41.
|
Philosophy Today:
Volume >
65 >
Issue: 2
Jessica S. Elkayam
Invitations to Multiplicity:
Revisiting Travel in Response to Mariana Ortega’s In Between
|
|
|
42.
|
Philosophy Today:
Volume >
65 >
Issue: 2
Jennifer Gammage
Not-Being-at-Ease:
Ortega on Heidegger’s Unheimlichkeit and Anzaldúa’s Coatlicue State
|
|
|
43.
|
Philosophy Today:
Volume >
65 >
Issue: 2
Mariana Ortega
In-Between-Worlds and Re-membering:
Latina Feminist Phenomenology and the Existential Analytic of Dasein
|
|
|
44.
|
Philosophy Today:
Volume >
66 >
Issue: 1
Paula Landerreche Cardillo
Review of Adriana Cavarero, Surging Democracy: Notes on Hannah Arendt’s Political Thought
|
|
|
45.
|
Philosophy Today:
Volume >
66 >
Issue: 1
Talia Mae Bettcher
Comments on Gayle Salamon's The Life and Death of Latisha King
|
|
|
46.
|
Philosophy Today:
Volume >
66 >
Issue: 1
Andrea J. Pitts
Reflections on Gayle Salamon's The Life and Death of Latisha King
|
|
|
47.
|
Philosophy Today:
Volume >
66 >
Issue: 1
Alisa Bierria
On Love and the Limits of Theory:
A Commentary on Gayle Salamon’s The Life & Death of Latisha King: A Critical Phenomenology of Transphobia
|
|
|
48.
|
Philosophy Today:
Volume >
66 >
Issue: 1
Gayle Salamon
Heaviness, Suffocation, Loneliness:
Response to Andrea Pitts, Talia Bettcher, and Alisa Bierria
|
|
|
49.
|
Philosophy Today:
Volume >
66 >
Issue: 2
John W. M. Krummel
Reiner Schürmann, Tomorrow the Manifold; Neo-Aristotelianism and the Medieval Renaissance; and The Philosophy of Nietzsche
|
|
|
50.
|
Philosophy Today:
Volume >
66 >
Issue: 2
Walter Brogan
Nancy Tuana and Charles E. Scott, Beyond Philosophy: Nietzsche, Foucault, Anzaldúa
|
|
|
51.
|
Philosophy Today:
Volume >
58 >
Issue: 3
Giovanna Borradori
The Markers of Deconstructive Citizenship:
A Corrective to the Constructionist Approach to Justice
|
|
|
52.
|
Philosophy Today:
Volume >
58 >
Issue: 3
Elaine Kelly
There's a Promise Hidden in the Ruins of a Pure Ethics:
Reviewing Anderson's "Ethics under Erasure"
|
|
|
53.
|
Philosophy Today:
Volume >
58 >
Issue: 3
Jeffrey Bell
Experiments in Thinking:
An Assay of Smith's "Essays on Deleuze"
|
|
|
54.
|
Philosophy Today:
Volume >
59 >
Issue: 3
Keri Walsh, Vasuki Nesiah, Emily Wilson, Stefani Engelstein, Olga Taxidou
Book Discussion: Bonnie Honig, Antigone, Interrupted (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2013)
|
|
|
55.
|
Philosophy Today:
Volume >
59 >
Issue: 3
Evelyn Burg
John Locke in the Twenty-First Century
|
|
|
56.
|
Philosophy Today:
Volume >
59 >
Issue: 3
Oliver George Downing
Surpassing Philosophical Antagonism?:
A Critique of Tom Eyers's Post-Rationalism
|
|
|
57.
|
Philosophy Today:
Volume >
60 >
Issue: 2
Mark Alznauer
Secularizing Kenosis:
Review of Sacrifice in the Post-Kantian Tradition: Perspectivism, Intersubjectivity, and Recognition, by Paolo Diego Bubbio
|
|
|
58.
|
Philosophy Today:
Volume >
60 >
Issue: 2
Johannes Fritsche
National Socialism, Anti-Semitism, and Philosophy in Heidegger and Scheler:
On Peter Trawny’s Heidegger & the Myth of a Jewish World-Conspiracy
abstract |
view |
rights & permissions
According to Trawny, Heidegger’s Black Notebooks show that he turned away from any National Socialism in 1938 and that his thinking could be “contaminated” by National Socialism and anti-Semitism only between 1931 and 1944/1945. However, in this paper it is argued that already in Being and Time (1927) Heidegger had made a case for National Socialism; that he discovered in 1938 the “true” National Socialism, and that Trawny’s main criterion regarding Heidegger’s anti-Semitism is false. Heidegger’s case is compared with Max Scheler, who, because of Hitler, turned from the right to the centre. In addition, alternatives to Trawny’s detailed interpretations of three of Heidegger’s anti-Semitic remarks are offered, it is shown that Trawny misconstrues Heidegger’s anti-Semitism, and the anti-Semitic aspects of Heidegger’s history of Being are presented.
|
|
|
59.
|
Philosophy Today:
Volume >
60 >
Issue: 4
Will Johncock
Richard Grusin, ed., The Nonhuman Turn; and Vicki Kirby, Quantum Anthropologies: Life at Large
|
|
|
60.
|
Philosophy Today:
Volume >
60 >
Issue: 4
James Griffith
Richard F. Hassing, Cartesian Psychophysics and the Whole Nature of Man: On Descartes’s Passions of the Soul
|
|
|