- Christopher Yeomans, The Politics of German Idealism: Law and Social Change at the Turn of the 19th Century (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2023).
- Sally Sedgwick, Time and History in Hegelian Thought and Spirit (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2023)
- Charles Bambach, Of An Alien Homecoming: Reading Heidegger’s Hölderlin (New York: SUNY Press, 2022)
- “Minerva Has Written Her Physics”
- Review of Sarah Broadie’s Plato’s Sun-Like Good: Dialectic in the Republic
- Open to Encounter – Heidegger on Being Us
- The Propositions of Freedom – On Kant’s Distinction between the Moral Law and the Practical Postulate
- How Much Is the Interpreter of an Artwork Bound by the Author’s Intention?
- Hegel and the Political Economy of the Family – Property, Subsistence, and Labor
- On a Supposed Contradiction in Max Weber’s Logic of Science – The Realism-Idealism Problem in the Cultural Sciences
- Φρόνησις and Instrumentality – The Import of Aristotle’s Book 6 of the Nicomachean Ethics Today
- Trust in the World – Løgstrup on the Conditions of Shared Moral Life
- Decolonizing Damiens – The Coloniality of Sovereignty and Government by Terror
- Fighting for Exploitation As If It Were Rebellion – Spinoza, Marx, and Subjection Today
- Making Conceptual Space for the Unconscious – Kant, Schopenhauer, and Freud
- Sarah Ahmed, Complaint!
- Emmanuel Alloa, Looking through Images: A Phenomenology of Visual Media
- Review of Ágnes Heller’s Tragedy and Philosophy: A Parallel History
- Elena Ficara, The Form of Truth: Hegel’s Philosophical Logic
- On Seeing What There Is to See – Nietzsche on Forgetting and Aspectival Captivity
- The Need, the Duty
- Being Present – The Existential Challenges of Remembering and Forgetting
- Remembering Women – Hegel, Irigaray, and Beauvoir on Women and Memory
- Memory, Technology, and Wisdom
- The Implex of Oblivion
- Melancholic Imprisonment in Memory – How “Never Again” Crumbled When Russia Invaded Ukraine
- The Remembered Self – Memory Studies through the Eyes of Phenomenology
- Introduction – Forgetting and Memory
- Mary C. Rawlinson, The Betrayal of Substance: Death, Literature, and Sexual Difference in Hegel’s Phenomenology of Spirit
- François Raffoul, Thinking the Event
- Hopes for Nonviolence – Recent Work in Feminist Ethics from Judith Butler and Adriana Cavarero
- The Resurgence of Richard Rorty – Review of Richard Rorty’s Pragmatism as Anti-Authoritarianism
- Proto-Phenomenology and the Work of Truth – Hope in a Time of Degradation
- “Walten” in Schleiermacher, Heidegger, and Derrida – Purifying Plato and Poeticizing the Purified Plato
- The Art of Second Nature – Modern Culture after Kant
- Qualifying Disqualification and Its Inversions – Power after Foucault and the Distributions of Incapacity
- John Sallis, The Logos of the Sensible World: Merleau-Ponty’s Phenomenological Philosophy, ed. Richard Rojcewicz
- From One to Many, and Back Again – Review of Dmitri Nikulin’s Neoplatonism in Late Antiquity
- Can We Find Our Mothers in Time? – Review of Fanny Söderbäck’s Revolutionary Time: On Time and Difference in Kristeva and Irigaray
- On Different Ways to the Highest Good
- Normativity as a Poetic Quality – Discourse Ethics in Milton and Garnier
- Marrano of Reason
- Spinoza and Freud – Psychoanalytic Reflections on Immanence, Finitude, and Emancipation
- The Antinomy of History – Reflections on Yovel’s Kant and the Philosophy of History
- On the Dependency Structure of Self-Consciousness and the Ethical Constitution of Reason – Reflections on Yovel’s Hegel Interpretation
- The Fragility of Compassion – Arendt’s Appraisal of Empathic Solidarity
- Notes On Recent Work
- Lucas Fain, Primal Philosophy: Rousseau with Laplanche (Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield, 2021)
- Massimiliano Tomba, Insurgent Universality: An Alternative Legacy of Modernity (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2019)
- “Participation of the People through Its Delegates”: Montesquieu, Kant, and Hegel on German Freedom
- Review of Dorota M. Dutsch’s Pythagorean Women Philosophers: Between Belief and Suspicion
- The Place of Marx in Reiner Schürmann’s Work: On the Tenacious Life of Ghosts
- From “Vegetable Values” to the Human Animal: Wynter and Foucault on Race and the Unsettling of Culture
- Heidegger, Our Monstrous Site: On Reiner Schürmann’s Reading of the Beiträge
- “Only Proteus Can Save Us Now”: On Anarchy and Broken Hegemonies
- Introduction to “‘Only Proteus Can Save Us Now’: On Anarchy and Broken Hegemonies”
- A Feminist Genealogy of the Post-Enlightenment Subject: With the Marquis de Sade’s Juliette
- Difference in Plato’s Timaeus
- Ian Alexander Moore, Eckhart, Heidegger, and the Imperative of Releasement
- Hegel between Aristotle and Kant – Notes on Two Recent Studies
- Liane Carlson, Contingency and the Limits of History: How Touch Shapes Experience and Meaning
- The Place of the World-Soul in the Development of Maimon’s Thought
- On the World-Soul (Entelechia Universi)
- The Dialectical Dynamic of Life’s Self-Preservation in Hans Jonas’ Philosophical Biology
- More than a Mother Tongue – Derrida, Arendt, Cassin
- Derrida, Austin, and the Destabilization of Signification – A Missed Opportunity?
- The Second Person in Fichte and Levinas
- Changing What We Desire – Olympiodorus on Person-Sensitivity and the Superiority of the Platonic Method
- Sandro Mezzadra and Brett Neilson, The Politics of Operations: Excavating Contemporary Capitalism
- Skepticism toward Violence and the Vigilance for Peace – Reflections on James Dodd’s Reading of Max Scheler and the First World War
- Nancy Fraser and Rahel Jaeggi, Capitalism: A Conversation in Critical Theory
- Deborah Cook, Adorno, Foucault and the Critique of the West
- The “Second-Century” Marx
- Queer Autoarte – A Differential Aesthesis of the Limen
- What Is Decolonial Critique?
- Working through Critical Theory’s Colonial Unconscious – Mbembe, Adorno, and the End of Progress
- Critique of Decolonial Reason – On the Philosophy of the Calibans
- Philosophy, Coloniality, and the Politics of Remembrance
- Introduction: Philosophy and Coloniality
- A Running Leap into the There – Heidegger’s “Running Notes on Being and Time”
- Wittgenstein’s Rejection of the “Queer”
- The Reach of Shame
- Richard J. Bernstein, Why Read Hannah Arendt Now
- Simon Critchley, Tragedy, the Greeks and Us
- On the Responsibility of the Philosopher and the Artist
- Alan Bass, Fetishism, Psychoanalysis, and Philosophy: The Iridescent Thing
- Pragmatic Naturalism – John Dewey’s Living Legacy
- Introduction to the Exchange between Rudolf Bultmann and Hans Jonas on Hans Jonas’ “Essay on Immortality”
- Exchange on Hans Jonas’ Essay on Immortality
- Materials and Elements in Art
- Beyond “Kaput” – Horace Kallen and Kallenism at The New School for Social Research
- Are There Limitations to Toleration in a Free Society?
- Susanne K. Langer’s Theory of Mind and Living Form – Introduction to “Materials and Elements in Art”
- Theory of the Priority of the Ordinal over the Cardinal Numbers – Philosophical Principles of Mathematics
- Democracy – The Politicizing of Society
- The Simul – Reiner Schürmann Reads Kant through Luther
- Neo-Aristotelianism – On the Medieval Renaissance and William of Ockham
- Introduction to “Neo-Aristotelianism: On the Medieval Renaissance and William of Ockham”
- Introduction – 100 Years of Philosophy at The New School
- The Importance of Knowing Greek – Reflections on Immigration and the Philosophy of Transferable Values
- On the Genealogy of Color: A Case Study in Historicized Conceptual Analysis
- Descartes for Philosophers – Review of Jean-Luc Marion’s On Descartes’ Passive Thought: The Myth of Cartesian Dualism
- Ponderings XII–XV: Black Notebooks 1939–1941
- Aberrant Movements: The Philosophy of Gilles Deleuze
- The Category and the Office of Proclamation, with Particular Reference to Luther and Kierkegaard
- Indirect Communication, Authority, and Proclamation as a Normative Power – Løgstrup’s Critique of Kierkegaard
- What Is Understanding?
- A Cartesian Misreading of Spinoza’s Understanding of Adequate Knowledge
- How Philosophy and Sociology Need Each Other – A Conversation
- The Relationship between Nature and Technology as a Philosophical Problem
- Rorty and (the Politics of) Love
- Beyond the Living and the Dead – On Post-Kantian Philosophy as Historical Appropriation
- Hans Blumenberg’s Early Theory of Technology and History
- Philosophy and the Patience of Film in Cavell and Nancy
- Review of Andrew Norris’ Becoming Who We Are: Politics and Practical Philosophy in the Work of Stanley Cavell
- Wittgenstein and Pragmatism: On Certainty in the Light of Peirce and James
- Toward a Non-Ideal Philosophy of Language
- Philosophy, Literature, and the Burden of Theory – Review of Toril Moi’s Revolution of the Ordinary: Literary Studies after Wittgenstein, Austin, and Cavell
- On Homecoming – Wittgenstein, Cavell, and the Odyssey
- Aesthetic Self-Consciousness and Sensus Communis – On the Significance of Ordinary Language in Kant’s Analytic of the Beautiful
- Category Mistakes and Ordinary Language
- The Vulnerability of the Ordinary – Goffman, Reader of Austin
- A Wittgensteinian/Austinian Qualified Defense of Ryle on Know-How
- Conceptual Analysis, Practical Commitment, and Ordinary Language
- Introduction – Who’s Afraid of Ordinary Language Philosophy? A Plea for Reviving a Wrongly Reviled Tradition
- The Concept of History
- Review of Emmanuel Alloa’s Resistance of the Sensible World: An Introduction to Merleau-Ponty
- Space, Time, and Other: A Study in the Method and Limits of Transcendental Phenomenology
- Introduction to the Exchange between Abbt and Mendelssohn
- Exchange on the Vocation of Man – The 287th Letter Concerning the Latest Literature
- The Habermas/Luhmann Controversy and the “Cybernetics Moment”
- Kant on Time and Revolution
- Self-Identity in Spinoza’s Account of Finite Individuals
- Infopolitics, Biopolitics, Anatomopolitics – Toward a Genealogy of the Power of Data
- “I Value Effort above Everything Else” – Bergson’s Response to the Question of Egoism
- Philosophy and the Problem of Beauty in Heidegger’s Translation of “Justice”
- Learning to Live with Derrida and Levinas
- Articulating the World: Conceptual Understanding and the Scientific Image
- Heidegger: The Question of Being and History
- Consequences of Liberal Naturalism – Review of Hilary Putnam’s Naturalism, Realism, and Normativity
- Pragmatism, Analysis, and Inspiration – Continuing Education with Hilary Putnam
- Putnam’s Happy Ending? – Pragmatism and the Realism Debates
- Putnam and Propaganda
- The Complementarity of Means and Ends – Putnam, Pragmatism, and the Critique of Economic Rationality
- Hilary Putnam – The Pragmatist Enlightenment
- A Problem with Conceptually Relating Race and Class, Regarding the Question of Choice
- Vico’s History of Philosophy
- Cassirer and Rousseau – The Problem of a Universal Principle of Justice
- On Active Solitude – Caring for the Self in Hannah Arendt’s Moral Philosophy
- Inside Ethics: On the Demands of Moral Thought
- Notes on Recent Work
- Black Bodies Matter – A Reading of Ta-Nehisi Coates’ Between the World and Me
- Memory of a Sign without History – Enlightenment, Revelation, and Wonder in Spinoza
- Review of Stanley Rosen’s Platonic Production
- Imagining Modernity – Kant’s Wager on Possibility
- Edith Stein’s Second Account of Empathy and Its Philosophical Implications
- Immortality and Despair – Situating Kierkegaard in the Texture of Modernity as a Step toward Responsive Anthropology
- Rethinking Thinking – Heidegger in the 1950s
- Divine Deception in Descartes’ Meditations
- The Equivocity of Habit
- Philosophy’s Task
- Capitalism in the Web of Life: Ecology and the Accumulation of Capital
- Herder: Aesthetics against Imperialism
- Multilayer History: Journeying on the Roads Not Taken – The Possessive Individual and Other Trajectories
- Phenomenology, Historical Significance, and the Limits of Representation – Perspectives on David Carr’s Experience and History
- Italian Modernism as a Philosophical Problem? – Review of Rocco Rubini’s The Other Renaissance
- From Utopia to Dystopia – A Story of Historical Imagination
- Analytic Philosophy of History – Origins, Eclipse, and Revival
- “There is No Verb for History” – Practicing Historians and Postmodern Theory
- Establishing the Laws of History – Or, Why Tolstoy Is Not Homer
- Tocqueville and Flaubert on 1848 – The Sublimity of Revolution
- Progress, Normativity, and the Dynamics of Social Change – An Exchange
- On Historicity
- Introduction