ssppp 2016 faculty - unive.it · of the origin of the logic of symbolic mathematics: jacob klein...
TRANSCRIPT
SSPPP2016
Ca’ Foscari University Venice
FACULTY
Nicolas de Warren (PhD Boston University, 2001)is Research Professor in Philosophy and
Director of Center for Phenomenology and Continental Philosophy, Husserl Archives, at KU
Leuven.
Burt C. Hopkins (PhD DePaul University, 1988) is Professor and Chair of Philosophy at Seattle
University. His main research interest is the philosophical foundation of the transformation of
knowledge that began in the 16th century with the philosophical advent of modernity. He is author
of The Origin of the Logic of Symbolic Mathematics: Jacob Klein and Edmund Husserl (2011), The
Philosophy of Husserl (2010), and Intentionality in Husserl and Heidegger: The Problem of the
Original Method and Phenomenon of Phenomenology (1993). He is founding co-editor of The New
Yearbook for Phenomenology and Phenomenological Philosophy.
Claudio Majolino (PhD University of Rome “La Sapienza”, 2002). After teaching at University of
Paris “La Sorbonne” (2003-2004) he is professor of philosophy of language at University of Lille
(2005—). He has also been distinguished visiting professor at Seattle University (2008, 2010). In
the last fifteen years he has authored, edited and translated several books and articles on
phenomenology, ontology and the history of philosophy.
Daniele De Santis (PhD University of Rome II, 2013) is full-time instructor in the Philosophy
Department of Seattle University. His main interest is Edmund Husserl’s phenomenology.
Currently he is working on the problem of the a priori in Schlick, Kant, and Husserl.
Matteo Giannasi (PhD Ca' Foscari University Venice, 2005).Matteo Giannasi has published two
books and a number of papers on various aspects of the phenomenological project. He has been
lecturing on a number of subjects at Ca' Foscari University Venice. His interests focus, in particular, on
the legacies of the phenomenological movement and of linguistic philosophy.
Emiliano Trizio (MPhil London School of Economics 2001, PhD Paris-X/Ca’ Foscari University
Venice, 2005). After teaching at the University of Paris Pantheon Sorbonne, and at the University of
Lille III, he is currently full-time instructor in the Philosophy Department of Seattle University,
where he teaches philosophy of human person, ethics, and introductory courses on ancient
philosophy and culture. He is author of several publications on phenomenology and on various
aspects of contemporary philosophy of science.
Gian Luigi Paltrinieri is Associate Professor at Ca’ Foscari University Venice, where he teaches
Philosophical Hermeneutics. His writings concern both Kantian Thought and the Hermeneutic
Contemporary Area. More recent essays: “Kant e illinguaggio (Kant and Language)”,
2009; “L’intertestualitàtraermeneutica e letteratura: una breve riflessionefilosofica (Intertestuality
between Hermeneutics and Literature: Some Philosophical Remarks)”, 2012; “Die
Ausnahmebestätigtnicht die Regel. Kant zwischenPhronesis und Klugheit”, in «Kant und die
Philosophie in weltbürgerlicherAbsicht». Akten des XI. Internationalen Kant-Kongresses, Berlin,
Berlin 2013; “Nietzsche e la verità. Al di là del corretto e dello sbagliato (Nietzsche and Truth.
Beyond Right and False)”, 2014.
ArunIyer is philosophy instructor at Seattle University. He is the author of Towards an
Epistemology of Ruptures: The Case of Heidegger and Foucault published by Bloomsbury. He is
the co-editor and translator with Pol Vandevelde of the three volume critical edition of Hans-Georg
Gadamer’s previously untranslated essays, the first volume of which is titled Hermeneutics between
History and Philosophy: The Selected Writings of Hans-Georg Gadamer: Volume I and will be out
this year. His research interests include epistemology and 20th
century continental philosophy,
especially the work of Martin Heidegger and Michel Foucault.
Dermot Moran (PhD DLitt MRIA)is Professor of Philosophy (Metaphysics & Logic) at University
College Dublin, Ireland, and President of the International Federation of Philosophical
Studies/Fédération Internationale des Sociétés de Philosophie (FISP). He has published on medieval
philosophy, contemporary Continental philosophy, especially the phenomenological tradition, and
on the dialogue between philosophical traditions. His books include: The Philosophy of John
Scottus Eriugena. A Study of Idealism in the Middle Ages (Cambridge University Press, 1989;
reissued 2004), Introduction to Phenomenology (Routledge, 2000), Edmund Husserl. Founder of
Phenomenology (Cambridge: Polity, 2005), Husserl’s Crisis of the European Sciences: An
Introduction (Cambridge University Press, 2012), and The Husserl Dictionary (Bloomsbury, 2012),
co-authored with Joseph Cohen. He is Founding Editor of The International Journal of
Philosophical Studies (1993)and Editor of the book series Contributions to Phenomenology
(Springer). He is a member of the Executive Committee of SPEP (2013-2016). Professor Moran
was awarded the Royal Irish Academy Gold Medal in the Humanities in 2012. In 2013, he was
awarded the DLitt Degree by the National University of Ireland on the basis of published work. In
2015 he was awarded an Honorary Doctoral Degree from the University of Athens. In 2015, he was
Gadamer Visiting Professor at Boston College.
Hélène Leblanc is a research fellow on the SNF project Meaning and Intentionality in Anton Marty. At
the Crossroads of the Philosophy of Language and Mind. She is a member of Inbegriff – Geneva
Seminar for Austro-German Philosophy. She wrote a PhD on semiotic theories in Early Modern
Philosophy, received at the Université de Lille 3, under the supervision of Philippe Hamou (Paris Ouest
Nanterre La Défense) and Giulia Belgioioso (Universitàdel Salento - Lecce).
Darian Meacham is Senior Lecturer in Philosophy at UWE, Bristol and researcher at BrisSynBio.
His main areas of research are political philosophy, phenomenology and philosophy of technology.
He is a lead on the Post-Europe Project.
Niall Keane is Senior Lecturer and Head of the Department of Philosophy at Mary Immaculate College,
University of Limerick, Ireland. He has published widely in the areas of phenomenology and hermeneutics
and is currently working on the emergence and transformation of the self in Heidegger’s philosophy. In
addition to his publications on Heidegger, Husserl, Gadamer, Michel Henry, he is Treasurer of the Irish
Phenomenological Circle, executive committee member of the British Society for Phenomenology, and co-
founder and coordinator of the Irish Centre for Transnational Studies.