•  270
    Les concepts fondamentaux de la phénoménologie: Entretien avec Claude Romano
    Journal of French and Francophone Philosophy 20 (2): 173-202. 2012.
    Entretien avec Claude Romano
  •  150
    La phénoménologie et le concept de vie: Un entretien avec Renaud Barbaras
    Journal of French and Francophone Philosophy 19 (2): 153-179. 2011.
    Interview with Renaud Barbaras, conducted on May 18, 2011
  •  67
    Method, Metaphysics, Metaphor (Being after Phenomenology)
    Symposium: Canadian Journal of Continental Philosophy/Revue canadienne de philosophie continentale 18 (2): 54-76. 2014.
    Method, metaphysics, metaphor: three words with a common prefix, which, for philosophy, bear an ancient pedigree. Classically, the last word, as an object of philosophical reflection, has mostly been excluded from bearing any philosophical significance; we will see how this can no longer be the case today, precisely for phenomenology. If the “method” of phenomenology is wholly determined by its goal, namely, "pure" description, and if description is paradoxically only actualized in a figurative …Read more
  •  61
    Prayer, the Political Problem
    Philosophy and Theology 27 (1): 209-233. 2015.
    This essay attempts to describe some basic aspects of the political logic of religious belief by reference to some recent work of Sarah Coakley. It does so in two parts. First we examine two models of God, the model of “competition,” shared by pop atheism and religious fundamentalism, and the model of “cooperation,” as espoused by classical religious belief. As an explication of this latter model, in the second part we examine what I term the “doxological feminism” of Sarah Coakley as it appears…Read more
  •  48
    No Neutral Metaphysics: Miklos Vetö
    Research in Phenomenology 44 (2): 301-314. 2014.
  •  31
    Quiet Powers of the Possible: Interviews in Contemporary French Phenomenology
    with Tarek R. Dika and William Christian Hackett
    Fordham University Press. 2016.
  •  8
    In _God, the Flesh, and the Other, _the philosopher Emmanuel Falque joins the ongoing debate about the role of theology in phenomenology. An important voice in the second generation of French philosophy’s “theological turn,” Falque examines philosophically the fathers of the Church and the medieval theologians on the nature of theology and the objects comprising it. Falque works phenomenology itself into the corpus of theology. Theological concepts thus translate into philosophical terms that ph…Read more