Columbia University Department of Philosophy

The Columbia University Department of Philosophy is ranked 9th in the US and 10th in the English-speaking world, in the 2018 ranking of philosophy departments by The Philosophical Gourmet Report.[1] It has particular strengths in logic, philosophy of mind, metaphysics, philosophy of law, philosophy of biology, general philosophy of science, philosophy of social sciences, philosophy of physics, 17th-century early modern philosophy, and 19th- and 20th-century continental philosophy.

Columbia University Department of Philosophy
Established1890
Location,
40°48′26.8″N 73°57′39.6″W
Websitephilosophy.columbia.edu

The department is distinguished by its being prone to promote philosophical domains not considered as "mainstream" in other philosophy departments. Not only does it offer advanced research in the wide range of subjects in analytical philosophy but it also has particular strengths in the history of Western philosophy. It also benefits from the presence or activity nearby of other departments' faculty such as Souleymane Bachir Diagne from French and Romance Philology, Joseph Raz and R. Kent Greenawalt from Law School, or Jon Elster from Political Science. Many cross-registered courses allow students to enlarge their scopes in other departments.

The philosophy departments of City University of New York, which is a few blocks away, and New York University have close relations with the faculty. Enrolled doctoral students are able to take courses offered at these universities.[2] The Graduate School is also a member of the Inter-University Doctoral Consortium (IUDC) which provides for cross-registration among member institutions. Participating schools are CUNY Graduate Center, Fordham University, New School for Social Research, New York University (including the Institute of Fine Arts), Princeton University, Rutgers University, and Stony Brook University.

Every year Columbia University and NYU philosophy graduate students organize the Annual NYU/Columbia Graduate Student Philosophy Conference.[3]

Columbia University is also the home of the Journal of Philosophy.

Faculty

This list is limited to those with individual articles in Wikipedia

  • David Albert: philosophy of physics and philosophy of science.
  • Akeel Bilgrami: philosophy of Mind, philosophy of Language, political philosophy and moral philosophy.
  • Taylor Carman: 19th- and 20th-century European philosophy, especially Heidegger and Merleau-Ponty.
  • Haim Gaifman: probability theory, logic, philosophy of language, and early 20th century analytic philosophy.
  • Lydia Goehr: philosophy of music, aesthetics, critical theory, philosophy of history, and 19th and 20th century philosophy.
  • Axel Honneth: social and political philosophy, ethics.
  • Patricia Kitcher: Kant, philosophy of psychology, and Freud.
  • Philip Kitcher: philosophy of science, biology, and mathematics.
  • Christia Mercer: early modern philosophy with special focus on sixteenth century platonism and humanism, history of science, metaphysics.
  • Michele Moody-Adams: political philosophy and legal theory
  • Frederick Neuhouser: modern European philosophy, especially Rousseau.
  • Christopher Peacocke: philosophy of mind, biology, and mathematics.
  • David Sidorsky: political philosophy and ethical theory.
  • Achille Varzi: logic and metaphysics.

Notable previous faculty members

References

  1. "The Philosophical Gourmet". Blackwell Publishing Philosophy. 2018. Archived from the original on 2019-11-24. Retrieved 2018-08-03.
  2. Graduate Program Handbook, distributed by Columbia University Department of Philosophy (last update: August 28, 2008), unpublished
  3. "NYU/Columbia Graduate Student Philosophy Conference". 2009. Archived from the original on 2009-03-28. Retrieved 2009-04-15.

Official website

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