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| This page contains information about alumni of the graduate program. If you are a Department of Philosophy graduate alumnus and you would like to be included on this page, please write to Anita Wallace, walla027@umn.edu. Updates and changes may also be sent to Anita Wallace. |
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Tatiana
Abatemarco, MA 2006, whose work was co-advised by Valerie Tiberius and Naomi Scheman, is pursuing graduate
work in Natural Resources and Environmental Studies at the University
of Vermont. Denis Arnold, PhD 1997, whose dissertation, "Coercion and Moral Responsibility," was co-advised by Norman Bowie and Norman Dahl, is a tenured Associate Professor of Philosophy and Director of Graduate Studies at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville. Thomas Atchison, PhD 1999, whose dissertation, "False Consciousness: A Study of Methodological Problems of Critical Social Theories," was advised by Douglas Lewis, is a tenure-track Assistant Professor at Hamline University, St. Paul, Minnesota. Marilyn Bennett, PhD 1994, whose dissertation "Autonomy, Beneficence, and Persuasion" was advised by Norman Dahl. She is a tenured Associate Professor of Philosophy at the College of Saint Catherine in St. Paul, Minnesota. Lisa Bergin, PhD 1998, whose dissertation, "Knowledge, Communication, and Difference: an Integrative Theory," was co-advised by Douglas Lewis and Helen Longino, is an Assistant Professor of Philosophy at St. Cloud State University in St. Cloud, Minnesota. Joseph Bessie, PhD 1991,
whose dissertation, "Theories of Probabilistic Causality," was
advised by C. Anthony Anderson, is Vice President for Academic
Affairs at Valley City State University in Valley City, North Dakota. Janet Binder, PhD 2000, whose dissertation, "Journeys of Understanding: the Epistemic Value of Movement," was co-advised by Douglas Lewis and Naomi Scheman, is an adjunct faculty member at Metropolitan State University, Minneapolis, Minnesota. Larry Blackman, PhD 1976,
is currently Professor of Philosophy at the State University of New York,
College at Geneseo. Luc Bovens, PhD 1990,
whose dissertation, "Reasons for Preferences," was advised
by H.E. Mason, is a Professor of Philosophy at the London School of Economics,
Department of Philosophy, Logic and Scientific Method. Allen Brinton, PhD 1974,
Professor Emeritus, Boise State University. David Brokken, PhD 2004, whose dissertation, "Disclosure: The Hidden Weakness in Informed Consent," was advised by Jasper Hopkins, teaches philosophy at the University of St. Thomas and mathematics at the University of Minnesota as an adjunct faculty member. Katherine Gray Brown, PhD 2000, whose dissertation, "Resistance and Resilience: MacIntyre's Communitarianism and the Cherokee Tribal Tradition," was advised by Douglas Lewis, is an Assistant Professor of Philosophy and Peace Studies at Manchester College in Indiana. Michael Brown, Ph.D. 2005, whose dissertation, "Matters of Conscience: Justice and Protest in Society," was co-advised by Sarah Holtman and Douglas Lewis, is a visiting assistant professor of philosophy at Manchester College, Manchester, IN. Robert Brownawell, MA 2005, was advised by Norman Dahl, Norman Bowie, and Michelle Mason. Melissa Burchard, PhD 1996, whose dissertation, "Returning to the Body: A Philosophical Reconceptualization of Violence," was co-advised by Douglas Lewis and Naomi Scheman, is a tenured Associate Professor at the University of North Carolina, Asheville. James Burnett, PhD 2002, whose dissertation, "From Genetic Etiology to Genetic Disease Entity: Understanding Claims about Pre-Symptomatic Genetic Disease States," was advised by Ronald Giere, is a tenure-track Assistant Professor of Philosophy and Religion at Augustana College in Sioux Falls, South Dakota. John Cabral, PhD 2002, whose dissertation, "Psychological Explanation as Scientific Explanation," was advised by Joseph Owens, is working at Cycorp in Austin, Texas. Jennifer Callahan, PhD 2003, whose dissertation, "All for One: Consumer Culture and Civic Virtue," was advised by Sarah Holtman, is working as an editor at the University of Chicago Press in Chicago, Illinois. Miriam Cameron, MA 1994,
whose MA work was advised by Douglas Lewis, is currently a faculty
member of the University of Minnesota Center for Spirituality and Healing.
Her work integrates Western Philosophy and Tibetan thought. Michael Casper, PhD 2001, whose dissertation, "Conceptualizing Truth: Philosophical Implications of the Cognitive Linguistic Theory of Metaphor," was advised by Ronald Giere, is currently pursuing a law degree at the University of Minnesota. Ho
Mun Chan, PhD 1994, whose dissertation, "Formalization, Complexity
and Adaptive Rationality, " was advised by C. Wade Savage, is
an Associate Professor of Philosophy in the Department of Public and Social
Administration at the City University of Hong Kong. Carl Chung, PhD 2000, whose dissertation, "Essence, Variation, and Evolution: An Analysis of Ernst Mayr's Distinction between 'Typological' and 'Population' Thinking," was co-advised by Kenneth Waters and John Beatty, is a philosophy instructor at Century College, White Bear Lake, MN. Larry Crockett, PhD 1990,
is a full professor at Augsburg College, where he directed the Honors
Program for sixteen years. Also a priest in the Diocese of Minnesota,
spring 2006 finds him on sabbatical in Tennessee writing a science-and-religion
paper. He can be reached at ljcrockett@gmail.com. Margaret Crouch, PhD 1985,
Professor of Philosophy, Eastern Michigan University. |
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Michael Degnan, PhD 1990, whose dissertation, "The Role of Reason in Aristotle's Notion of the Good of Man," was co-advised by Sandra Peterson and Norman Dahl, is a tenured Professor of Philosophy at the University of St. Thomas in St. Paul, Minnesota. Stephen Donaho, PhD 1999, whose dissertation, "Representational Semantic Theories for Natural Languages," was advised by John Dolan, is a tenured faculty member at Normandale Community College in Minneapolis. Shane Drefcinski, PhD 1996, whose dissertation, "A Defense of Aristotle's Doctrine of the Unity of the Virtues," was co-advised by Norman Dahl and Sandra Peterson, is a tenured Associate Professor at the University of Wisconsin at Platteville. Christopher Eliot, PhD 2004, whose dissertation, "Exceptions Make the Rules," was advised by Kenneth Waters, is an Assistant Professor in a tenure-track position at Hofstra University. Steven Elkin, PhD 2000, whose dissertation, "A Wittgensteinian Characterization of Individualist and Social Views of the Self," was advised by Douglas Lewis, is a Major Gifts Officer at Haverford College, Haverford, Pennsylvania. Previously he served as a Development Officer at Grinnell College, Grinnell, Iowa and as a Development Associate and fund-raiser for the Plymouth Music Series in Minneapolis. Michelle Elliott, PhD 2003, whose dissertation, "Spinoza's Metaphysics and its Place in Early Modern Philosophy," was advised by Douglas Lewis, also pursued a supporting program in art history. She recently married and moved to North Carolina, where she will manage an art gallery and enjoy learning about art collection development and acquisition. Sandra Fairbanks, PhD 1997,
whose dissertation, "Kantian Moral Theory and the Destruction of the Self,"
was advised by Norman Dahl, is an Associate Professor of Philosophy
at Barry University in Miami Shores, Florida. Kevin Falvey, PhD 1995, whose dissertation, "Externalism, Self-Knowledge, and Scepticism," was advised by Joseph Owens, received tenure in Fall '01 at the University of California at Santa Barbara. Daniel Flory, PhD 1995, whose dissertation, "Fear of Imagination in Western Philosophy and Ethics," was advised by Keith Gunderson, is a tenured Associate Professor of Philosophy at Montana State University at Bozeman. Scott Forschler, PhD 2004,
whose dissertation "A Defense of Justificatory Rule Theory: Deriving
Consequentialist Ethics from Practical Reason," was co-advised
by Norman Bowie and Valerie Tiberius, is currently a part-time Librarian at Hamline University while looking for a tenure-track teaching position. Bryan Frances, PhD 1999,
whose dissertation, "Propositional Attitudes and Physicalism,"
was advised by Joseph Owens, is a tenured Associate Professor at
Fordham University in New York. Previously he held a
tenure-track position at the University of Leeds in England. |
| Geoffrey
Gorham, Ph.D 1994, whose dissertation 'The Structure of Theoretical
Progress' was advised by Ronald Giere, is an associate professor of philosophy at St. Olaf College. Heidi Grasswick, PhD 1996, whose dissertation, "Socialized Individuals in Epistemic Communities: Keeping the Normative Project of Epistemology Alive," was co-advised by Helen Longino and Naomi Scheman, is an Associate Professor of Philosophy at Middlebury College in Middlebury, Vermont. James Harold, PhD 2001, whose dissertation, "The Coherence of Value," was advised by Norman Dahl, is an Assistant Professor in a tenure-track position at Mount Holyoke College. Michael Harvey, PhD 1998, whose dissertation, "Freedom of Belief and Liberal Democratic Theory," was advised by Sandra Peterson, is an adjunct faculty member at the Century Community College in White Bear Lake, Minnesota. Amy Hilden, PhD 1996, whose dissertation, "Pregnancy as a Developing Relationship: Implications for the Construction of Fetal Personhood," was advised by Naomi Scheman, is a tenured Associate Professor and Department Chair at the College of St. Catherine, St. Paul, Minnesota. Jaime Hoffman, PhD 2005, whose dissertation, "Depression, Narratives, and the Self," was co-advised by Douglas Lewis and Valerie Tiberius, is a Visiting Assistant Professor at the University of Minnesota in Duluth. Kristen Houlton, MA 2006, whose MA thesis "The Politics of Beauty," was advised by Douglas Lewis, John Wallace, Naomi Scheman, and August Nimtz, is currently working at the University of Minnesota. Tomas Hribek, PhD 2006, whose dissertation "The Metaphysics of Anti-Individualism" was advised by Joseph Owens is currently working as a researcher and journal reviewer in Prague. Brian Huss, PhD 2002, whose dissertation "Rationality, Pragmatism, and True Belief" was advised by Ronald Giere, has taught for several years as a full time instructor of philosophy in the Atkinson Philosophy Department of York University in Toronto. He was recently hired to a tenure-track appointment at State University of New York at Potsdam. Jeremy Iggers, PhD 1993,
Journalist, Minneapolis Star-Tribune. Ramona Ilea, PhD 2006,
whose dissertation, "Moral Philosophy and Social Change," was
co-advised by Naomi Scheman and Helen Longino, has a tenure-track appointment as Assistant Professor
at Pacific University in Portland, Oregon.
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Monica Janzen, PhD 2006, whose dissertation "Hospitality: Resolving Gross Inequalities of Welfare and Cultivating Civic Virtue" was co-advised by Sarah Holtman and John Wallace, is teaching part-time at the University of St. Thomas, and raising two young children. Paul Jeffries, PhD 2000, whose dissertation, "After MacIntyre: A Role for Tradition in Moral Philosophy," was advised by Norman Dahl, is an Assistant Professor of Philosophy in a tenure-track position at Ripon College in Wisconsin. Jeff Johnson, PhD 2006, whose dissertation "Pictures and Examples" was advised by Keith Gunderson, is currently teaching as a visiting assistant professor at the College of St. Catherine in St. Paul, Minnesota. Gregory Kaebnick, PhD 1998, whose dissertation, "Reasons without Rules: Particularist Moral Justification and the Decision to Stop Medical Treatment," was advised by H. Eugene Mason, is an Editor of the Hastings Center Report at the Hastings Center in New York. Peter Kosso, PhD 1986,
Professor of Philosophy, Northern Arizona University. Toben Lafrancois, PhD 2006, whose dissertation "Taxonomic Resolution in Ecology" was advised by C. Kenneth Waters, is a Visiting Assistant Professor at St. Olaf College. Kevin Lattery, PhD 1999, whose dissertation, "The Epistemology of Experimental Systems in Biological Research," was advised by Kenneth Waters, is the Director of Advanced Analytics for MarketTools, Inc., http://www.markettools.com. Chung-Hyoung Lee, PhD 2006, whose dissertation, "Uses of Quantum Measurements," was advised by Geoffrey Hellman, has a tenure-track appointment as Assistant Professor at California State University at Fresno. Ernie Lepore, PhD 1978,
Professor of Philosophy, Rutgers University. Margarita R. Levin, Ph.D. 1986, whose dissertation "On the New Empiricism in the Philosophy of Mathematics," was advised by William Hanson, has been teaching since 1987 at Stern College, Yeshiva University in New York City. Shaoxin Lin, PhD 1997,
whose dissertation, "Confucian Ethics and the Concept of Rights," was
advised by H. Eugene Mason, is a computer programmer at TalentSoft,
a computer development company in Eagan, Minnesota. |
| Terrance
McConnell, PhD 1975, is currently
a Professor of Philosophy at the University of North Carolina, Greensboro. Howard McGary, PhD 1974,
Professor of Philosophy, Rutgers University. Casey McGinnis, PhD 2007, whose dissertation, "Paraconsistency and Deontic Logic: Formal Systems for Reasoning with Normative Conflicts," was co-advised by William Hanson and Geoffrey Hellman, is a Visiting Assistant Professor at the University of Minnesota, Duluth. Sandra Lee Menssen, PhD 1984, whose dissertation, "Foundations of Theodicy: Is There a Criterion of Goodness for Worlds?", was advised by John Dolan, is a tenured Professor of Philosophy at the University of St. Thomas in St. Paul, Minnesota. Glen Meyer, PhD 2003, whose dissertation, "Understanding How Mathematics is Applied: An Instrumentalist Versus a Realist Approach," was advised by Geoffrey Hellman, was working at CyCorp in Austin, Texas and plans to seek an academic position in philosophy. Christopher Michaelson, PhD 1997, whose dissertation, "Philosophy out of the Cave: An Expedition in Philosophical Style," was co-advised by Sandra Peterson and Michael Root, is a Senior Manager and business ethics consultant at PriceWaterhouseCoopers LLP, a professional services firm best known for accounting, in New York. Roberta Millstein, PhD 1997,
whose dissertation, "The Chances of Evolution: An Analysis of the Roles
of Chance in Microevolution and Macroevolution," was co-advised by Kenneth
Waters and John Beatty, is an Associate Professor of Philosophy at the
University of California, Davis. Thomas Moody, PhD 1982,
Associate Professor of Philosophy, California State University - San Bernardino. Kazunobu Narita, PhD 1999,
whose dissertation, "A Defense of a Humean View of Motivation,"
was advised by Norman Dahl, is an Associate Professor at Keio University
in Japan. Peg O'Connor, PhD 1996,
whose dissertation, "Back to the Rough Ground!: Wittgensteinian Moral
Realism," was co-advised by Douglas Lewis and Naomi Scheman, holds
a tenured position in Women's Studies at Gustavus Adolpho College, where
she also teaches philosophy. In 2004-05 she was a fellow at the University
of Connecticut Humanities Institute. |
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Garry Pech, PhD 1997, whose dissertation, "Emotions and Embodiment: Essays on the Metaphysics of Emotion," was advised by H. Eugene Mason, has a tenured position at the College of St. Catherine in St. Paul, Minnesota. Anne Phibbs, PhD 2000, whose dissertation, "Challenging Gender Essentialism: Three Case Studies in Sexual Ethics," was co-advised by Douglas Lewis and Naomi Scheman, is an advisor for students in the Health Sciences at Metropolitan State University, Minneapolis, Minnesota. Kathryn Plaisance, PhD 2006, whose dissertation "Behavioral Genetics and the Environment: The Generation and Exportation of Scientific Claims" was advised by C. Kenneth Waters, has a postdoctoral fellowship at the Zentrale Einrichtung für Wissenschaftstheorie und Wissenschaftsethik (Center for Philosophy and Ethics of Science) at the Zentrale Einrichtung University of Hannover. This is a one-year postdoctoral fellowship with the possibility of renewal for 1-3 years. Nancy Nyquist Potter,
Ph.D. 1994, Associate Professor of Philosophy, University of Louisville. Scott Pratt, PhD 1995,
whose dissertation, "Inquiry and Social Diversity: John Dewey's Conception
of Philosophy," was advised by Douglas Lewis, was granted tenure in
philosophy at the University of Oregon in Fall '01 and has served as department
chair. Laura Rediehs, PhD 1998, whose dissertation, "Relational Realism," was advised by Ronald Giere, is an Associate Professor and is Chair of the Philosophy Department at St. Lawrence University in Canton, New York. Delbert Reed, PhD 2000, whose dissertation, "Frege in Context," was advised by Sandra Peterson, has a position as a Reference Services Professional at the University of Minnesota Bio-Medical Library, Minneapolis, Minnesota. Nicholas Reeder, PhD 1996, wrote a dissertation titled "Property Definiteness in Quantum Mechanics: Modal Interpretations" and advised by Geoffrey Hellman. We have not been able to locate Nick Reeder. Kristina Rolin, PhD 1996, whose dissertation, "Gender, Emotions, and Epistemic Values in High Energy Physics: A Feminist Challenge for Scientific Methodology," was co-advised by Ronald Giere and Helen Longino, is a Lecturer at the Helsinki School of Economics and Business Administration in Helsinki, Finland. Mariana Rodrigues, PhD 2006, whose dissertation "The Ethics of Interpersonal Forgiveness" was co-advised by Sarah Holtman and Norman Dahl, currently teaches at California State University in Los Angeles. Tanya Rodriguez, PhD 2006, whose dissertation "Empathy and Ethicism" was advised by Marcia Eaton, has been hired as a tenure-track assistant professor, in the Department of Art, Music, and Philosophy at John Jay College of Criminal Justice of the City University of New York. |
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Pauline Sargent, PhD 1997, whose dissertation, "Imaging the Brain, Picturing the Mind: Visual Representation in the Practice of Science," was advised by Ronald Giere, had a two-year NSF Post-Doctoral Fellowship at UC San Diego. She is now Senior Academic Advisor of the College of Arts and Sciences and an adjunct faculty member at the University of New Mexico. Nathan Sawyer, MA 2006, whose MA work was co-advised by Sarah Holtman and John Wallace, is an Associate Program Director in the College of Continuing Education at the University of Minnesota. Gregory Schaefer, PhD 2006, whose dissertation, "Another Look at Moral Realism, with the Aim of Learning About the Kind of Objectivity that We Can Justifiably Attribute to Our Moral Judgments," was co-advised by Norman Dahl and Marcia Eaton, has a one-year temporary appointment as Visiting Assistant Professor at Virginia Commonwealth University in Richmond, Virginia. Walter Schultz, PhD 1997,
whose dissertation, "Some Moral Conditions of Pareto-optimal Equilibrium
Allocations," was co-advised by Norman Bowie and Norman Dahl, decided
to leave his tenure track position at Cedarville College in Xenia, Ohio
and return to Minnesota in order to have more time to work on two books,
one on ethics and one a logic textbook. While working on his books, he
also teaches philosophy as an adjunct at Bethel Seminary, and teaches
introduction to philosophy at University of Wisconsin, Eau Claire. Peter Shea, Ph.D. 2005, whose dissertation, "The Arguments of Their Lives: A Role for Lives in Moral Reflection and Moral Teaching," was advised by John Wallace, produces the weekly philosophy show, "The Bat of Minerva," on Minneapolis regional cable, consults and writes grants for the Hopework Folkschool, conducts workshops in Philosophy for Children, and teaches as an adjunct instructor at Twin Cities colleges. His current employment includes serving as a Visiting Assistant Professor of Philosophy at Gustavus Aldophus College in St. Peter, Minnesota. James Skidmore, PhD 2000, whose dissertation, "Left Out: Deontological Moral Theory and the Problem of Animals," was advised by Norman Dahl, has a tenure track position at Idaho State University. Jeffrey Smith, PhD 2000, whose dissertation, "Cognitivism and Relativism: A Study of Wittgensteinian and Discourse Theories of Morality," was advised by Norman Dahl, is an Assistant Professor in a tenure-track position at the University of Redlands, in Redlands, California. He currently serves as Director of the Center for Business, Ethics, and Society. Steven Soderholm, PhD 1996, whose dissertation, "On Wrongs, Rights, and Responsibilities: A Utilitarian Theory of Punishment," was advised by Norman Bowie, has a position at the Wells Fargo Bank in Minneapolis. Ronald Sundstrom, PhD 1999, whose dissertation, "Rending the Veil: A Critical Look at the Ontology and Conservation of Race," was co-advised by Michael Root and John Wright of Afro-American Studies and English, is an Assistant Professor in a tenure-track position at the University of San Francisco, where he also serves as the Co-Director of the African-American Studies Program. Christian Trejbal, MA 2000,
whose MA work was advised by Keith Gunderson and Norman Bowie
has taken a position as an editorial writer for The Roanoke Times in Roanoke,
Virginia. |
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William Vann, PhD 2006, whose dissertation "The Good Friend: An Analysis of Plato's Lysis" was co-advised by Betty Belfiore and Sandra Peterson, is a tenured faculty member of Hennepin Technical College in Brooklyn Park, Minnesota. Amanda Vizedom, PhD 2000, whose dissertation, "Philosophical Knowledge as Social Knowledge: A Case Study in Social Epistemology," was advised by Naomi Scheman, is an ontological engineer at Cycorp, Inc., an artificial intelligence company in Austin, Texas. Heather Wainwright, PhD 2006, whose dissertation, "New Paradigms in Aesthetics: The Challenge of Environmental Art," was advised by Marcia Eaton, is a faculty member at Argosy University Twin Cities in Eagan, Minnesota. She also works as an adjunct faculty member at the University of Wisconsin, River Falls. Charles Wallis, PhD 1995, whose dissertation, "Representation, Knowledge, and Structure in Computational Explanations in Cognitive Science," was advised by Ronald Giere, is a tenured Associate Professor at California State University at Long Beach, where he serves as Director of the Center for Cognitive Science Graduate Advisor. Nancy Walsh, PhD 2004, whose dissertation, "A Business Ethics Approach to Hazard Communication and Employee Right to Know," was advised by Norman Bowie, is a Senior Environmental, Health and Safety Manager and Six Sigma Black Belt at 3M. Dona Warren, PhD 1995, whose dissertation, "Explaining Ourselves: Simulation Theory, Externalism, and Causality," was advised by Joseph Owens, has tenure in philosophy at the University of Wisconsin, Stevens Point. Charles Weinstein, PhD 2001, whose dissertation, "Information Systems Consulting and Ethics: An Aristotelian Approach," was co-advised by Norman Bowie and Douglas Lewis, works for an information technology company in the Twin Cities. Michael Winter, PhD 1996, whose dissertation, "Can There Be an Aristotelian Science of Aristotle's Ethics?," was co-advised by Norman Dahl and Sandra Peterson, is an Associate Professor of Philosophy at the University of St. Thomas in St. Paul, Minnesota. Alana Yu, MA 2003, was advised by William Hanson. She is currently working as a consultant for ESS Healthcare Consulting. |
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