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Edward Averill, Professor Emeritus (Ph.D., M.S.,
University of California at Santa Barbara; B.A. Harvard), has been at
Texas Tech since 1980. His areas of specialization are philosophical
psychology, philosophy of language, and metaphysics.
Professor Averill's publications include: "The Primary-Secondary
Quality Distinction," Philosophical Review (1982), "Color and
the Anthropocentric Problem," Journal of Philosophy (1985),
"The Relational Nature of Color," Philosophical Review (1992),
and "Towards a Projectivist Account of Color," Journal of Philosophy
(2005). Email: edward.averill@ttu.edu,
more information: Dr. Averill's CV |
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Peder Christiansen, Professor and Chair (Ph.D. in
Classics, University of Wisconsin at Madison; M.A. in History,
University of Wisconsin at Madison; B.A. Carroll College), was formerly
Director of Texas Tech's Honors Program (1969-1981) and formerly chair
of the Department of Classical and Modern Languages and
Literatures(1990-2002). He specializes in philology with
emphasis on the relationship between Latin and Greek, ancient
religion, based on humanity's relationship to nature, including
both mythology and early Christianity, and Late Antiquity,
covering the transformation of the Classical world into early modern
Europe, with emphasis on continuity. His most recent book, Anthologiae
Latinae Concordantia, (Olms-Weidmann2002), was produced with one
colleague at Texas Tech and another at theUniversity of Otago, New
Zealand. Email: peder.christiansen@ttu.edu |
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Howard Curzer, Professor (Ph.D. University of Texas at
Austin; M.A., B.A. in Mathematics, Wesleyan University), taught at the
University of Houston before coming to Texas Tech in 1985. His areas of
specialty are ancient philosophy, virtue ethics, and biomedical
ethics. His publications include Ethical Theory and Moral
Problems (Wadsworth, 1999), "Aristotle's Painful Path to Virtue," Journal
of the History of Philosophy (2002), "The Ethics of Embryonic Stem
Cell Research," Journal of Medicine and Philosophy (2004), "How
Good People Do Bad Things: Aristotle on the Misdeeds of the Virtuous," Oxford
Studies in Ancient Philosophy (2005), and "Admirable Immorality,
Dirty Hands, Ticking Bombs, and Torturing Innocents," Southern
Journal of Philosophy (2006). He is currently working on a book
tentatively entitled "Aristotle's Account of Virtue". Email: howard.curzer@ttu.edu, more
information: Dr. Curzer's CV |
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Francesca di Poppa, Assistant Professor (Ph.D.
University of Pittsburgh; B.A., University of Pisa), is mainly
interested in history of modern philosophy, in particular the
causation debate and the development of modern notions of man and the
world. She is also interested in ancient philosophy (especially
Aristotle), Scholasticism and history of science. She is
currently working on the notion of causation in Descartes and Spinoza.
Email: fdipoppa@gmail.com |
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Christopher Hom, Visiting Assistant Professor (Ph.D.,
University of California, Irvine), joined the department in Fall 2007.
He
specializes in philosophy of language, philosophy of mind,
and philosophical logic; his current work is on the semantics
of racial epithets. Webpage: http://www.artsci.wustl.edu/~chom/index.html |
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Sungsu Kim, Assistant Professor (Ph.D., University of
Wisconsin-Madison), specializes in the philosophy of mind, philosophy
of science, and philosophy of biology. His publications
include "Supervenience and Causation: A Probabilistic Approach," Synthese
(2000), "Physical Process Theories and Token-Probabilistic Causation," Erkenntnis
(2001), and "Testing Multiple Realizability: A Discussion of Bechtel
and Mundale," Philosophy of Science (2002). Email: sungsu.kim@ttu.edu, Webpage: www.philosophy.ttu.edu/kim/ |
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Daniel Nathan, Associate Professor and Director of
Graduate Studies (Ph.D., University of Illinois at Chicago; A.B.,
University of Michigan), writes and teaches in the areas in the areas
of aesthetics, ethics, and philosophy of law.
His work has appeared in the Australasian Journal of Philosophy,
the Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism, Erkenntnis,
and Public Affairs Quarterly; his most recent papers include:
"A Paradox in Intentionalism," British Journal of Aesthetics
(2005) and "Art, Meaning, and Artist's Meaning," in Kieran (ed.), Contemporary
Debates in the Philosophy of Art (2006). Currently, he is working
on problems of interpretation in legal philosophy and aesthetics.
Email: daniel.nathan@ttu.edu,
More information: Dr. Nathan's profile |
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Joseph Ransdell, Professor Emeritus (Ph.D., Columbia
University; B.A., San Francisco State), writes chiefly on the
philosophy of the American philosopher Charles Peirce, especially his
semiotic or theory of representation. He also has a special interest in
Plato, in early modern philosophy, and in theory of meaning and
representation generally. |
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Anna Christina Ribeiro, Assistant Professor (Ph.D.,
Maryland at College Park; M.A., B.Phil., Katholieke Universiteit
Leuven; B.A. Hunter College) taught previously at Furman University in
South Carolina before coming to Texas Tech in 2006. Her area of
specialization is aesthetics, particularly the philosophies
of literature and film, and she has a strong secondary interest in philosophy
of psychology. Her "Intending to Repeat: A Definition of Poetry,"
is forthcoming in the Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism.
She is currently at work on a paper called "Aesthetic Properties: The
Case of Poetry." Email: annachristina.ribeiro@gmail.com,
Webpage: www.philosophy.ttu.edu/ribeiro/
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Mark Scala, Visiting Assistant Professor (Ph.D.,
Syracuse University), joined the department in Fall 2007. He
specializes
in metaphysics, and among his many interests are: philosophy of mind,
the history of philosophy, and philosophical logic. Webpage: http://markscala.googlepages.com.
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Walter Schaller, Associate Professor (Ph.D.,
University of Wisconsin-Madison; M.A. in Political Science, University
of California-Berkeley) taught previously at Wheaton (Mass.) College
and the University of Kentucky. His primary interests are in political
philosophy and ethics. Professor Schaller has published
articles on Kant's ethics, utilitarianism, and the relationship between
virtues and duties in Philosophy and Phenomenological Research,
Ratio, Dialogue, and History of Philosophy
Quarterly. His recent articles include: "Is Liberal Neutrality
Insufficiently Egalitarian?," Journal of Philosophy (2004) and
"Liberal Neutrality and Liberty of Conscience," Law and Philosophy
(2005). Email: walter.schaller@ttu.edu,
Phone: (806) 742-3277, Webpage: webpages.acs.ttu.edu/wschalle/home.htm |
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Mark Webb, Associate Professor and Associate Chair
(Ph.D., Syracuse; M.A., B.A., and M.A. in Classical Humanities, Texas
Tech)
He specializes in epistemology and philosophy of religion.
He is currently working in the epistemology of religious experience,
especially as it applies to non-Western religious experiences.
Professor Webb's articles have appeared in The Journal of Philosophy,
Pacific Philosophical Quarterly, Religious Studies,
The International Journal for Philosophy of Religion, and Hypatia,
and most recently "Can Epistemology Help? The Problem of the
Kentucky-Fried Rats," Social Epistemology (2004). Email: mark.webb@ttu.edu, Phone: (806)
742-0373 ext. 339, Webpage: www.philosophy.ttu.edu/webb/
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