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700Dionysus versus the Crucified: Thinking the Death of God with Heidegger, Girard, and BatailleHuman Affairs 35 (4): 587-599. 2025.Girard has argued that in the opposition between “Dionysus” and “the crucified,” Nietzsche contrasts Christian martyrdom that resolves violence through pacifism with pagan festivals that affirm violence by ritualizing it. In agreement with Girard, this article shows how Heidegger’s discussion of nihilism fails to ethically confront the violence of Nietzsche’s Dionysianism, a criticism that applies equally to Deleuze. However, I argue that Bataille’s reading of Nietzsche confronts the violence in…Read more
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105Nietzsche on Socrates, Jesus, and the Slave Revolt in MoralityInternational Journal of Philosophy and Theology 85 (3-4): 142-164. 2024.This article shows how the triumph of Socratic optimism in Nietzsche’s first book, The Birth of Tragedy, is due to a slave revolt in morality that promulgates a religious faith in the value of scientific truth. This early argument parallels his critique of the ascetic ideal that infects science in The Genealogy of Morality. I draw out the resemblance between Socrates’s martyrdom in The Birth and Jesus’s crucifixion in the Genealogy in order to illuminate how ritual human sacrifice mythically imm…Read more
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1147Dissonance and Illusion in Nietzsche's Early Tragic PhilosophyParrhesia (39): 86-117. 2024.Nietzsche’s Birth of Tragedy overcomes the opposition between scientific optimism and Schopenhauerian pessimism with the image of a music-making Socrates, who symbolizes the aesthetic affirmation of life. This article shows how the aesthetic ideal is an illusion whose metaphysical solace undermines itself in being recognized as such, thereby ceasing to be comforting. While I agree with recent commentaries that contest the pervasive Schopenhauerian reading of The Birth, most of these commentaries…Read more
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1185Nihilism: Schopenhauer, Nietzsche and NowOpen Philosophy 6 (1): 178-195. 2023.In this paper, I discuss how Nietzsche’s critique of nihilism concerns the complicity between Christian morality and modern atheism. I unpack in what sense Schopenhauer’s ascetic denial of the will signifies a return to nothingness, what he calls the nihil negativum. I argue that Nietzsche’s formulation of nihilism specifically targets Schopenhauer’s pessimism as the culmination of the Western metaphysical tradition, the crucial stage of its intellectual history in which the scientific pursuit o…Read more
APA Western Division
Hamilton, ON, Canada
Areas of Specialization
| Friedrich Nietzsche |
| 19th Century Philosophy |
| 20th Century Philosophy |
| Continental Philosophy |
Areas of Interest
| History of Western Philosophy |
| Literature |
| Film and Television |
| Religious Studies |