•  48
    In the “Concluding Remarks” of his final book The Vicissitudes of Nature, Richard J. Bernstein makes an appeal to his readers urging that “we need to face the full complexity of developing new ways of speaking of causality if we are to develop an adequate conception of the relations of humans to the rest of nature” (206). Bernstein refers to the modern ways in which we speak of causality as “event causality” (Vicissitudes 206). He calls to mind Kant’s deterministic claim that the principle of ca…Read more
  •  970
    The Structure of Psychic Revolutions: A Psychoanalytic Account of Kuhnian Science
    with S. C. Taylor
    American Imago 3 (76): 381-404. 2019.
    In an often-forgotten proclamation during an autobiographical interview in 1995, Thomas Kuhn notes, without much explanation, his indebtedness to psychoanalysis. While in the wake of Kuhn's 1962 publication The Structure of Scientific Revolutions, many psychoanalytic scholars have made use of his work to justify shifts in psychoanalytic traditions, few have attempted to point out the relation between Kuhnian science and the psychoanalytic process. This article argues that there is a strong affin…Read more
  •  189
    George Herbert Mead
    Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. 2008.
    George Herbert Mead (1863-1931), American philosopher and social theorist, is often classed with William James, Charles Sanders Peirce, and John Dewey as one of the most significant figures in classical American pragmatism. Dewey referred to Mead as “a seminal mind of the very first order” (Dewey, 1932, xl). Yet by the middle of the twentieth-century, Mead's prestige was greatest outside of professional philosophical circles. He is considered by many to be the father of the school of Symbolic In…Read more
  •  119
    G. H. Mead’s Philosophical Hermeneutics of the Present
    European Journal of Pragmatism and American Philosophy 11 (2). 2019.
    In this article I draw together what is a largely neglected account of the hermeneutic thrust of Mead’s late writings. In particular, I argue that Mead’s philosophy of the present also amounts to a theory of interpretation. In an open dialogue with a number of Hans-Georg Gadamer’s most fundamental concepts, I demonstrate how Mead’s notion of emergence in the present of both past and future neatly aligns with Gadamer’s philosophical hermeneutics. I will trace the foundation of this common ground …Read more