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Michael Neumann (born 1946) is a professor of philosophy at Trent University in Ontario, Canada. [1] He is the author of What's Left?Radical Politics and the Radical Psyche (1988), The Rule of Law: Politicizing Ethics (2002) and The Case Against Israel (2005), and has published papers on utilitarianism and rationality.
Kathryn Norlock (born 1969) is the inaugural Kenneth Mark Drain Endowed Chair in Ethics, the Chair of the Department of Philosophy, an affiliated faculty member in Sustainability Studies, and an associated faculty member in Gender and Women's Studies at Trent University. [1] [2]
Trenton Merricks (/ ˈ m ɛr ɪ k s /) is an American philosopher and the Commonwealth Professor of Philosophy [1] at the University of Virginia. While Merricks' primary field of study is metaphysics, he has also published scholarship in epistemology , philosophy of language , and philosophy of religion .
From 2014-2024, he was the president of Trent University. [2] Groarke's publications have concerned Ancient Greek philosophy, the history of ideas, and argumentation theory. He has published several papers on the possibility of arguments in non-linguistic modes, such as visual and musical arguments.
Clark was born on 30 October 1945 in Luton, Bedfordshire.His family originally came from Shropshire and Staffordshire. His father, D. A. R. Clark, was an apprentice railway engineer who became a technology teacher, and was later appointed principal of Middlesbrough Technical College, now Teesside University, then principal of Nottingham Technical College, now Nottingham Trent University.
Trent Schroyer (May 23, 1936 – December 4, 2018) was an American scholar, author and international activist. Schroyer's first book The Critique of Domination: The Origins and Development of Critical Theory [ 1 ] was nominated for a National Book Award .
Steuco proposes his “perennial philosophy,” deeply permeated by platonism, in 1540, on the eve of the Council of Trent: at a moment when, after the Protestant Reformation, the chance of restoring the unity of the Christian world would seem to be exhausted, and the very ideal – dear to many exponents of the so-called “Catholic Reform ...
Christopher William Tindale (born 1953) is a Canadian philosopher specializing in rhetoric, argumentation theory, and ancient Greek philosophy. [2] Tindale is an editor of the journal Informal Logic, and currently serves as the chair of the Centre for Research in Reasoning, Argumentation, and Rhetoric.