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         Epistemology Philosophy:     more books (100)
  1. Moral Epistemology Naturalized (Canadian journal of philosophy) by Campbell, 2001-03-25
  2. Beyond Epistemology: New Studies in the Philosophy of Hegel by F.G. Weiss, 1974-06-30
  3. From Conceivability to Possibility: An Essay in Modal Epistemology (Umes Studies in Philosophy) by Anders Berglund, 2005-12-31
  4. Epistemology I (Tulane Studies in Philosophy) by Peter M. Burkholder, 1968-07
  5. Philosophy: The Power of Ideas, Brief by Brooke Noel Moore, Ken Bruder, 1995-01-13
  6. Epistemology: Key Concepts in Philosophy by Christopher Norris, 2005-11-30
  7. Thomas Reid's Ethics: Moral Epistemology on Legal Foundations (Continuum Studies in British Philosophy) by William C. Davis, 2006-12-24
  8. Knowledge and Evidence (Cambridge Studies in Philosophy) by Paul K. Moser, 1991-07-26
  9. Epistemology: An Introduction to the Theory of Knowledge (Suny Series in Philosophy) by Nicholas Rescher, 2003-10
  10. Personal Epistemology
  11. Logic, Probability, and Epistemology : The Power of Semantics (Science and Philosophy in the Twentieth Century: Basic Works of Logical Empiricism) by Sahotra Sarkar, 1996-02-01
  12. An Introduction To Comparative Philosophy: A Travel Guide to Philosophical Space by Walter Benesch, 2001-03-09
  13. Epistemology: A Contemporary Introduction to the Theory of Knowledge (Routledge Contemporary Introductionsto Philosophy, 2) by Robert Audi, 1997-12-18
  14. Deconstructing the Mind (Philosophy of Mind Series) by Stephen P. Stich, 1998-12-17

81. People With Online Papers In Philosophy
connectionism); David Papineau (consciousness, epistemology, philosophyof science); Tom Polger (consciousness, evolution); William
http://www.u.arizona.edu/~chalmers/people.html
People with online papers in philosophy
Compiled by David Chalmers
Updated and restructured August 2, 2003.
This is a list of individuals who have made available online papers in philosophy and related areas. This practice is very much to be encouraged! Note that this list concentrates mostly on academic philosophers, although some scientists and others in related fields are included. If you know of people I should add to this list, please tell me. New papers on the pages listed here are logged daily in Brian Weatherson's philosophy papers log . For other sources of online papers see my directory of online papers on consciousness , and of web resources Index Consciousness Perception Content Mind ... Others Philosophy of consciousness

82. Epistemology
(Journal of Occupational and Organizational Psychology). BASIC JAINA epistemology.(philosophy East and West). An extended epistemology for fostering
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    epistemology u u j E Pronunciation Key epistemology Descartes and other philosophers (e.g., Baruch Spinoza, G. W. Leibniz, and Blaise Pascal) sought to retain the belief in the existence of innate (a priori) ideas together with an acceptance of the values of data and ideas derived from experience (a posteriori). This position was basically that of rationalism . Opposed to it later was empiricism , notably as expounded by John Locke, David Hume, and John Stuart Mill, which denied the existence of innate ideas altogether. The impressive critical philosophy of Immanuel Kant had immense effects in an attempt to combine the two views. In later theories the split was reflected in idealism and materialism. The causal theory of knowledge, advanced by Alfred North Whitehead and others, stressed the role of the nervous system as intermediary between an object and the perception of it. The methods of perceiving, obtaining, and validating data derived from sense experience has been central to

83. Immanuel Kant
sense that philosophy could, as the Neoplatonists believed, certify, verify, andtheorize the results of mystical intuitions. Given a Kantian epistemology and
http://www.friesian.com/kant.htm
Immanuel Kant (1724-1804)
Kant's most original contribution to philosophy is his "Copernican Revolution," that, as he puts it, it is the representation that makes the object possible rather than the object that makes the representation possible. This introduced the human mind as an active originator of experience rather than just a passive recipient of perception. Something like this now seems obvious: the mind could be a tabula rasa , a "blank tablet," no more than a bathtub full of silicon chips could be a digital computer. Perceptual input must be processed , i.e. recognized , or it would just be noise "less even than a dream" or "nothing to us," as Kant alternatively puts it. But if the mind actively generates perception, this raises the question whether the result has anything to do with the world, or if so, how much. The answer to the question, unusual, ambiguous, or confusing as it would be, made for endless trouble both in Kant's thought and for a posterity trying to figure him out. To the extent that knowledge depends on the structure of the mind and not on the world, knowledge would have no connection to the world and is not even true representation , just a solipsistic or intersubjective fantasy. Kantianism seems threatened with "psychologism," the doctrine that what we know is our own psychology, not external things. Kant did say, consistent with psychologism, that basically we don't know about "things-in-themselves," objects as they exist apart from perception. But at the same time Kant thought he was vindicating both a

84. Islam Online
Politics Economics Interfaith Dialogue Science Technology Media Fiction Dialogue Between Civilizations philosophy epistemology Society.
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Home About Us Media Kit Contact Us ... Your Mail Search Advanced Search News People Against Prisoner Abuse The World in Pictures ... Muslim Heritage Discover Islam Introducing Islam Ask About Islam Contemporary Issues My Journey to Islam ... Qur'an Newsletter Enter your E-mail Humanities Politics Economics Inter-faith Dialogue ... Society Fatwa Corner Fatwa Bank Ask the Scholar Live Fatwa Counseling Cyber Counselor Special Files Palestine in Mourning Hijab Economic Issues Directories Site Directory Islamic Society Islamic Banks TV Channels ... Telephone Code Services Prayer Times Matrimonial Date Converter Calendar ... SITE MAP Best viewed by:
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85. Philosophy At NYU - Faculty
philosophy of mind, philosophy of language, epistemology; Hartry Field metaphysics,epistemology, philosophy of logic, and philosophy of mathematics;
http://www.nyu.edu/gsas/dept/philo/faculty/
F ACULTY REGULAR FACULTY
  • Ned Block : philosophy of mind, philosophy of science, foundations of cognitive science
  • Paul Boghossian : philosophy of mind, philosophy of language, epistemology
  • Hartry Field : metaphysics, epistemology, philosophy of logic, and philosophy of mathematics
  • Kit Fine : logic, metaphysics, philosophy of language
  • Richard Foley : epistemology
  • Elizabeth Harman : ethics, metaphysics
  • : continental philosophy, Hegel, Kant
  • Thomas Nagel : philosophy of mind, political philosophy, ethics
  • Christopher Peacocke : philosophy of mind and psychology, philosophy of language, metaphysics, and epistemology
  • John Richardson : 19-20th century continental philosophy, ancient philosophy
  • William Ruddick : philosophy of science and medicine, professional and applied ethics
  • Stephen Schiffer : philosophy of language, philosophy of mind, metaphysics
  • Sharon Street : ethics
  • Peter Unger : metaphysics, epistemology, philosophy of mind, ethics
  • Roger White : philosophy of science, epistemology, and metaphysics

REGULAR VISITING FACULTY

86. Philosophy And Phenomenological Research
from its considerable effects within the philosophy of language, such a reassessmentwill at the very least reopen issues in epistemology, philosophy of mind
http://www.nyu.edu/gsas/dept/philo/courses/concepts/katzsemantics.html
Philosophy and Phenomenological Research Vol. LVII, No. 1, March 1997 Analyticity, Necessity, and the Epistemology of Semantics* JERROLD J. KATZ The Graduate Center The City University of New York Introduction Philosophers who agree on little else agree that analyticity—if there is such a thing—is (necessary) truth in virtue of meaning alone. I will call this "the standard view". The view derives from Frege’s (1953, p. 4) definition of analyticity as truth based on proof based on logical laws and definitions. The standard view is taken entirely for granted both by philosophers like Carnap (1965, p. 8 and p. 222) who accept analyticity and necessity and also by philosophers like Quine p. 21) who reject them. Quine’s p. 23) definition of an analytic statement in "Two Dogmas of Empiricism" as a statement that "can be turned into a logical truth by putting synonyms for synonyms"—which set the terms for the debate about analyticity—is a virtual paraphrase of Frege’s definition. The general acceptance of the standard view is due to its being perceived as the only view on analyticity that intensionalists have available to them. The standard view is as deeply influential as it is widely accepted. The arguments of Donnellan, Putnam, and Kripke concerning the semantics of natural kind terms, which most philosophers now take to be the decisive arguments against the traditional theory of meaning (i.e., the theory coming down to us from Descartes, Locke, and Kant) depend on the standard view and the Fregean notion of sense underlying it. Those arguments have had important philosophical consequences not only in the philosophy of language but also in areas such as the theory of knowledge and the philosophy of mind. Generalizing Donnellan’s (1962, pp.

87. Advanced Seminar In Objectivist Epistemology And Philosophy Of Mind -- Objectivi
Advanced Seminar in Objectivist epistemology and philosophy of Mind.The Advanced Seminar in Objectivist Studies program has been
http://www.objectivistcenter.org/center/news/news_adv-sem-objectivist-epistemolo
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Advanced Seminar in Objectivist Epistemology and Philosophy of Mind
The Advanced Seminar in Objectivist Studies program has been set and is posted on the TOC website. The Advanced Seminar is a small, intensive half-week gathering that discusses new research on Objectivism and develops Objectivist methods of scholarship. It will take place June 25-27 at Bentley College, preceding the full summer seminar. Likely participants include advanced undergraduates, graduate students in philosophy and allied fields, and professional and independent scholars. The Advanced Seminar is offered free of charge to qualified students and professional scholars, including those presenting papers. Non-student participants pay only the cost of room and board for the three nights of the seminar. The application deadline is April 21, 2003. Admission is strictly limited to qualified students and scholars in order to permit productive discussions. Applicants should possess a systematic understanding of Objectivism and a professional interest in developing and applying objective methods of philosophic analysis. Participants will be expected to prepare for the seminar by reading the seminar papers in advance, and some may be requested to prepare comments on certain papers.

88. We Are Having Trouble Finding Your Page -- Objectivist Center -- Reason, Individ
Advanced Seminar in Objectivist epistemology and philosophy of Mind.The Advanced Seminar in Objectivist Studies program has been
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89. David Hume -- Metaphysics And Epistemology [Internet Encyclopedia Of Philosophy]
Although most of Hume s philosophy in some way touches on issues of metaphysicsand epistemology, the discussion here are largely restricted to portions of
http://www.iep.utm.edu/h/humeepis.htm
David Hume (1711-1776)
Metaphysical and Epistemological Theories
Treatise of Human Nature (1739); (2) Sections 1-9 and 12 of Hume's Enquiry Concerning Human Understanding (1748); and (3) the "Dissertation on the Passions" (1757).
Table of Contents (Clicking on the links below will take you to that part of this article)
Hume's Influences. In 1737 Hume sent a letter to his friend Michael Ramsay in which Hume suggests that, to understand Hume's views in the Treatise Meditations on the First Philosophy Meditationes de prima philosophia , 1641), Descartes combats sceptics who doubt the existence of the external world and the reliability of our senses. To accomplish his task, Descartes himself provisionally plays the role of a sceptic and doubts everything that can possibly be doubted. Descartes then arrives at one absolute truth - his own existence - and uses this as a foundation for demonstrating all knowledge. Hume was probably influenced by Descartes's provisional doubting process as Hume himself doubted the sources of our knowledge. Throughout Hume's philosophical writings, though, he also reacted against the more speculative metaphysical views that Descartes developed. The remaining three philosophers listed in Hume's letter - Malebranche, Bayle, and Berkeley - were all highly controversial figures when their writings first appeared, and they share the conviction that the true nature of the world is not as evident as we ordinarily think. By drawing from these three philosophers, it is no surprise that Hume challenged tradition in virtually every philosophical topic that he considered.

90. Contextualism In Epistemology [Internet Encyclopedia Of Philosophy]
. (2000b) Now You Know It, Now You Don t. Proceedings of the TwentiethWorld Congress of philosophy Volume V, epistemology 91106. .
http://www.iep.utm.edu/c/contextu.htm
Contextualism in Epistemology have knowledge and why we judge in some contexts that we don’t —and that contextualism provides the best solution to puzzles generated by skeptical arguments.
Table of Contents (Clicking on the links below will take you to that part of this article)
  • 1. Introduction 2. Subjunctive Conditionals Contextualism 3. Relevant Alternatives Contextualism and Rejecting Closure
    1. Introduction Epistemological contextualism has evolved primarily as a response to views that maintain that we have no knowledge of the world around us. Taking quite seriously the problems presented by skepticism, contextualists seek to resolve the apparent conflict between claims like the following: (1) I know that I have hands.
    (2) But I don’t know that I have hands if I don’t know that I’m not a brain-in-a-vat (that is, a bodiless brain that is floating in a vat of nutrients and that is electrochemically stimulated in a way that generates perceptual experiences that are exactly similar to those that I am now having in what I take to be normal circumstances).
    (3) I don’t know that I’m not a brain-in-a-vat (henceforth, a BIV).

91. UM Dept. Of Philosophy - Faculty
epistemology, philosophy of Mind, philosophy of Psychology, philosophyof Language. Metaphysics, epistemology, philosophy of Sexuality.
http://www.philosophy.umd.edu/people/faculty/
Department of Philosophy People : Faculty
Philosophy Faculty
Affiliate Faculty
Jeffrey Bub , Professor, Ph.D., University of London. Philosophy of Science, Philosophy of Physics, Philosophy of Neuropsychology. (CPaS Chair) Peter Carruthers , Professor, Ph.D., Oxford University. Epistemology, Philosophy of Mind, Philosophy of Psychology, Philosophy of Language. (Philosophy Chair) Christopher Cherniak , Professor, Ph.D., University of California, Berkeley. Epistemology, Cognitive Science, Philosophy of Neuroscience. Lindley Darden , Professor, Ph.D., University of Chicago. History and Philosophy of Biology, Philosophy of Science, Artificial Intelligence. Mathias Frisch , Assistant Professor, Ph.D., University of California, Berkeley. Philosophy of Science, Philosophy of Physics. Patricia Greenspan , Professor, Ph.D. Harvard University. Moral Psychology, Ethics, Metaethics, Philosophy of Mind. John Horty , Professor, Ph.D., University of Pittsburgh. Philosophical Logic, Artificial Intelligence, Decision Theory and Practical Reasoning, Ethics. (Also a member of UMIACS - The University of Maryland Institute for Advanced study in Computer Science) Samuel Kerstein , Associate Professor, Ph.D., Columbia University.

92. Epistemology, Introduction
This philosophy still dominates most present work in cognitive science and artificialintelligence. According to pragmatic epistemology, knowledge consists of
http://pespmc1.vub.ac.be/EPISTEMI.html
Epistemology, introduction
Epistemology is the branch of philosophy that studies knowledge. It attempts to answer the basic question: what distinguishes true (adequate) knowledge from false (inadequate) knowledge? Practically, this questions translates into issues of scientific methodology: how can one develop theories or models that are better than competing theories? It also forms one of the pillars of the new sciences of cognition, which developed from the information processing approach to psychology, and from artificial intelligence, as an attempt to develop computer programs that mimic a human's capacity to use knowledge in an intelligent way. When we look at the history of epistemology, we can discern a clear trend, in spite of the confusion of many seemingly contradictory positions. The first theories of knowledge stressed its absolute, permanent character, whereas the later theories put the emphasis on its relativity or situation-dependence, its continuous development or evolution, and its active interference with the world and its subjects and objects. The whole trend moves from a static, passive view of knowledge towards a more and more adaptive and active one. Let us start with the Greek philosophers. In Plato's view knowledge is merely an awareness of absolute, universal

93. Alvin Goldman
Alvin Goldman Professor epistemology, philosophy of Mind, Cognitive Science(732) 9326768 Davison Hall, Rm 109 goldman@philosophy.rutgers.edu.
http://philosophy.rutgers.edu/FACSTAFF/BIOS/goldman.html
Alvin Goldman
Professor

Epistemology, Philosophy of Mind, Cognitive Science
Davison Hall, Rm 109
goldman@philosophy.rutgers.edu
RESEARCH PUBLICATIONS RESEARCH Alvin Goldman's principal research areas are epistemology, philosophy of mind, and cognitive science, and he has also written on metaphysics, political and legal theory, and philosophy of science. In epistemology he has championed the causal theory of knowing, the relevant alternatives approach to knowledge, and reliabilism about justification. Epistemology and Cognition (1986) explores connections between epistemology and cognitive science. Knowledge in a Social World (1999) articulates a truth-oriented conception of social epistemology and shows how the pursuit of truth can be enhanced by good interpersonal argumentation and well-designed technologies and institutions of public communication. These themes are applied to science, law, democracy, and education. Recent papers on epistemic internalism, a priori warrant, philosophical intuitions, and trust in experts are collected in Pathways to Knowledge (2002). He is currently writing a book on the simulation theory of mindreading, combining approaches from philosophy of mind, developmental psychology, and cognitive neuroscience.

94. Notre Dame Philosophy Department Faculty And Staff
Audi, Robert, audi.1@nd.edu, Ethics, Political philosophy, epistemology,Religious epistemology, philosophy of Mind and Action . Bays
http://www.nd.edu/~ndphilo/faculty_staff.htm

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Grams, LinDa L. grams.2@nd.edu Administrative Assistant to Professors Weithman and Holloway. Robertson, Catherine robertson.24@nd.edu Administrative Assistant to Professors Freddoso and Stubenberg.
Members of the Department
Ameriks, Karl ameriks.2@nd.edu History of Modern Philosophy, Continental Philosophy. Audi, Robert audi.1@nd.edu Ethics, Political Philosophy, Epistemology, Religious Epistemology, Philosophy of Mind and Action . Bays, Timothy bays.5@nd.edu Logic, Philosophy of Logic, Philosophy of Mathematics. Blanchette, Patricia blanchette.1@nd.edu Philosophy of Logic, Philosophy of Language, Philosophy of Mathematics. Bobik, Joseph bobik.1@nd.edu Philosophy of Religion, Medieval Philosophy, Metaphysics. Burrell, David burrell.1@nd.edu Medieval Philosophy, Philosophical Theology, Metaphysics. Dallmayr, Fred Dallmayr.1@nd.edu Continental Philosophy, Contemporary Political Philosophy, Comparative Philosophy. David, Marian

95. Notre Dame Philosophy Department Graduate Students
Religion, Metaphysics, epistemology. Coffman, EJ, coffman.11@nd.edu,Metaphysics, philosophy of Action, epistemology, philosophy of Mind.
http://www.nd.edu/~ndphilo/students.htm

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Current Graduate Students Arana, Andrew arana.1@nd.edu Philosophy of Math, Logic Austin, Ryan austin.22@nd.edu Early Modern, Kant, History and Philosophy of Science. Baldwin, Jason baldwin.9@nd.edu Barham, James jbarham@nd.edu Philosophy of Science. Berry, Roberta berry.18@nd.edu Philosophy of Science. Biddle, Justin biddle.3@nd.edu Philosophy of Science and Philosophy of Physics. Birondo, Noell birondo.1@nd.edu Ethical Theory, Metaethics, Ancient Philosophy. Blauwkamp, Chris blauwkamp.1@nd.edu Twentieth Century German Philosophy Boeninger, Brian bboening@nd.edu Philosophy of Mind, Philosophy of Action, Philosophy of Religion. Botham, Thad botham.2@nd.edu Bowler, Michael bowler.1@nd.edu Continental, Ancient. Branham, Alissa branham.2@nd.edu Phenomenology (especially Husserl), Existentialism . Branson, Beau branson.1@nd.edu Metaphysics, Logic. Choi, Isaac ichoi@nd.edu Philosophy of Religion, Metaphysics, Epistemology. Coffman, E.J. coffman.11@nd.edu Metaphysics, Philosophy of Action, Epistemology, Philosophy of Mind. DiQuattro, David

96. Epistemology
epistemology. philosophy 5300/6300. University of Utah. Spring 2003. 1999. “Knowledge,skepticism and coherence” Philosophical Perspectives 13, epistemology.
http://www.geocities.com/black_tim/philosophy_6300.htm
epistemology Philosophy 5300/6300 University of Utah Spring 2003 Lecture Notes John L. Pollock and Joseph Cruz’s “Foundations Theories” PDF John L. Pollock and Joseph Cruz’s “Coherence Theories” PDF Alvin I. Goldman’s “What is justified belief?” PDF Alvin I. Goldman’s “Discrimination and perceptual knowledge” PDF Fred Dretske’s “The pragmatic dimension of knowledge” PDF David Lewis’s “Elusive knowledge” PDF Laurence BonJour’s “Externalist theories of empirical knowledge” PDF William P. Alston’s “Internalism and externalism in epistemology” PDF Alvin I. Goldman’s “Internalism exposed” PDF Ernest Sosa’s “Philosophical scepticism and epistemic circularity” PDF Christopher S. Hill, “Process reliabilism and cartesian scepticism PDF Instructor: Tim Black Class meets: Tuesdays and Thursdays; 10:45 a.m.-12:05 p.m. in OSH 336 Office hours: Tuesdays and Thursdays; 1:30 p.m.-2:45 p.m. ; other hours by appointment Office: OSH 341K Office phone: Instructor’s email: tim.black@philosophy.utah.edu I invite you to visit me during my office hours and to talk with me via telephone and e-mail. I always welcome your comments and questions, and I am exceptionally happy to talk with you about the course material or about other philosophical or administrative matters. Department office: OSH 341 Department phone: Aims of the Course: This course will focus on epistemological theories, emphasizing in particular the debate between internalism and externalism in epistemology, and on the ways in which these theories are employed in addressing the issue of skepticism about the external world.

97. Epistemology
epistemology Wikipedia, the free encyclopediaepistemology. From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. epistemology is the branchof philosophy that deals with the nature, origin and scope of knowledge.
http://www.courses.fas.harvard.edu/~phil159/
Spring 2004 Syllabus
Philosophy 159
Epistemology
Anthony S. Gillies
Meeting time: TTh 10:00-11:00 Exam group: 12 Catalog number: 4507 Announcements
There are no announcements for today. A survey of theories of justification and how they relate to questions about knowledge, perceptual beliefs, induction, and rational belief change.
Web contact: Gillies Anthony
URL: http://www.courses.fas.harvard.edu/~phil159/
Last modified: 02/03/2004 Instructor's Toolkit

98. Metaphysics, Epistemology And Philosophy Of Mind Reading List
Back. METAPHYSICS, epistemology, philosophy OF MIND READING LIST.METAPHYSICS. I. Ontological Commitment/Ontology. 1. WvO Quine On
http://web.gc.cuny.edu/Philosophy/COMPMIND.htm

[Back]
METAPHYSICS, EPISTEMOLOGY, PHILOSOPHY OF MIND READING LIST METAPHYSICS I. Ontological Commitment/Ontology 1. W.v.O. Quine "On What There Is" in his From a Logical Point of View
Ontological Relativity and Other Essays
3. Carnap, R. "Empiricism, Semantics, and Ontology" in many places e.g. S.D. Hales,ed. Metaphysics
4. Davidson, D. "The Logical Form of Action Sentences" in his Essays on Actions and Events II. Identity/Identity over time 5. W.v.O. Quine "Identity, Ostension, and Hypostasis" in his From a Logical Point of View
6. D. Parfit "Personal Identity" in Personal Identity J. Perry, ed.
7. B. Williams "The Self and the Future" in Personal Identity J. Perry,ed.
8. J. Perry "Williams on the self and the future" in Perry and Bratman,eds. Introduction to Philosophy III. Causality and Free Will 9. R.M. Chisholm "Human Freedom and the Self" in Feinberg and Shafer-Landau,eds. Reasoning and Responsibility
10. Harry Frankfurt "Freedom of the Will and the Concept of a Person" in G. Watson, ed. Free Will
11. D. Lewis "Causation" in his Philosophical Papers Vol.II

99. Philosophy Department -- Faculty And Staff
ANDRESITO E. ACUÑA, MA Professor, philosophy Specialization epistemology,philosophy of Social and the Behavioral Sciences, philosophy of Language.
http://web.kssp.upd.edu.ph/philo/faculty.htm
THE PHILOSOPHY DEPARTMENT FACULTY KAREN CONNIE M. ABALOS
Instructor, Philosophy
Specialization : Speculative Thought, Philosophical Analysis, Feminist Philosophy ANDRESITO E. ACUÑA, M.A.
Professor, Philosophy
Specialization : Epistemology, Philosophy of Social and the Behavioral Sciences, Philosophy of Language ALLEN ANDREW A. ALVAREZ, M.A.
Assistant Professor, Philosophy
Specialization : Bioethics, Philosophy of Reasoning JOSE ULYSSES T. ARAÑA, M.A.
Assistant Professor, Philosophy
Specialization : Ethical theory, Practical Reasoning, Philosophy of Language KARITSA ANIKA C. AREVALO
Instructor, Philosophy
Specialization : Social and Political Philosophy, Ethics, Philosophy for Children ROMULO T. BAÑARES, M.A. Instructor, Philosophy Specialization : Epistemology, Philosophy of Language, Philosophy of Religion VENERANDO F. CAGUISANO, M.A. Assistant Professor, Philosophy Specialization : History of Philosophy, Epistemology, Logic, Philosophy of Education, Philosophy of Buddhism LILYBETH R. CENTENO-LUMAGBAS Instructor, Philosophy Specialization : Feminism, Ancient Philosophy

100. People - Department Of Philosophy - University Of Miami
Specialties philosophy of Psychology, philosophy of Language, epistemology,philosophy of Science. Office Ashe Bldg., Room 713.
http://www.miami.edu/phi/faculty.htm
Home FACULTY Name : Edward Erwin Ph.D., Johns Hopkins University ), Professor. Specialties : Philosophy of Psychology, Philosophy of Language, Epistemology, Philosophy of Science. Office : Ashe Bldg., Room 713 Office Phone # : Office Hours : E-mail : eerwin@miami.edu Name : Simon Evnine Ph.D., University of California, Los Angeles ), Assistant Professor. Specialties : Epistemology, Metaphysics, Philosophy of Mind. Office : Bldg. 37 B, Room 2-2 Office Phone # : Office Hours : E-mail : sevnine@mail.as.miami.edu Name : Susan Haack Ph.D., Cambridge University
Cooper Senior Scholar in Arts and Sciences,
Professor of Philosophy and Law. Specialties : Philosophy of Logic and Language, Epistemology and
Metaphysics, Philosophy of Science,
Pragmatism, Philosophy and Literature. Office : Ashe Bldg., Room 729 Office Phone # : Office Hours : E-mail : s.haack@miami.edu Dr. Susan Haack Name : Risto Hilpinen (Ph.D., University of Helsinki), Professor. Specialties : Philosophical Logic, Epistemology and Philosophy of

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