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Philosophy and Phenomenological Research
Edited by:
Ernest Sosa
Philosophy and Phenomenological Research
publishes articles in a wide range of areas including philosophy of
mind, epistemology, ethics, metaphysics, and philosophical history
of philosophy. No specific methodology or philosophical orientation
is required for submissions.
In 1890-91, E.B. Andrews,
then President of Brown University, was also professor of
philosophy and taught all the courses at Brown in that subject.
Other Brown Presidents who have taught philosophy include Francis
Wayland (President from 1827 to 1855), and W.H.P. Faunce
(1899-1929). In 1894 W.G. Everett was appointed Professor and
attained high distinction in our field before retiring in 1930.
Notable among Visiting Professors in those early years was Roy Wood
Sellars. Alexander Meiklejohn, a Brown philosopher from 1897 to
1912, was also an educational leader whose ideas inspired the
special program still offered today at institutions such as St.
John's College.
The new age of Brown philosophy arrived in 1926 with Curt
Ducasse, who, for a quarter century, from the late 20s, was the
most important philosopher at Brown. He was influential not only in
the department, but in the University, and in the highest councils
of the profession. Around him there gathered a steadily larger and
more impressive department, including Arthur Murphy, Ralph Blake,
and Charles Baylis. Soon after World War II, Brown renewed its
ascent through Vincent Tomas, John
Ladd, Richard
Taylor, Richard
Cartwright, Joel Feinberg,
Wesley Salmon, Richard
Schmitt, John
W. Lenz, and especially Roderick
Chisholm. For a quarter century, from the late 50s, it was
Chisholm who figured centrally in Brown philosophy, though others
contributed as well. In the mid-sixties Herbert Heidelberger,
Jaegwon
Kim , and Ernest
Sosa formed a faculty core in Chisholm's seminar every
semester, drawing inspiration, along with an excellent group of
graduate students. In the decades from the 70's on, the Department
renewed itself regularly and, despite its smallness, retained a
high ranking, as it does now. Dan
Brock, Philip Quinn, James
Van Cleve, Victor Caston, and Martha Nussbaum were tenured
Department members during these decades.
Faculty who have more recently joined the tenured ranks include
David
Estlund (Chair), James
Dreier,
Justin Broackes, Felicia
Nimue Ackerman and
Bernard Reginster. In 2001, Mary
Louise Gill was appointed (jointly with Classics) as Full
Professor, and Brian
Weatherson (now at Cornell University) as Assistant Professor.
Christopher
Hill came to Brown in 2002 as Full Professor. Nomy
Arpaly joined us in 2003, and was tenured in 2005. In 2005 we
welcomed Richard
Heck from Harvard as Full Professor . Two new Assistant
Professors also joined us this year:
Joshua Schechter, an NYU PhD, and Douglas
Kutach, whose doctorate is from Rutgers. On July 1, 2006,
Charles Larmore came to Brown from the University of Chicago as
Full Professor.
The Department continues to attract fine graduate students,
extending a long tradition graced by such names as: Richard
Cartwright, Richard Taylor, Vincent Tomas, Keith Lehrer, James
Cornman, Robert Sleigh, James Ross, and many others in more recent
decades. As the foregoing lists of faculty and students would
suggest, the Department has been traditionally strong in
epistemology and metaphysics, ethics, and history of philosophy --
the core areas of philosophy. Because it is a relatively small
graduate department it has focused on training its graduate
students to become philosophers, rather than offering a
comprehensive menu of courses in all subfields of philosophy.
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