•  15
    This book is about bodies and discomfort. Specifically, it is about how to recognize discomfort as a motivating source for critical reflection. This book is about how people project their discomfort onto others in harmful ways that alienate, and it is also about how those who are alienated may use their discomfort to fight against those harms. Based in work from pragmatist, feminist, queer, and disability studies, and informed by lessons from personal narratives and philosophical analysis, this …Read more
  •  77
    Somaesthetics of Discomfort
    European Journal of Pragmatism and American Philosophy 13 (1). 2021.
    This essay presents somaesthetics of discomfort as an extension of the field of somaesthetics as developed by Shusterman. Using the work of Peirce and Dewey as a foundation upon which Shusterman and Johnson have considered the body as the basis of aesthetics, I propose that somaesthetics of discomfort provides a means of enhancing bodily awareness and reflection useful for domains of inquiry, such as healthcare and design. Taking Peirce’s notion of the irritation of doubt in a literal sense, I e…Read more
  •  79
    Assessment practices have come to dominate much of formalized education, especially within the United States. Currently, learning analytics (la) and educational data mining (edm) are purported by many educational companies and institutions to successfully improve learning through what are often considered as objective collection, classification, and analysis of educational data. Enthusiasm about big data in education has contributed to the naturalization of datafication within the field. Educati…Read more
  •  65
    This article addresses the need for adaptive ethical analysis within machine learning that accounts for emerging problems concerning social bias and generative adversarial networks. I use John Dewey’s criticisms of the reflex arc concept in psychology as a basis for understanding how these problems stem from human-gan interaction. By combining Dewey’s criticisms with Donna Haraway’s idea of cyborgs, Luciano Floridi’s concept of distributed morality, and Shaowen Bardzell’s recommendations for a f…Read more
  •  75
    Metaphilosophy, Volume 53, Issue 4, Page 560-564, July 2022.
  •  77
    This essay examines contemporary digital educational assessment and argues that there are underlying problematic values and consequences entailed by the datafication of education as coupled with assessment practices. By applying Dewey’s work concerning curriculum, aims, growth, and the conception of democracy through education to current methods, this examination exposes digital assessment as perpetuating a cruel optimism through assessment that undermines democratic, progressive functions of ed…Read more
  •  95
    Humility and Inquiry: A Response to Tibor Solymosi
    Eidos. A Journal for Philosophy of Culture 3 (1): 122-133. 2019.
    In his essay, “Affording our Culture: “Smart” Technology and the Prospects for Creative Democracy,” Tibor Solymosi addresses my challenge for neuropragmatism to counter what I have elsewhere called dopamine democracy. Although I believe that Solymosi has begun to provide an explanation for how neuropragmatism may counter dopamine democracy, especially with his conceptions Œ and cultural affordances, I respond with a helpful addition to his approach by returning to the theory of inquiry as put fo…Read more
  •  288
    Somaesthetics of discomfort provides tools for instrumentally usurping normativity that imposes ideologies of domination upon bodies. I argue that somaesthetics pro- vides an underutilized set of tools for interrogating alienation. By developing somaes- thetics with specific regard for feelings of discomfort that accompany alienation and misfitting, inquiry becomes rooted in material experiences of abjection, oppression, and exclusion, which have too often been silenced or homogenized through ov…Read more
  •  139
    Guessing and Abduction
    Transactions of the Charles S. Peirce Society 50 (1): 115. 2014.
    “Scientific research faces up with an open and unknown world”Within the work of C. S. Peirce, the most fundamental and contentious form of inference is that of abduction. According to Peirce, abduction is the only type of inference from which new ideas are created (CP 5.171, 1903). He wrote, “every single item of scientific theory which stands established today has been due to Abduction” (CP 5.172, 1903). Similarly, “All that makes knowledge applicable comes to us viâ abduction. […] Not the smal…Read more
  •  82
    This paper draws on Michel Foucault’s genealogy and Richard Shusterman’s somaesthetics to analyze and resist the resurgence of legally enforced sexual binarism in the U.S., U.K., and New Zealand. These laws reflect biopolitical mechanisms that normalize and exclude intersex, trans, and non-binary individuals. Framing “sex” as a regulatory fiction, the paper integrates Foucault’s critique of biopower with Shusterman’s pragmatic focus on embodied experience. I propose a somaesthetics of discomfort…Read more
  •  43
    Halo of Identity
    Janus Head 6 (1): 67-78. 2003.
  •  76
    The Creative Moment of Scientific Apprehension
    European Journal of Pragmatism and American Philosophy 5 (1). 2013.
    Scientific explanation is both instrumental and consummatory. When we experience scientific explanation in its consummation, we experience what I have deemed a creative moment of scientific apprehension, which is an important aspect of creativity that comes at the end of inquiry and contributes to the development of future inquiry. Because scientific explanation is commonly cleaved from aesthetic experience, this moment of creativity has been neglected in both analyses of scientific practice and…Read more
  •  146
    John Dewey provided a robust and thorough conception of scientific explanation within his philosophical writing. I provide an exegesis of Dewey's concept of scientific explanation and argue that this concept is important to contemporary philosophy of science for at least two reasons. First, Dewey's conception of scientific explanation avoids the reification of science as an entity separated from practical experience. Second, Dewey supplants the realist-antirealist debate within the philosophical…Read more
  •  93
    When we assume that we have cultural competence rather than thoroughly engaging in what Dewey calls the pattern of inquiry, we fail to achieve cultural humility. By analyzing how habits undermine inquiry and underlie failure in situations that call for cultural humility, we may be better equipped to address unintentional offenses. In this essay, I define cultural humility and contrast it with cultural competence, explaining why aiming for cultural competence alone is problematic. Next, I conside…Read more
  •  216
    Pragmatics and Pragmatic Considerations in Explanation
    Contemporary Pragmatism 6 (2): 25-44. 2009.
    I provide a brief history of pragmatics as it relates to explanation, highlighting the great neglect of pragmatics and pragmatic considerations in regard to explanation during the mid-twentieth century. In order to understand pragmatic considerations regarding explanation, I utilize the work of Bas C. van Fraassen, Peter Achinstein, and Jan Faye. These thinkers provide crucial tools for understanding pragmatics, especially with regard to concepts such as context and exigence. The work of these t…Read more
  •  25
  •  113
    The argument that justice entails a form of what is deserved continues to inform attitudes about punishment. The belief in ‘just deserts’ is especially relevant in cases of punishment that are not court-ordered or officially prescribed, but nonetheless are considered deserved. Perhaps the most egregious example concerns incarcerated persons who are sexually assaulted. The belief in violence as justly deserved is ethically problematic, negatively affecting the health of incarcerated persons, as w…Read more
  •  39
    Of the scientific concepts that the American philosopher, Charles S. Peirce, analyzed in his work, two of the less commonly investigated have been those of guessing and of scientific economy. Peirce argued that guessing was the initial moment of hypothesis-formation. He also argued that economic factors play a significant role in the development and acceptance of hypotheses; however, the relationship between these two concepts has been neglected in most philosophical and scientific literature. I…Read more
  •  37
    Reconsidering Risk Groups: A Case of Ethical Reconstruction
    with Tibor Solymosi
    Ethics in Biology, Engineering and Medicine. forthcoming.
  •  160
    A Humanist Ethic of Ubuntu: Understanding Moral Obligation and Community
    Essays in the Philosophy of Humanism 21 (2): 47-61. 2013.
    The secular conception of ubuntu, as proffered by Thaddeus Metz, supplies a foundation for a humanist argument that justifies obligation to one’s community, even apart from a South African context, when combined with Kwasi Wiredu’s conception of personhood. Such an account provides an argument for accepting the concept of ubuntu as humanistic and not necessarily based in communalism or dependent upon supernaturalism. By re-evaluating some core concepts of community as they are presented in Plato…Read more
  •  81
    Gradations of Guessing: Preliminary Sketches and Suggestions
    Contemporary Pragmatism 10 (2): 135-154. 2013.
  •  105
    There is no question that the work of John Dewey has been invaluable with regard to theories of education. What has too often been neglected, however, is Dewey's work on the philosophy of science as it pertains specifically to science education.1 Although educators might well concede that children should be encouraged to be "philosophical" within the arts or humanities, most neglect or fail to heed Dewey's insights concerning the child as philosopher-scientist within the science classroom. Dewey…Read more
  •  213
    Addressing Microaggressions and Epistemic Injustice: Flourishing from the Work of Audre Lorde
    Essays in the Philosophy of Humanism 24 (1): 87-101. 2016.
    Microaggressions cause epistemic injustice and prevent human flourishing. As a step toward the recognition of microaggressions as sources of epistemic injustice and their remedy as a source for flourishing, I propose active engagement with narratives that present cases of microaggressions as they are contextualized in experience. The poet, essayist, and mythobiographer, Audre Lorde, provides contextualized narratives that express experiences of microaggressions from multiply intersectional and h…Read more
  •  50
    Foucault's Dream
    Janus Head 3 (2): 242-271. 2000.
  •  82
    I propose the next steps in the neuropragmatic approach to philosophy that has been advocated by Solymosi and Shook (2013). My focus is the initial process of inquiry implicit in addressing philosophical questions of cognition and mind by utilizing the tools of neuroscientific research. I combine John Dewey’s pattern of inquiry with Charles Peirce’s three forms of inference in order to outline a methodological schema for neuropragmatic inquiry. My goal is to establish ignorance and guessing as w…Read more