Philosophy Faculty, Staff, Student Scholarship
This collection holds the creative and scholarly works of the Department of Philosophy's faculty, staff, and students. It includes scholarly content such as journal articles, book chapters, conference papers, etc.
Submissions from 2023
Acceptance Governance, Jeremy Bendik-Keymer
Of Life Beyond Domination: Capability Determination, Surfacing, Norm Play, Jeremy Bendik-Keymer
The Self-Work of Planetary Justice, Jeremy Bendik-Keymer
Classical American Pragmatism as Antiscientism, Parysa Clare Mostajir
Submissions from 2022
A Planetary Imagination: Responses to Chakrabarty’s Socio-Natural Historiography, Editorial Introduction, Jeremy Bendik-Keymer
The Planetary Sublime Part II of The Problem of an Unloving World, Jeremy Bendik-Keymer
Submissions from 2021
Unacceptable Agency Part I of The Problem of an Unloving World, Jeremy Bendik-Keymer
Submissions from 2020
Involving Anthroponomy in the Anthropocene: On Decoloniality, Jeremy Bendik-Keymer
Submissions from 2019
Lostness, Jeremy Bendik-Keymer
The Space in a Life Beyond Skill, Jeremy Bendik-Keymer
Submissions from 2016
“Goodness itself must change” – Anthroponomy in an age of socially-caused, planetary environmental change, Jeremy Bendik-Keymer
Submissions from 2013
Poor in Practical Capacity: How ‘Environmental Alienation’ Is Really a Deficit of Political Know-how, Jeremy Bendik-Keymer
Presentism the Magnifier, Jeremy Bendik-Keymer
Submissions from 2012
A Minimal Participatory Condition on Democratic Right, Jeremy Bendik-Keymer
Do You Have a Conscience?, Jeremy Bendik-Keymer
Sustainability Trajectory and Possibility, Roger Saillant and Jeremy Bendik-Keymer
Submissions from 2009
Ad Hominem Address, Jeremy Bendik-Keymer
The Practice of Ethics, Jeremy Bendik-Keymer
Submissions from 2006
The Ecological Life: Discovering Citizenship and a Sense of Humanity, Jeremy Bendik-Keymer
Submissions from 2004
Kierkegaard as an Enlightenment Thinker, Jeremy Bendik-Keymer
Mining in Irian Jaya: How Citizens Should Think about Environmental Justice, Jeremy Bendik-Keymer