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2Reality, Attention, and SocialityTechné: Research in Philosophy and Technology 27 (2): 149-152. 2023.
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438The City, The Highway and the Spatial Level: Navigation Apps and DisorientationTechné Research in Philosophy and Technology 29 (1): 69-83. 2025.I argue that mobile navigation apps, like Google Maps, alienate us from our lived environments. I phenomenologically contrast the experience of moving through an unfamiliar city on foot with driving through one with the aid of a mobile navigation app. This comparison reveals that movement possesses a developmental character: to move through space is to learn how to respond to the environments we encounter, simultaneously developing our sense of ourselves and of the spaces we inhabit. Because the…Read more
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507Fracturing the Affordance Space: An account of Digitalized AlienationFrontiers in Psychiatry 15. 2024.This paper investigates the lived experience of alienation as a form of mental strife or pathology as it is connected to the digitalization of modern life. To do so, I deploy the concept of affordances from ecological psychology, phenomenology, and embodied cognition. I propose an affordance-based model for understanding digitalized alienation. First, I argue that the lived sense of alienation is best understood as a fracturing of the affordance space, where possibilities for action are lived as…Read more
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48Reality, Attention, and SocialityTechné Research in Philosophy and Technology 27 (2): 149-152. 2023.
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569There is No Good Answer: The Role of Responsibility in Sartre's Ethical TheorySartre Studies International 21 (2): 97-107. 2015.This paper contends that under a Sartrean framework, any moral judgment we make regarding our own action is never final; the meaning and moral value of our past actions always remains reinterpretable in light of what unfolds in the future. Our interactions with other people reveal that we are responsible for far more than we had initially supposed ourselves to be choosing when we began our project, such that it is in fact impossible to ever finish taking responsibility completely.
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690Buying Green: A Trap for Fools, or, Sartre on Ethical ConsumerismIn Matthew C. Ally & Damon Boria (eds.), Earthly Engagements: Reading Sartre after the Holocene, Rowman & Littlefield. 2023.This paper appears in Earthly Engagements: Reading Sartre after the Holocene, edited by Matthew Ally and Damon Boria. From the introduction: "In Chapter 6, Michael Butler critically examines the misguided effort to shop our way out of climate change problems. After expositions of some key concepts from Sartre's Critique of Dialectical Reason, he criticizes ethical consumerism in a way reminiscent of Sartre's criticism of voting as a trap for fools. His concluding section juxtaposes two competing…Read more
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99Habits and the Diachronic Structure of the SelfIn Andrea Altobrando, Takuya Niikawa & Richard Stone (eds.), The Realizations of the Self, Palgrave Macmillan. pp. 47-63. 2018.In this chapter, we explore the role of habit in giving shape to conscious experience and importantly to our pre-reflective awareness of ourselves which includes the sense of mineness that accompanies our conscious experience. For the most part, discussions in philosophy of mind and phenomenology concerning pre-reflective self-awareness are focused on determining the relationship between phenomenal consciousness and selfhood. For this reason perhaps, the existence of pre-reflective self-awarenes…Read more
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University of North Dakota, Grand ForksDepartment of Philosophy and Religious StudiesAssistant Professor
Grand Forks, North Dakota, United States of America
Areas of Specialization
| Phenomenology |
| Philosophy of Cognitive Science |
| Philosophy of Technology |