•  2
    Value and the Will to Power
    Journal of Social Philosophy 22 (2): 119-127. 2008.
  •  6
    Television: Breaking Bad
    with Joe MacDonagh
    Philosophy Now 116 50-53. 2016.
  •  19
    The central character in Sartre's 1938 novel La Nausée, Antoine Roquentin, has lost his sense of things, and now the world appears to him as utterly unstable. Roquentin suffers from what he calls ‘nausea,’ a condition caused by an ontological intuition that the self, as well as the world through which that ‘self’ moves, lacks a substantial nature. The novel portrays Sartre's own philosophical account of the self in La transcendence de l'égo. Here Sartre argues that Husserl's account of conscious…Read more
  •  52
    Nietzsche's Noontide Friend: The Self as Metaphoric Double
    Pennsylvania State University Press. 2005.
    Ever since Heidegger lectured on Nietzsche, philosophers have stressed the active side of the Übermensch, the self who aggressively consumes and exploits value. Sheridan Hough, however, argues that there is a distinctly receptive and passive side to the Nietzschean self, and thus a pervasive doubleness in Nietzsche's thought that hasn't been explored before. This doubleness is the focus of Hough's attention here. Hough argues that Nietzsche's favorite way to describe the self is to use opposed p…Read more
  •  2
    Nietzsche's Noontide Friend: The Self as Metaphoric Double
    Pennsylvania State University Press. 1997.
    Ever since Heidegger lectured on Nietzsche, philosophers have stressed the active side of the Übermensch, the self who aggressively consumes and exploits value. Sheridan Hough, however, argues that there is a distinctly receptive and passive side to the Nietzschean self, and thus a pervasive doubleness in Nietzsche's thought that hasn't been explored before. This doubleness is the focus of Hough's attention here. Hough argues that Nietzsche's favorite way to describe the self is to use opposed p…Read more
  •  93
    Book Notes (review)
    with Daniel Dombrowski, Don Garrett, Stanley Hauerwas, Hugh LaFollette, Ariela Lazar, S. E. Marshall, Corinne M. Painter, Rosamond Rhodes, and Mary Anne Warren
    Ethics 112 (3): 651-657. 2002.
  •  84
    At the end of ‘The Age of the World Picture,’ Heidegger offers a brief sentence, ‘Keiner stirbt für blosse Werte’ (No one dies for mere values.). This sentence underscores one of the central themes of Heidegger’s later essays, the nihilism that results from living in an economy of value. This way of life is lived by a certain kind of human being, one who treats a culture’s embedded habits and practices as value systems to be exploited and exhausted. A more difficult problem presents itself: what…Read more
  • This article argues that, rather than thinking that our ethics has to fall back on Kantian and proto-Christian claims, Sellars should have appealed to the framework of Buddhist ethics
  •  72
    Enhancement, Ethics, and Existentialism
    with Hannah Chimowitz and Robert Sade
    American Journal of Bioethics Neuroscience 6 (1): 48-49. 2015.
  • Silence, "composure in existence," and the promise of faith's joy
    In Robert L. Perkins, Marc Alan Jolley & Edmon L. Rowell (eds.), Why Kierkegaard matters: a festschrift in honor of Robert L. Perkins, Mercer University Press. 2010.
  •  52
  •  188
    This article characterizes the work of Native basket weaver Mabel McKay, using some of the conceptual tools of twentiethth-century phenomenologist Maurice Merleau-Ponty. Specifically, McKay's baskets have often been described as "living;" Merleau-Ponty's account of the world as "living flesh" seems to suggest a way of thinking about these baskets as more than mere artifacts. I conclude that McKay's baskets are a powerful propaedeutic: they awaken a sense of ourselves as perceivers.
  •  62
    To the Lighthouse, via the “Things Themselves”
    International Studies in Philosophy 34 (4): 41-53. 2002.
  •  38
    This book is an analysis of Kierkegaard's account of the self from a unique perspective, that of a character introduced by one of Kierkegaard's pseudonymous authors, Johannes de silentio. This character is seen once in a brief vignette in Fear and Trembling, but Hough argues that this character is a necessary lens for looking across Kierkegaard's vast authorship, both the pseudonymous works as well as the works that Kierkegaard himself signed. This character sketch, often overlooked in Kierkegaa…Read more