•  164
    Suffering injustice: Misrecognition as moral injury in critical theory
    International Journal of Philosophical Studies 13 (3). 2005.
    It is the persistence of social suffering in a world in which it could be eliminated that for Adorno is the source of the need for critical reflection, for philosophy. Philosophy continues and gains its cultural place because an as yet unbridgeable abyss separates the social potential for the relief of unnecessary human suffering and its emphatic continuance. Philosophy now is the culturally bound repository for the systematic acknowledgement and articulation of the meaning of the expanse of hum…Read more
  •  157
    Torture and Dignity: An Essay on Moral Injury
    University of Chicago Press. 2015.
    In this unflinching look at the experience of suffering and one of its greatest manifestations—torture—J.M. Bernstein critiques the repressions of traditional moral theory, showing that our morals are not immutable ideals but fragile constructions that depend on our experience of suffering itself. Morals, Bernstein argues, not only guide our conduct but also express the depth of mutual dependence that we share as vulnerable and injurable individuals. Beginning with the attempts to abolish tort…Read more
  •  132
    Following the lead of Annette Baier, this essay argues that trust relations provide the ethical substance of everyday living. When A trusts B, A unreflectively allows B to approach sufficiently close so as to be able to harm A. In order for this to be possible, A practically presupposes that B perceives A as a person and will hence act accordingly. Trust relations are relations of mutual recognition in which we acknowledge our mutual standing and vulnerability with respect to one another. A robu…Read more
  •  78
    To Be Is to Live, To Be Is to Be Recognized
    Graduate Faculty Philosophy Journal 30 (2): 357-390. 2009.
  •  71
    Without sovereignty or miracles: Reply to Birmingham
    Journal of Speculative Philosophy 24 (1): 21-31. 2010.
    Let me begin with a wisp of political history. According to the Earl of Clarendon, in 1639 the king’s “three kingdoms [were] flourishing in entire peace and universal plenty.”1 Yet by 1642 civil war had broken out, and in 1649 the king was beheaded. What had caused this breakdown of civil and political order, a breakdown that was not localized in England but, in fact, rife throughout Europe—1648 like 1848 was a year of revolutions? Clarendon himself is less than acute on the matter, opting gener…Read more
  •  58
    Deleuze's philosophy of cinema departs from the standard conception of modernist aesthetics that sees art withdrawing from representation in order to reflect upon the specificity of its medium. While ambitious and influential, Deleuze's attempt fails. Overdetermined by its own metaphysics, it forsakes the real importance of the movies. It is unable to explain how they function and why they matter. This essay pursues three lines of criticism: Deleuze cannot account for the aesthetic specificity o…Read more
  •  57
    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
  •  46
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Readymades, Monochromes, Etc.:Nominalism and the Paradox of ModernismJ. M. Bernstein (bio)If Schopenhauer's thesis of art as an image of the world once over bears a kernel of truth, then it does so only insofar as this second world is composed out of elements that have been transposed out of the empirical world in accord with Jewish descriptions of the messianic order as an order just like the habitual order but changed in the slight…Read more
  •  45
    Major Trends in Public Health Law and Practice: A Network National Report
    with James G. Hodge, Leila Barraza, Courtney Chu, Veda Collmer, Corey Davis, Megan M. Griest, Monica S. Hammer, Jill Krueger, Kerri McGowan Lowrey, and Daniel G. Orenstein
    Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 41 (3): 737-745. 2013.
    Since its inception in September 2010, the Network for Public Health Law has responded to hundreds of public health legal technical assistance claims from around the country. Based on a review of these data, a series of major trends in public health practice and the law are analyzed, including issues concerning: the Affordable Care Act, tobacco control, emergency legal preparedness, health information privacy, food policy, vaccination, drug overdose prevention, sports injury law, public health a…Read more
  •  43
    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
  •  35
    Blind Intuitions: Modernism's Critique of Idealism
    British Journal for the History of Philosophy 22 (6): 1069-1094. 2014.
    Adorno contends that something of what we think of knowing and rational agency operate in ways that obscure and deform unique, singular presentations by relegating them to survival-driven interests and needs; hence, in accordance with the presumptions of transcendental idealism, we have come to mistake what are, in effect, historically contingent, species-subjective ways of viewing the world for an objective understanding of the world. And further, this interested understanding of the world is d…Read more
  •  33
    Promising and Civil Disobedience (Arendt’s Political Modernism)
    Graduate Faculty Philosophy Journal 28 (1): 47-60. 2007.
  •  29
    Major Trends in Public Health Law and Practice: A Network National Report
    with James G. Hodge, Leila Barraza, Courtney Chu, Veda Collmer, Corey Davis, Megan M. Griest, Monica S. Hammer, Jill Krueger, Kerri McGowan Lowrey, and Daniel G. Orenstein
    Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 41 (3): 737-745. 2013.
    Public health law research reveals significant complexities underlying the use of law as an effective tool to improve health outcomes across populations. The challenges of applying public health law in practice are no easier. Attorneys, public health officials, and diverse partners in the public and private sectors collaborate on the front lines to forge pathways to advance population health through law. Meeting this objective amidst competing interests requires strong practice skills to shift t…Read more
  •  28
    Amery’s devastation and resentment an ethnographic transcendental deduction
    Tijdschrift Voor Filosofie 76 (1): 5-30. 2014.
    What is the relation between philosophical categories and everyday experience? Can an effectively first-person account of an historical experience rise to the level of a philosophical argument? This essay argues that Jean Amery’s account of his sufferings under the Nazis intends to generate a justificatory argument, a transcendental deduction of sorts, for the category of ”resentment’ against its philosophical critics, most importantly, Nietzsche.
  •  25
    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
  •  19
    Review of Michael Kelly, Iconoclasm and Aesthetics (review)
    Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews 2004 (3). 2004.
  •  17
    Anerkennung und Verleiblichung. Überlegungen zu Fichtes Materialismus
    In Christopher F. Zurn & Hans-Christoph Schmidt am Busch (eds.), Anerkennung, Akademie Verlag. pp. 53-90. 2009.
  •  15
    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
  •  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
  •  12
    To Be Is to Live, To Be Is to Be Recognized
    Graduate Faculty Philosophy Journal 30 (2): 357-390. 2009.
  •  11
    Beyond Public Health Emergency Legal Preparedness: Rethinking Best Practices
    Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 41 (s1): 13-16. 2013.
    The concept of public health legal preparedness grew out of the public health emergency preparedness movement, but was conceptualized more broadly to be utilized to achieve full public health legal preparedness for all types of public health threats. This article analyzes the need to refocus public health legal preparedness to include all areas of public health law and presents a new model for the fourth core element that will aid in the development of legal benchmarks so public health systems c…Read more
  •  10
    On the Dependency Structure of Self-Consciousness and the Ethical Constitution of Reason
    Graduate Faculty Philosophy Journal 42 (2): 283-314. 2021.
  •  10
    Cross Sector Data Sharing: Necessity, Challenge, and Hope
    with Cason Schmit and Kathleen Kelly
    Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 47 (S2): 83-86. 2019.
    Existing data sources have tremendous potential to inform public health activities. However, a patchwork of data protection laws impede data sharing efforts. Nevertheless, a data-sharing initiative in Peoria, IL was able to overcome challenges to set up a cross-sectoral data system to coordinate mental health, law enforcement, and healthcare services.
  •  8
    Promising and Civil Disobedience (Arendt’s Political Modernism)
    Graduate Faculty Philosophy Journal 28 (1): 47-60. 2007.
  •  7
    Beyond Public Health Emergency Legal Preparedness: Rethinking Best Practices
    Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 41 (s1): 13-16. 2013.
    It has now been 10 years since the framework for public health legal preparedness was put forth as a model to meet new public health challenges in the 21st century. Public health legal preparedness is defined as the “attainment by a public health system of specified legal of standards essential to the preparedness of the public health system.” The framework has continued to develop over time and four core elements have emerged to make up the basis for public health legal preparedness. The four c…Read more
  •  7
    Without Sovereignty or Miracles: Reply to Birmingham
    Journal of Speculative Philosophy 24 (1): 21-31. 2010.
  •  6
    6 Das Naturschöne
    In Anne Eusterschulte & Sebastian Tränkle (eds.), Theodor W. Adorno: Ästhetische Theorie, De Gruyter. pp. 73-88. 2021.