Daniel Rodriguez-Navas
Assistant Professor of Philosophy
Email
danielrn@newschool.edu
Office Location
D - 6 East 16th Street
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Profile
Daniel Rodriguez-Navas works at the intersection of ethics and the history of philosophy. His interest in ethics lies both on theoretical and meta-theoretical questions about the nature of normativity, and on more concrete questions concerning what many think of as mechanisms of exclusion and what the best strategies for dismantling them might be. His historical interests center around the 19th and 20th-century European tradition. His work on the history of philosophy has centered around Nietzsche's views about values and his genealogical approach to morality, and on Foucault’s work on ethics and his views about subjectivity and autonomy.ÌýMore recently, Daniel has developed an interest in narrative approaches to selfhood, insofar as these offer the conceptual resources to move away from the individualist conception of selfhood that has been dominant in the ethical tradition. He has also been working on an article on the politics of narrative film.
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Degrees Held
PhD 2016, University of Chicago
Master II (DEA), 2005, Panthéon-Sorbonne (Paris I)
Mastre I (Maîtrise) 2004, Paris-Sorbonne (Paris IV)
Recent Publications
Articles and Book Chapters
Foucault’s Change of Attitude toward Psychology in 1953. Selections from the First Annual Meeting of the Historical Epistemology Research Group, Vagelli et Moya Diez, eds., Presses de la Sorbonne, France. 2017. Ìý
"Transcendental Imaginations: From the Phenomenological Breakthrough to the Copernican Revolution." Revue Alter, No 14. 2006. [in French]Ìý
Translation
"Reduction, Construction, Destruction – of a Three-Way Dialogue: Natorp, Husserl and Heidegger." Jean-Francois Courtine (Daniel R. Rodriguez Navas and Karl Hefty, translation). Philosophiques. Vol. 36, no. 2. 2009. Ìý
Research Interests
19th and 20th-century European philosophy, value theory, ethics, normativity, agency, philosophy of film
Awards And Honors
Creating Connections Consortium and Middlebury College, Mellon Postdoctoral Fellowship, 2016