University of Edinburgh
Department of Philosophy
PhD, 1975
Greenwich Village, New York, United States of America
  • D Kolb's The Critique Of Pure Modernity (review)
    Bulletin of the Hegel Society of Great Britain 14 41-47. 1986.
  •  1
    Conscience And Transgression: The Persistence Of Misrecognition
    Bulletin of the Hegel Society of Great Britain 29 55-70. 1994.
  •  99
    8 Autonomy and solitude
    In Keith Ansell-Pearson (ed.), Nietzsche and Modern German Thought, Routledge. pp. 192. 1991.
  •  1
    The Politics of Fulfilment and Transfiguration'
    Radical Philosophy 47 21. 1987.
  •  3
    Mimetic Rationality and Material Inference : Adorno and Brandom
    Revue Internationale de Philosophie 1 7-23. 2004.
  •  3
    This essay originated as a reply to Richard Rorty's ”Habermas, Derrida, and the Functions of Philosophy“. In it, I contest Rorty's deployment of the categories of private selfcreation and the collective political enterprise of increasing freedom, first developed in Contingency, Irony and Solidarity, to demonstrate that the philosophical projects of Habermas and Derrida are complementary rather than antagonistic. The focus of my critique is two-fold: firstly, I contend that so-called critiques of…Read more
  •  1
    Review of Michael Kelly, Iconoclasm and Aesthetics (review)
    Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews 2004 (3). 2004.
  • Tragedy
    In Richard Thomas Eldridge (ed.), The Oxford handbook of philosophy and literature, Oxford University Press. pp. 71--94. 2009.
  •  27
    Art and Aesthetics After Adorno (edited book)
    with Claudia Brodsky, Anthony J. Cascardi, Thierry de Duve, Aleš Erjavec, Robert Kaufman, and Fred Rush
    Fordham University Press. 2022.
    Theodor Adorno's Aesthetic Theory offers one of the most powerful and comprehensive critiques of art and of the discipline of aesthetics ever written. The work offers a deeply critical engagement with the history and philosophy of aesthetics and with the traditions of European art through the middle of the 20th century. It is coupled with ambitious claims about what aesthetic theory ought to be. But the cultural horizon of Adorno's Aesthetic Theory was the world of high modernism, and much has h…Read more
  •  1
    Classic and Romantic German Aesthetics (edited book)
    Cambridge University Press. 2002.
    This 2002 volume brings together major works by German thinkers, writing just prior to and after Kant, who were enormously influential in this crucial period of aesthetics. These texts include the first translation into English of Schiller's Kallias Letters and Moritz's On the Artistic Imitation of the Beautiful, together with translations of some of Hölderlin's most important theoretical writings and works by Hamann, Lessing, Novalis and Schlegel. In a philosophical introduction J. M. Bernstein…Read more
  •  7
    Adorno and Ethics (edited book)
    with Martin Jay, Christina Gerhardt, Rob Kaufman, and Detlev Claussen
    Duke University Press. 2006.
    Because of his preoccupation with the formal aspects of music and literature, Theodor W. Adorno is often regarded as the most aesthetically oriented thinker of the Frankfurt School theorists. It is Adorno’s perceived commitment to aestheticism—the study of art for art’s sake and the study of art as a source of sensuous pleasure, rather than as a vehicle for culturally constructed morality or meaning—that many scholars have criticized as hostile to genuine, concrete, substantive political, social…Read more
  •  8
    The Philosophy of Recognition: Historical and Contemporary Perspectives
    with Frederick Neuhouser, Michael Quante, Ludwig Siep, Terry Pinkard, Daniel Brudney, Andreas Wildt, Nancy Fraser, Axel Honneth, Emmanuel Renault, Hans-Christoph Schmidt am Busch, Jean-Philippe Deranty, and Arto Laitinen
    Lexington Books. 2009.
    Edited by Hans-Christoph Schmidt am Busch & Christopher Zurn. This volume collects original, cutting-edge essays on the philosophy of recognition by international scholars eminent in the field. By considering the topic of recognition as addressed by both classical and contemporary authors, the volume explores the connections between historical and contemporary recognition research and makes substantive contributions to the further development of contemporary theories of recognition.
  •  8
    On Jean Améry: Philosophy of Catastrophe
    with Magdalena Zolkos, Roy Ben-Shai, Thomas Brudholm, Arne Grøn, Dennis B. Klein, Kitty J. Millet, Joseph Rosen, Philipa Rothfield, Melanie Steiner Sherwood, Wolfgang Treitler, Aleksandra Ubertowska, Michael Ure, Anna Yeatman, and Markus Zisselsberger
    Lexington Books. 2011.
    This volume offers the first English language collection of academic essays on the post-Holocaust thought of Jean Améry, a Jewish-Austrian-Belgian essayist, journalist and literary author. Comprehensive in scope and multi-disciplinary in orientation, contributors explore central aspects of Améry's philosophical and ethical position, including dignity, responsibility, resentment, and forgiveness
  •  22
    Anthropocene Self-Consciousness: Response to “Critical Naturalism: A Manifesto”
    Krisis | Journal for Contemporary Philosophy 43 (1): 139-142. 2023.
    The prior issue of Krisis (42:1) published Critical Naturalism: A Manifesto, with the aim to instigate a debate of the issues raised in this manifesto – the necessary re-thinking of the role (and the concept) of nature in critical theory in relation to questions of ecology, health, and inequality. Since Krisis considers itself a place for philosophical debates that take contemporary struggles as starting point, it issued an open call and solicited responses to the manifesto. This is one of the s…Read more
  •  7
    Classic and Romantic German Aesthetics (edited book)
    Cambridge University Press. 2002.
    This 2002 volume brings together major works by German thinkers, writing just prior to and after Kant, who were enormously influential in this crucial period of aesthetics. These texts include the first translation into English of Schiller's Kallias Letters and Moritz's On the Artistic Imitation of the Beautiful, together with translations of some of Hölderlin's most important theoretical writings and works by Hamann, Lessing, Novalis and Schlegel. In a philosophical introduction J. M. Bernstein…Read more
  •  10
    Adorno: Disenchantment and Ethics
    Cambridge University Press. 2001.
    Theodor W. Adorno is best known for his contributions to aesthetics and social theory. Critics have always complained about the lack of a practical, political or ethical dimension to Adorno's philosophy. In this highly original contribution to the literature on Adorno, J. M. Bernstein offers the first attempt in any language to provide an account of the ethical theory latent in Adorno's writings. Bernstein relates Adorno's ethics to major trends in contemporary moral philosophy. He analyses the …Read more
  •  18
    On the Dependency Structure of Self-Consciousness and the Ethical Constitution of Reason
    Graduate Faculty Philosophy Journal 42 (2): 283-314. 2021.
  •  7
    The Meaning of Ugliness, The Authority of Beauty
    In Jonathan Gilmore & Lydia Goehr (eds.), A Companion to Arthur C. Danto, Wiley. 2022.
    In “The Philosophical Disenfranchisement of Art,” Arthur Danto argues that there were two stages to the platonic critique of the arts: ephemeralization and takeover. Danto's philosophy of art sought a rescue by detaching art from the philosophy of art in a manner that would give back to the arts the very dangerousness that so alarmed Plato in the first instance. This chapter draws Danto's theory into conversation with Stanley Cavell's and T.W. Adorno's philosophies of modernism. Ugliness or terr…Read more
  •  13
    Concept and Object
    In Peter Eli Gordon (ed.), A companion to Adorno, Wiley. 2019.
    In the Preface to Negative Dialectics, Adorno states that the primary ambition of the book is to find a substitute for the “supra‐ordinated” concept and to “break through the deception of constitutive subjectivity.” For a book whose ambition is to renew the Marxist idea of critique, these are puzzling claims. The notions to be criticized are Kant's in The Critique of Pure Reason ; Adorno, from his earliest studies with Siegfried Kracauer, had taken Kant's theoretical philosophy as expressing the…Read more