•  20
    Pushing the fitting-attitude theory to its limits: Contributions from early phenomenological realism
    Phenomenology and the Cognitive Sciences 1 (online first): 1-24. 2026.
    What makes something aesthetically valuable? The fitting-attitude (FA) theory famously answers: the appropriateness of the subject’s response. Yet this answer is increasingly under pressure, especially as renewed interest in aesthetic realism has called into question whether value depends on attitudes. This paper takes up this tension and explores how early phenomenological realism can reframe the FA theory in a new, dual-aspect light. On this view, emotional attitudes are not value-constituting…Read more
  •  14
    Hubert Dreyfus's philosophical methodology is deeply influenced by Heidegger, emphasizing the importance of interpreting philosophical texts within their historical context and uncovering the phenomena these texts elucidate. Dreyfus excels in engaging philosophical discussions to reveal the contemporary relevance of these texts. His approach is not only to understand their original meanings but also to clarify their contributions to ongoing philosophical dialogues. He contends that philosophical…Read more
  •  59
    This paper examines the divergent views of Moritz Geiger and Edmund Husserl on emotional experience and its relationship to intentionality. While both philosophers emphasize affective intentionality, Geiger posits that emotional experience can exist independently of external objects, highlighting the internal, self-sufficient nature of feeling. Husserl, in contrast, defends the idea that feelings remain directed towards something, even when this relation is not immediately apparent. Through a de…Read more
  •  56
    The paper situates Heidegger’s account of authentic belief within debates on the ethics of belief. After outlining the Heideggerian notion of authentic belief, it examines two apparently opposed interpretations developed in the literature: Dreyfus’s view that authentic belief gains its intelligibility solely from the shared social world, and Crowell’s view that authenticity hinges on the believer’s first-person ownership. The paper argues that each interpretation risks collapsing into moral rela…Read more
  •  22
    Geiger's Critique of Dilettantism: Towards Objectivity in Aesthetic Perception
    Tsinghua Studies in Western Philosophy 10 (1): 259-282. 2024.
    Geiger considers dilettantism as an aesthetic attitude (inner concentration) that undermines the subject's ability to truly perceive the essential value of the artwork and thus calls for outer concentration to actualize the justice of the work itself. Geiger's position suggests that we must pay equitable attention to artworks and that this attitude requires a theory of aesthetic perception -- phenomenological realism. However, the complexity of the aesthetic experience presents Geiger with sever…Read more