I am a philosopher and writer (of sorts) based in New York City. My interests are primarily in the theoretical development of the concept of necessity throughout Western modernity, discerning an important difference between the grammar of moral and existential “need.” It is a vocational mission of mine to seek those things which are most important for a good life while preserving the importance of pluralistic modes of being as sacred in their own ways. I am currently interested in the Hebraic / biblical concept of “election” as well as the relationship between existential and moral necessity, and their usefulness in understanding contemporary ethical problems including personal identity, leadership, institutional responsibility, and resource distribution.
I hold a master’s degree in Philosophy from The New School for Social Research in New York City and hold a bachelor’s degree in Philosophy, Sociology, and Psychology from the CUNY Baccalaureate for Unique and Interdisciplinary Studies.
For work, I am a higher education systems analyst with expertise in business data management and solutions. My joy is in being a volunteer speech and debate coach for high school boys at my own alma mater.
That latter point is important. What does it mean to love others in the same way we are asked to rely disinterestedly on God? If I can indulge myself in borrowing ideas from my go-to philosopher Emmanuel Levinas, the responsibility that originates from an “immemorial past” in the face of the Other is analogous (or perhaps synonymous, if we take Jesus at his word in Matthew 25:40-45) to the relationship of responsibility towards the demands of God.
Christian charity is grounded in obedience to the law of love that emerges from the particular face-to-face relationship with another. For Levinas this otherness contains a trace of the divine; for the Christian, it is the face of God. Penance is reconciliation then, both turning a person back to God and likewise does turning them back and reorienting them towards other individuals.