Jay Gupta

Mills College At Northeastern University
  •  19
    Barbarism by Any Other Name: Eliminating the NEA and NEH
    Telos: Critical Theory of the Contemporary 2025 (211): 149-152. 2025.
    ExcerptEven if we acknowledge the aspirational virtue of confronting the antidemocratic, authoritarian tendencies of a rampant federal bureaucracy,1 we ought to insist on the categorical difference between the empty grandstanding of Elon Musk waving around “the chainsaw for democracy” and sober, good faith, and, yes, informed procedures. To characterize DOGE’s “chainsaw” approach to dismantling the federal bureaucracy as a “misstep”2 taken on the way to the restoration of a “citizen republic”3 b…Read more
  •  22
    Changing the Channel and Pulling the Plug: Voting for Trump in 2024
    Telos: Critical Theory of the Contemporary 2024 (209): 152-155. 2024.
    ExcerptA slew of convergent reasons has been offered for why Trump won the presidency: anger at inflation and immigration, the Democratic abandonment of the working class, low Democratic turnout in swing states, inept Democratic messaging, racism and misogyny, reaction against “woke” identity politics, loss of traditionally Democratic voters, Trump’s savvy leveraging of the “manosphere”(!),1 among others.
  •  21
    Making the Hive Great Again: Spiritual Assault and the Politics of Erasure
    Telos: Critical Theory of the Contemporary 2025 (210): 154-157. 2025.
    ExcerptIn 2001, we all looked on in helpless horror as the Taliban detonated and destroyed the Buddhas of Bamiyan, two towering statues built in the sixth century, standing at 115 and 174 feet tall, and carved into the sandstone cliffs of the Bamiyan Valley in central Afghanistan. These majestic monuments, silently embedding a profound cultural history for 1,500 years, were reduced to meaningless rubble in a matter of moments.
  •  77
    Welcome to the Machine: AI, Existential Risk, and the Iron Cage of Modernity
    Telos: Critical Theory of the Contemporary 2023 (203): 163-169. 2023.
    ExcerptRecent advances in the functional power of artificial intelligence (AI) have prompted an urgent warning from industry leaders and researchers concerning its “profound risks to society and humanity.”1 Their open letter is admirable not only for its succinct identification of said risks, which include the mass dissemination of misinformation, loss of jobs, and even the possible extinction of our species, but also for its clear normative framing of the problem: “Should we let machines flood …Read more
  •  25
    You and What Army? The Moral Ghost in the U.S. Security Machine
    Telos: Critical Theory of the Contemporary 2021 (196): 174-176. 2021.
  •  41
    Torches, Pitchforks, Smartphones, and Mass Delusion: An American Insurrection
    Telos: Critical Theory of the Contemporary 2021 (194): 158-162. 2021.
  •  45
    Speaking B.S. to Truth: The Public Sphere in the Age of Trump
    Telos: Critical Theory of the Contemporary 2021 (195): 151-156. 2021.
  •  36
    The Aesthetics of Fascism
    Telos: Critical Theory of the Contemporary 2020 (190): 181-184. 2020.
  •  41
    COVID-19: Morality, Politics, and Fear
    Telos: Critical Theory of the Contemporary 2020 (191): 181-186. 2020.
  •  31
    Values or Virtues, Nietzsche or Aristotle?
    Telos: Critical Theory of the Contemporary 2016 (174): 107-127. 2016.
  •  60
    Does Truth Matter to Ethics? Kierkegaard, Ethics, and the Subjectivity of Truth
    In Lambert Zuidervaart, Allyson Carr, Matthew J. Klassen, Ronnie Shuker & Matthew J. Klaassen (eds.), Truth Matters: Knowledge, Politics, Ethics, Religion, Mcgill-queen's University Press. pp. 195-210. 2014.
    Does truth matter to ethics? Ethical truth is a highly vexed notion. In addition to a virtual chaos of views concerning right versus wrong courses of action in applied issues, philosophers have encountered perennial difficulties in the attempt to theoretically specify what ethical truth could be. Recent arguments emphasize "ethical imagination" over ethical truth. I argue that ethical imagination is an important notion, but that an understanding of ethical truth is crucial to its growth. It is, …Read more
  • This study develops a particular interpretation of G. W. F. Hegel's Phenomenology of Spirit, and extends it to contemporary philosophical concerns. I claim that the Phenomenology is a critique of an epistemic concept, 'consciousness', and that the Phenomenology should therefore be viewed generally as a critique of mentalism. 'Mentalism' refers to both a body of beliefs and certain habits of thought that presuppose the subjectivity of mind, and that picture mind and mental items as standing in a …Read more
  •  12
    Freedom of the Void: Hegel and Nietzsche on the Politics of Nihilism: Toward a Critical Understanding of 9/11
    Telos: Critical Theory of the Contemporary 2004 (129): 17-39. 2004.
    Occasionally you will hear it said that the violence perpetrated by organizations such as Al Qaeda is “nihilistic.” The senses of the term as thus employed seem to be largely intuitive, and involve a cluster of notions. The journalist and pundit Christopher Hitchens, for example, offers up such descriptions as “sinister grandiosity,” “pointless nastiness,” and “the tactic of demanding the impossible and demanding it at gun- point.”1 The idea is that contrary to the revolutionary, idealist rhetor…Read more