- Saving the Subject: How I Found You When I Almost Lost Me (CFP, August 2024) (my philosophical memoir on identity, relationship, and faith after traumatic brain injury). Available in Paperback, Hardcover, and E-book/Kindle formats.
- “How One Lawyer Changed My Life Post-TBI” (The Verdict, Spring 2024, Vol. 42 (ITLA).
- Cameron M. Fathauer, “The New EU Copyright Directive––Good News or Bad News?”, 3–4, American Bar Association, Arts & Cultural Heritage Law (Spring 2019)
- “Leff to Right” –– This essay, written during law school, examines Arthur Leff’s devastating 1979 challenge to legal philosophy: “Who among us ought to be able to declare law that ought to be obeyed?” Leff argued that without God, no normative legal authority exists—law becomes merely power and coercion. I take his argument seriously, follow it to its logical conclusion, and then redirect it: only the God of the Bible possesses the ontological authority to make declarations that ought to be obeyed, and through the incarnation and indwelling of the Holy Spirit, He extends this capacity to redeemed humanity. This remains the foundational question animating all my work—from “Saving the Subject” to the Performative Utterance Project. If you’re interested in how these ideas have developed since I first wrote this, those resources trace the evolution of my thinking on divine authority, human limitation, and the possibility of genuine normative speech.
- “How My Brain Injury Prepared Me For the AI Revolution” (The Gospel Coalition, 2026) (Forthcoming).
