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Joshua Kates [19]Joshua L. Kates [2]Joshua Laurence Kates [1]
  1.  49
    Essential history: Jacques Derrida and the development of deconstruction.Joshua Kates - 2005 - Evanston, Ill.: Northwestern University Press.
    However widely--and differently--Jacques Derrida may be viewed as a "foundational" French thinker, the most basic questions concerning his work still remain unanswered: Is Derrida a friend of reason, or philosophy, or rather the most radical of skeptics? Are language-related themes--writing, semiosis--his central concern, or does he really write about something else? And does his thought form a system of its own, or does it primarily consist of commentaries on individual texts? This book seeks to address these questions by returning to (...)
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  2.  58
    Fielding Derrida: philosophy, literary criticism, history, and the work of deconstruction.Joshua Kates - 2008 - New York: Fordham University Press.
    Introduction: Fielding Derrida -- Jacques Derrida's early writings : alongside skepticism, phenomenology -- Analytic philosophy, and literary criticism -- Deconstruction as skepticism -- Derrida, Husserl, and the commentators : a developmental approach -- A transcendental sense of death : Derrida and the philosophy of language -- Literary theory's languages : the deconstruction of sense vs. the deconstruction of reference -- Jacques Derrida and the problem of philosophical and political modernity -- Jacob Klein and Jacques Derrida : the problem of modernity (...)
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  3.  17
    Document And Time.Joshua Kates - 2014 - History and Theory 53 (2):155-174.
    This article explores what it calls the “documentarist” hypothesis: the belief that the subject matter of history, the past, is structurally absent and thus can be reached only by way of documents, testamentary traces of various sorts . The first part of the article works out the documentarist position through interpretations of creative works that embody it and of a variety of reflections on historiography—those of Michel de Certeau and Paul Ricoeur, as well as some “postmodern historiography.” It argues that (...)
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  4. Historicity and Holism: The example of Deleuze.Joshua Kates - 2013 - Diacritics 41 (1):50-77.
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  5.  4
    A Question Concerning Information Technology.Joshua Kates - 2024 - Angelaki 29 (6):32-52.
    This paper explores what may be happening with information and also with happening itself: those versions of the event, of historicizing, deemed suitable to interrogating information. It pairs Claude Shannon’s foundational work on information theory with Martin Heidegger’s meditation on technology (and his evolving understanding of history), investigating each in light of the other. For Heidegger, the question concerning technology does not primarily concern an invention or tool, but a mode of revealing or truth. Similarly, Shannon’s invention is not a (...)
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  6. Neal DeRoo: Futurity in Phenomenology: Promise and Method in Husserl, Levinas, and Derrida: Fordham University Press, New York, 2013, ISBN: 9780823244645, 240 pp, Hardcover, US-$55.Joshua Kates - 2015 - Husserl Studies 31 (1):81-88.
    There is a lot to like in Neal DeRoo’s Futurityin Phenomenology. In it, he canvases his three titular authors’ treatments of time , and his scholarship on all three is impressive. He shows himself familiar with their most decisive texts on this subject, as well as with much of the relevant secondary literature. His treatment of Husserl is especially noteworthy. DeRoo’s treatment of this subject, which in part draws on his previous publications, equals, if not surpasses, especially in its scope (...)
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  7.  12
    A new philosophy of discourse: language unbound.Joshua Kates - 2020 - New York: Bloomsbury Academic.
    Calling into question all structural rules and principles relating to language, Joshua Kates presents a radical new path for interpreting this every day, taken-for-granted tool of communication. Traversing theory, literary criticism, philosophy, and the philosophy of language, the book speaks to contemporary debates on analytical and humanistic modes of inquiry. Language and texts are thought of as active 'events', replete with allusions to history, context and tradition that are always in the making. This emphasis makes the case for a rigorous (...)
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  8.  23
    A Problem of No Species; or Jacques Derrida’s Contribution to Phenomenology.Joshua Kates - 2006 - New Yearbook for Phenomenology and Phenomenological Philosophy 6 (1):199-235.
  9.  23
    Comme or the Last Word: An Afterword to the Evans/Kates/Lawlor Debate and Correspondence July, 1996.Joshua Kates - 1998 - Philosophy Today 42 (2):211-226.
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  10.  20
    Deconstruction as Skepticism: The First Wave.Joshua L. Kates - 2002 - Journal of the British Society for Phenomenology 33 (2):188-205.
  11.  97
    Derrida, Husserl, and the commentators: Introducing a developmental approach.Joshua L. Kates - 2003 - Husserl Studies 19 (2):101-129.
    This article argues that only a developmental approach-one that views Derrida's 1967 work on Husserl, La Voix et la phénomène, in light of Derrida's three earlier encounters with Husserl's work and recognizes significant differences among them-is able to resolve the bitter controversy that has lately surrounded Derrida's Husserl interpretation. After first reviewing the impasse reached in these debates, the need for "a new hermeneutics of deconstruction" is set out, and, then, the reasons why strong development has been rejected internal to (...)
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  12.  20
    Letter to Evans.Joshua Kates - 1998 - Philosophy Today 42 (2):164-169.
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  13.  81
    Modernity and Intentional History.Joshua Kates - 2005 - Philosophy Today 49 (Supplement):193-203.
  14.  35
    ‘Neither a god nor ANT can save us’: Latour, Heidegger and History.Joshua Kates - 2017 - Paragraph 40 (2):153-173.
    Bruno Latour's work represents a powerful attempt to move beyond our usual constructions of knowledge and disciplinarity, as well as of history. Nevertheless, in his often playful appeals to metaphysics, Latour, I argue, sometimes revives that subject/object dichotomy he contests; similarly, at moments, he recurs to an unthematized model of history as periodized to motivate his own project. Latour's discussion of Heidegger, as well as Heidegger's own writings provide the occasion for pursuing these questions — of the disadvantages and advantages (...)
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  15.  34
    Pragmatics and Semantics and Husserl and Derrida.Joshua Kates - 2015 - Philosophy Compass 10 (12):828-840.
    This piece undertakes to sketch the contemporary approaches toward meaning known as pragmatics and semantics. Today, this pairing is associated with a controversy or question that concerns the proposition. Yet, while the pragmatics/semantics debate attests to the proposition's precise status being in doubt, the underlying belief remains that the work of the proposition or something like it – e.g., utterances, a portion of which function propositionally – eventually can be established. Jacques Derrida in his writings on Husserl questions even this (...)
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  16.  77
    Philosophy First, Last and Counting.Joshua Kates - 2004 - Graduate Faculty Philosophy Journal 25 (1):65-97.
    This essay continues the reconsideration of the thought of Jacob Klein now under way, largely by situating one key phase of it in the context of Edmund Husserl’s first writings on arithmetic. Klein’s most important work is Greek Mathematics and the Origin of Algebra. In its first part, Klein undertakes the retrieval of the ancient account of number, setting forth the understanding of ἀριθμόσ articulated by the Pythagoreans, Plato, and Aristotle. This retrieval is in part meant to pave the way (...)
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  17.  57
    ‘Signature Event Context’ … in, well, context.Joshua Kates - 2018 - Journal of the Philosophy of History 12 (1):117-141.
    _ Source: _Page Count 25 This article concerns a moment in French intellectual history when the self-evidences of structuralism become doubtful under the pressure exerted by _discourse_; it thus treats a _second turn_ within the linguistic turn as it occurred in France. The work of Emile Benveniste, and texts by Jean-Francois Lyotard and Paul Ricoeur, flesh out this development. I use them, as well as John Searle’s response, to approach anew Derrida’s essay “Signature Event Context.” Derrida’s distance from this second (...)
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  18.  57
    The Problem of Bedeutung in Derrida and Husserl: Final Version of a Paper delivered at the 1994 Meeting of The Society for Phenomenology and Existential Philosophy.Joshua Kates - 1998 - Philosophy Today 42 (2):194-199.
  19.  61
    Two Versions of Husserl’s Late History.Joshua Kates - 2005 - New Yearbook for Phenomenology and Phenomenological Philosophy 5:245-275.
  20.  19
    The voice that keeps reading.Joshua Kates - 1993 - Philosophy Today 37 (3):318-335.
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  21.  54
    Lawlor, Leonard, Derrida and Husserl: The basic problem of phenomenology. Bloomington: Indiana university press 2002 (studies in continental thought), ISBN 0-253-34049-7 cloth, 49.95; ISBN 0-253-21508-0, paper, 19.95. [REVIEW]Joshua Kates - 2005 - Husserl Studies 21 (1):55-64.