Works by Scott, Charles E. (exact spelling)

91 found
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  1. The Question of Ethics: Nietzsche, Foucault, Heidegger.Charles E. SCOTT - 1990 - Indiana University Press.
    "... stimulating and insightful... a thoroughly researched and timely contribution to the secondary literature of ethics... " —Library Journal "His important new work establishes Scott... as one of the foremost interpreters of the Continental philosophical tradition of the US.... Necessary for anyone working in ethics or the Continental tradition." —Choice "... a provocative discourse on the consequences of the ethical in the thought of Nietzsche, Foucault, and Heidegger." —The Journal of Religion Charles E. Scott's challenging book advances the broad claim (...)
  2.  42
    Companion to Heidegger's Contributions to Philosophy.Charles E. Scott, Susan Schoenbohm, Daniela Vallega-Neu & Alejandro Arturo Vallega (eds.) - 2001 - Indiana University Press.
    In theCompanion to Heidegger's Contributions to Philosophyan international group of fourteen Heidegger scholars shares strategies for reading and understanding this challenging work.
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  3.  8
    Beyond philosophy: Nietzsche, Foucault, Anzaldúa.Nancy Tuana & Charles E. Scott - 2020 - Bloomington, Indiana, USA: Indiana University Press. Edited by Charles E. Scott.
    Questions of whether anything exceeds reasonable sense and meaning have persisted throughout the history of philosophy. These questions have even continued in postmodern thought as well as in liberatory philosophies in which many kinds of events and lineages are experienced and seen as beyond philosophy. In this cowritten text, distinguished philosophers Nancy Tuana and Charles Scott pay particular attention to lineages and their dynamism as they develop the idea of things beyond philosophy, beyond norms. This is not a history of (...)
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  4.  47
    Ethics at the boundary: Beginning with Foucault.Charles E. Scott - 2011 - Journal of Speculative Philosophy 25 (2):203-212.
    I mean by the phrase "taking differences seriously" freeing differences from the conceptual and linguistic formations that promote recognitions based on categorical grouping and what we might call domination by images of familiar normalcy and global similarities. 1 I have in mind a discipline of turning out of those ways of speaking and thinking that intend to bring unity and essential harmony to highly diverse events and entities. Those are ways of thinking and speaking that assume that original identities define (...)
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  5.  55
    On the Advantages and Disadvantages of Ethics and Politics.Charles E. Scott - 1996 - Indiana University Press.
    "... remarkable account of the impact of postmodern philosophy on the question of ethics and politics... commendable also for its balanced view of Heidegger’s relationship to politics and ethics.... an excellent account of Heidegger’s philosophical understanding of technology..." —Choice This book takes as its point of departure the question of ethics: that values and their pursuit in the West often perpetuate their own worst enemies. At issue are the dangers in the structures and movements of images, values, and ways of (...)
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  6.  20
    Interrogating the Tradition: Hermeneutics and the History of Philosophy.Charles E. Scott & John Sallis (eds.) - 2000 - State University of New York Press.
    Constitutes a thoughtful survey of contemporary hermeneutics in its historical context.
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  7.  28
    The power of medicine, the power of ethics.Charles E. Scott - 1987 - Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 12 (4):335-350.
    Foucault's genealogies and archeologies provide occasions in which one may come to know the powers, accidents, and influences that have structured a particular knowledge or discipline. The Birth of the Clinic shows the development of modern medicine in a process by which rational inference and emphasis on the history of a disease are replaced by pathological anatomy. In modern anatomy, the corpse, not reason, became the “space” of modern medical knowledge. In this “space” developed a confederation of dead body, knowledge, (...)
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  8.  35
    Living with Indifference.Charles E. Scott - 2007 - Indiana University Press.
    Living with Indifference is about the dimension of life that is utterly neutral, without care, feeling, or personality. In this provocative work that is anything but indifferent, Charles E. Scott explores the ways people have spoken and thought about indifference. Exploring topics such as time, chance, beauty, imagination, violence, and virtue, Scott shows how affirming indifference can be beneficial, and how destructive consequences can occur when we deny it. Scott’s preoccupation with indifference issues a demand for focused attention in connection (...)
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  9.  42
    The Lives of Things.Charles E. Scott - 2002 - Indiana University Press.
    "Like Foucault and Levinas before him, though in very different ways, Scott makes an oblique incision into phenomenology... [it is] the kind of book to which people dazed by the specters of nihilism will be referred by those in the know." —David Wood "... refreshing and original." —Edward S. Casey In The Lives of Things, Charles E. Scott reconsiders our relationships with ordinary, everyday things and our capacity to engage them in their particularity. He takes up the Greek notion of (...)
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  10.  44
    Caputo on obligation without origin: Discussion of against ethics.Charles E. Scott - 1995 - Research in Phenomenology 25 (1):249-260.
  11.  63
    Foucault, ethics, and the fragmented subject.Charles E. Scott - 1992 - Research in Phenomenology 22 (1):104-137.
  12.  10
    Zuspiel and Entscheidung.Charles E. Scott - 1997 - Philosophy Today 41 (Supplement):161-167.
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  13.  12
    Question of Ethics in Our Time, the (with Letters From Heidegger).Zygmunt Adamczewski & Charles E. Scott - 1997 - State University of New York Press.
    A proposal for individual responsibility in communal life.
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  14.  72
    The Birth of an Identity: A Response to Del McWhorter's Bodies and Pleasures.Charles E. Scott - 2001 - Hypatia 16 (3):106 - 114.
    First, I engage Del McWhorter's confessional voice in the context of her thought and emphasize her claim that even "objective knowledge" often has an indirectly confessional aspect. Second, I give an account of the value of historicity and genealogy in McWhorter's understanding of knowing and subjectivity. Third, I address her reconfiguration of the subjectivity of desiring by prioritizing pleasure in the project of "becoming truly gay." Finally, I assess the meaning of her phrase, "straying afield from myself.".
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  15.  17
    Crises in Continental Philosophy.Arleen B. Dallery & Charles E. Scott (eds.) - 1990 - State University of New York Press.
    This book punctuates the moments of crisis in continental thought from the foundational crisis of reason in Husserl’s call for a rigorous science of phenomenology to the current crisis of postmodernism and its rejection of Husserl’s metanarrative of history and rationality. The mediating links between these moments is the centrality of the epochal history of Being, the power of cultural and disciplinary practices, and the dispersal of meaning in the post-Husserlian and post-subjective philosophies of Heidegger, Foucault, Derrida, and others. Included (...)
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  16.  9
    Ethics and Danger: Essays on Heidegger and Continental Thought.Arleen B. Dallery & Charles E. Scott (eds.) - 1992 - State University of New York Press.
    Ethics and Danger examines Heidegger’s association with German National Socialism and attempts to understand both the question of politics in Heidegger’s thought and the thought that gives rise to that question. It explores the contribution of Heidegger’s work to issues of ethics, technology, and social theory, as well as his relationship to other thinkers such as Parmenides, Aristotle, Hegel, Husserl, Benjamin, Levinas, Rorty, Foucault, and Derrida. Finally, it addresses the more general question of the future of ethical thought within continental (...)
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  17.  14
    The Question of the Other: Essays in Contemporary Continental Philosophy.Arleen B. Dallery & Charles E. Scott (eds.) - 1989 - State University of New York Press.
    Papers based on the work of Emmanuel Levinas' account of the face of the other.
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  18.  50
    Brill Online Books and Journals.Richard Kearney, László Tengelyi, Patrick L. Bourgeois, David M. Rasmussen, Bernard P. Dauenhauer, David M. Kaplan, Charles E. Scott, Bernard Freydberg, Jamey Findling & Eric C. Sanday - 2007 - Research in Phenomenology 37 (2):271-278.
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  19.  6
    The Human search: an introduction to philosophy.John Lachs & Charles E. Scott (eds.) - 1981 - New York: Oxford University Press.
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  20.  22
    Appearances.Charles E. Scott - 1998 - Graduate Faculty Philosophy Journal 20 (2-1):219-231.
  21.  60
    Archetypes and consciousness.Charles E. Scott - 1977 - Idealistic Studies 7 (January):28-49.
    When we consider the concepts and assumptions of a way of interpreting we are not abstracting ourselves from concrete analytical practice, but are dealing with one dimension of that practice. When a person’s assumptions and concepts change, aspects of his therapeutic work will also change. The philosophical ideal of conceptual clarity means that one strives to be able to recognize how he interprets what is going on—he strives to recognize how he proceeds with the therapeutic process in relation to other (...)
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  22.  36
    Άδικία and Catastrophe: Heidegger's "Anaximander Fragment".Charles E. Scott - 1994 - Heidegger Studies 10:127-142.
  23.  28
    A reply to jack Caputo.Charles E. Scott - 1995 - Research in Phenomenology 25 (1):269-272.
  24.  14
    A Response to John Lachs on Current French Philosophy.Charles E. Scott - 1996 - Journal of Speculative Philosophy 10 (1):24 - 28.
  25.  20
    A reply to Caputo, jack.Charles E. Scott - 1995 - Research in Phenomenology 25 (1):269-272.
  26. Boundaries in Mind: A Study of Immediate Awareness Based on Psychotherapy.Charles E. Scott - 1983 - Human Studies 6 (4):393-400.
     
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  27.  23
    Consciousness and the Conditions of Consciousness.Charles E. Scott - 1972 - Review of Metaphysics 25 (4):625 - 637.
    The idea of presentation may also help as one attempts to conceive the nature of self-awareness. In considering self-awareness I want to simplify the discussion of presentation, for the sake of accessibility, by not investigating the nature of worldly presentations. I want to focus on the immediate presentation of those structures which present things to man pre-thematically. I am interested, for example, in the way that intentions present themselves in a conscious state and not in the way something else is (...)
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  28.  43
    Cultural Borders.Charles E. Scott - 2012 - Research in Phenomenology 42 (2):157-205.
    Abstract This essay is motivated by the question, how might we describe the occurrences of cultural borders? It is organized in three sections with these titles: A. Borders of Concealment and Translation; B. Attunement with Fragmented, Differential Borders; C. Metaphors, Relations of Power, Borderlands. I limit these topics by focusing primarily on cultural borders and transformations within the United States. My aims within the context of these situated accounts are to encourage greater awareness of borders as events that often have (...)
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  29.  48
    Comment by Charles E. Scott.Charles E. Scott - 1970 - Proceedings of the Hegel Society of America 1:45-49.
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  30.  16
    Comments on Foucault's Anachronistic Truths.Charles E. Scott - 1985 - Journal of Philosophy 82 (10):547.
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  31.  20
    Daseinsanalysis: an Interpretation.Charles E. Scott - 1975 - Philosophy Today 19 (3):182-197.
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  32.  5
    Differences, Borders, Fusions.Charles E. Scott - 2015 - Journal of Speculative Philosophy 29 (1):16-24.
    ABSTRACT In the context of Dewey's account of habits and conduct, we understand will to refer not to the subjective agency of an autonomous person or to any kind of a priori capacity of human reason or spirit but to habitual interactions in the interdependence of people with their social and natural environments. For Dewey, this claim suggests that in the absence of transcendental guidance or a socially independent inner and given moral conscience, human natures are grounded in indeterminate freedom. (...)
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  33.  42
    Der Meistersinger.Charles E. Scott - 2007 - Philosophy Today 51 (2):231-235.
  34. Foucault and the Question of Humanism.Charles E. Scott - 1991 - In David Goicoechea, John C. Luik & Tim Madigan (eds.), The Question of Humanism: Challenges and Possibilities. Prometheus Books.
     
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  35.  46
    Foucault, Specific Intellectuals and Political Power.Charles E. Scott - 2000 - Studies in Practical Philosophy 2 (1):22-30.
  36.  3
    Foucault, Specific Intellectuals, and Political Power.Charles E. Scott - 2003 - International Studies in Philosophy 35 (2):41-50.
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  37.  12
    Fichte Today?Charles E. Scott - 1978 - Idealistic Studies 8 (2):169-178.
    Why Fichte? I wondered, when the six-day Fichte Tagung was announced for Zwettl, Austria. Hegel and Kant and Hume had had their festivals. I expected that. But in spite of some party spirit for Fichte there is hardly a competitive passion on the part of Fichte people against Kant and Hegel and Hume people that would prompt a world congress. There is no International Society for the study of Fichte. There is indeed intense interest in his work, witnessed in the (...)
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  38.  17
    Genealogy and différance.Charles E. Scott - 1990 - Research in Phenomenology 20 (1):55-66.
  39.  17
    Heidegger and consciousness.Charles E. Scott - 1970 - Southern Journal of Philosophy 8 (4):355-372.
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  40.  54
    Heidegger and Psychoanalysis: The Seminars in Zollikon.Charles E. Scott - 1990 - Heidegger Studies 6:131-141.
  41.  38
    Heidegger and the question of ethics.Charles E. Scott - 1988 - Research in Phenomenology 18 (1):23-40.
  42.  20
    History and truth.Charles E. Scott - 1982 - Man and World 15 (1):55-66.
  43.  1
    Heidegger's Attempt to Communicate a Mystery.Charles E. Scott - 1966 - Philosophy Today 10 (2):132.
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  44.  4
    Heroes in Twilight.Charles E. Scott - 1999 - Southern Journal of Philosophy 37 (S1):151-165.
  45. Heidegger’s Practical Politics.Charles E. Scott - 2002 - In Fran?ois Raffoul & David Pettigrew (eds.), Heidegger and Practical Philosophy. State University of New York Press. pp. 173-190.
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  46.  34
    Heidegger’s Question About Thought.Charles E. Scott - 1964 - Southern Journal of Philosophy 2 (4):174-179.
  47.  30
    Interpreting Silence?Charles E. Scott - 2020 - Research in Phenomenology 50 (1):1-16.
    The guiding question in this essay is, how might we speak of silence—interpret silence—without objectifying it and losing a sense of it in the way we speak of it. That means that prioritizing the value of direct linguistic language, comprehension, interpreting what other hermeneuts say about silence, or attempting to make it visible is not a viable option. The myths of Hermes and Metis, however, might be integral to the lineages of speaking and knowing that are more suited to speaking (...)
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  48.  1
    1 In the Name of Goodness.Charles E. Scott - 2008 - In Shannon Sullivan & Dennis J. Schmidt (eds.), Difficulties of ethical life. New York: Fordham University Press. pp. 11-24.
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  49.  5
    Nietzsche: Feeling, Transmission, Phusis.Charles E. Scott - 1998 - Journal of Nietzsche Studies 16:49-79.
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  50.  5
    Nietzsche.Charles E. Scott - 2017 - In Simon Critchley & William R. Schroeder (eds.), A Companion to Continental Philosophy. Oxford, UK: Blackwell. pp. 153–161.
    We can appreciate the strength of Friedrich Nietzsche's thought in the transformation of many of the ideas and values that have formed our Western heritage. This strength is figured in part by the questions that Nietzsche generated concerning traditional concepts of reason, nature, God, time, religion, memory, and morality. Hans‐Georg gadamer (see Article 38), a leading continental philosopher speaking when he was ninety years old, remarked that an entire generation of thinkers and artists in early twentieth‐century Europe found in Nietzsche's (...)
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