• Ideen I Confronting Its Critics
    In Lester Embree & Thomas Nenon (eds.), Husserl’s Ideen, Springer. 2013.
  •  22
    Husserl envisages transcendental phenomenology as a radically founding science that lays bare the higher-order experiences whereby logic and a theory of science become constituted. On the other hand, according to a usual presentation of Hegel’s philosophy, phenomenology is “logic’s precondition,” and science presents itself as its “result.” This alleged precedence of Hegel’s phenomenology (with its experiential and historical horizons) regarding logic may be a motif behind the current affinities…Read more
  •  27
    Husserl versus Neo-Kantianism Revisited
    New Yearbook for Phenomenology and Phenomenological Philosophy 4 173-208. 2004.
  •  26
    Husserl versus Neo-Kantianism Revisited
    New Yearbook for Phenomenology and Phenomenological Philosophy 4 173-208. 2004.
  •  23
    The Cartesian Meditations’ Foundational Discourse
    New Yearbook for Phenomenology and Phenomenological Philosophy 10 (1): 145-165. 2010.
  •  4
    Husserl’s Breakthrough Revisited
    Études Phénoménologiques 18 (35): 71-98. 2002.
  •  23
    Between conflict and reconciliation: the hard truth
    Human Studies 30 (2): 115-130. 2007.
    In the context of the fairly recent Truth and Reconciliation Commissions (TRC), I examine phenomenologically the nature of truth as the essential condition for overcoming social and political conflicts, and as an instrument for enforcing so-called “transitional justice” periods and promoting reconciliation. I also briefly approach the limits of this truth’s possibility of being recognized, if its evaluative and practical dimensions and its appeal to an “intelligence of emotions” do not prevail o…Read more
  •  1
    Evidence and Truth in the Digital Age
    Glimpse 21 9-27. 2020.
  •  276
    The following essay stems from my interest in finding out whether Taminiaux’s appealing and well-argued reading of the Greek and Platonic connivance between theôria and poiêsis in contrast to the fragility and contingency of human practical judgments and the human intrigue of our worldly abode—a reading that in his view is retrieved by modern and contemporary German philosophers, including Heidegger—may be applied to Husserl’s transcendental phenomenology and reduction. In my view, Taminiaux’s o…Read more
  • This chapter offered in hommage to Jacques Taminiaux’s long and fruitful career reflecting on ontological, political, and aesthetic issues, starts following the lead of his reading of Heidegger’s interpretation of these issues, as following the same “Platonic filiation” as in most of German Idealism’s representatives. Namely, Heidegger seems to interpret praxis beyond all relation to interaction and interlocution, but also that his revaluation of the role of art in politics is because he confers…Read more
  •  131
    The foundational discourse of Cartesian Meditations : an unfinished project
    The New Yearbook for Phenomenology and Phenomenological Philosophy X (2010) 1-21. 2011.
    Husserl’s transcendental philosophy has frequently been disparaged in many of the central philosophical debates of the 20th century. And many of his most virulent critics have been adherents of phenomenological philosophy. Critiques have stressed the bankruptcy of the concept of ultimate foundation in relation to a transcendental subject that is allegedly solipsistic and conditioned by modern prejudices. Two essential insights have led me to reconsider such critical assessments.1 On the one han…Read more