Curriculum Vitae JOHN J. DRUMMOND 280 Bronxville Road, 7M Bronxville, NY 10708 Telephone: (914) 787-8733 Facsimile: (866) 0686 Department of Philosophy Fordham University Bronx, NY 10458 Telephone: (718) 817–3332 Facsimile: (718) 817–3300 E-mail: [email protected] Web site: http://www.fordham.edu/philosophy/drummond EDUCATIONAL RECORD Georgetown University, Ph.D., Philosophy, 1975 Dissertation: “Presenting and Kinaesthetic Sensations in Husserl’s Phenomenology of Perception” Georgetown University, A.B., Philosophy, 1968 TEACHING EXPERIENCE Robert Southwell, S.J. Distinguished Professor in the Humanities, Fordham University, 2005– Professor of Philosophy, Fordham University, 2000– Visiting Professor, Fordham University, 1999–2000 Mount Saint Mary’s College Distinguished Professor, Mount Saint Mary’s College, 1997–2000 Professor of Philosophy, Mount Saint Mary’s College, 1991–2000 Adjunct Professor of Philosophy, Georgetown University, 1990–1995 (spring semesters) Associate Professor of Philosophy, Mount Saint Mary’s College, 1988–91 Visiting Associate Professor of Philosophy, Georgetown University, 1987–88 William P. and Gayle S. Whipple Associate Professor of Philosophy, Coe College, 1987–88 Associate Professor of Philosophy, Coe College, 1981–88 Assistant Professor of Philosophy, Coe College, 1975–81 Instructor, Georgetown University, 1974–75 PUBLICATIONS Books 1. Historical Dictionary of Husserl’s Philosophy (Lanham, Md.: Scarecrow Press, 2008); reissued in paperback as The A to Z of Husserl’s Philosophy (Lanham, Md.: Scarecrow Press, 2010). 2. Husserlian Intentionality and Non-Foundational Realism: Noema and Object (Dordrecht: Kluwer Academic Publishers, 1990). John J. Drummond 2 Edited Books 1. Editor (with Sonja Rinofner-Kreidl), Emotional Experiences: Ethical and Social Significance (London: Rowman & Littlefield International, forthcoming). 2. Editor (with Otfried Höffe), Husserl’s Philosophy [tentative title] (London: Cambridge University Press, forthcoming). 3. Editor (with Kwok-ying Lau), Husserl’s Logical Investigations in the New Century: Western and Chinese Perspectives (Dordrecht: Springer, 2007). 4. Editor (with Lester Embree), Phenomenological Approaches to Moral Philosophy (Dordrecht: Kluwer Academic Publishers, 2002). 5. Editor (with James G. Hart), The Truthful and The Good: Essays in Honor of Robert Sokolowski (Dordrecht: Kluwer Academic Publishers, 1996). 6. Editor (with Lester Embree), The Phenomenology of the Noema (Dordrecht: Kluwer Academic Publishers, 199.2). Journal Editions 1. Guest editor, special Husserl edition, American Catholic Philosophical Quarterly, spring 1992. Articles 1. “Having the Right Attitudes,” The New Yearbook for Phenomenology and Phenomenological Philosophy, forthcoming. 2. “Brentano, Geiger, Fichte, and Husserl’s Ethics,” in The Oxford Handbook of the History of Phenomenology, ed. D. Zahavi (Oxford: Oxford University Press, forthcoming). 3. “Husserl and the Problem of Consciousness,” in Consciousness and the Great Philosophers: What Would They Have Said About Our Mind-Body Problem, ed. S. Leach and J. Tartaglia (London: Routledge, forthcoming 2016). 4. “Time and the ‘Antinomies’ of Deliberation,” in Time and the Philosophy of Action, ed. R. Altshuler and M. Sigrist, 175–88 (New York: Routledge, 2016). 5. “Intuitions,” teorema 34 (2015): 19–36. 6. “Who’d ‘a Thunk It? Celebrating the Centennial of Ideas I,” in Commentary on “Ideas I,” ed. A. Staiti, 13–32 (Berlin: de Gruyter, 2015). 7. “The Doctrine of the Noema and the Theory of Reason,” in Commentary on “Ideas I,” ed. A. Staiti, 257–71 (Berlin: de Gruyter, 2015). 8. “Exceptional Love?” in Feeling and Value, Willing and Action, ed. M. Ubiali and M. Wehrle, 51–69 (Dordrecht: Springer, 2015). 9. “Intentionality, phenomenological perspectives,” in Routledge Encyclopedia of Philosophy Online, ed. T. Crane, (2015); https://www.rep.routledge.com/articles/intentionality-phenomenological-perspectives/. 10. “Neo-Aristotelian Ethics: Naturalistic or Phenomenological,” in Phenomenology in a New Key — Between Analysis and History: Essays in Honor of Richard Cobb-Stevens, ed. J. Bloechl and N. de Warren, 135–49 (Dordrecht: Springer, 2015). 11. “Husserl’s Phenomenological Axiology and Aristotelian Virtue Ethics,” in New Perspectives on Aristotelianism and its Critics, ed. M. Tuominen, S. Heinämaa, V. Mäkinen, 179–95 (Leiden: Brill, 2014). 12. “Phenomenology, Eudaimonia, and the Virtues,” in Phenomenology and Virtue Ethics, ed. Kevin Hermberg and Paul Gyllenhammer, 97–112 (London and New York: Bloomsbury, 2013). John J. Drummond 3 13. “The Intentional Structure of Emotions,” Logical Analysis and the History of Philosophy/Philosophiegeschichte und logische Analyse 16 (2013): 244–63. 14. “Eidetic Variation,” in New Catholic Encyclopedia Supplement 2012–2013: Ethics and Philosophy, ed. Robert L. Fastiggi, vol. 2, 434–35 (Detroit: Gale, 2013). 15. “Intentionality without Representationalism,” in The Oxford Handbook of Contemporary Phenomenology, ed. D. Zahavi, 115–33 (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2012). 16. “Imagination and Appresentation, Sympathy and Empathy in Smith and Husserl,” in Intersubjectivity and Objectivity in Adam Smith and Edmund Husserl: A Collection of Essays, ed. C. Fricke and D. Føllesdal, 117–37 (Heusenstamm bei Frankfurt: Ontos Verlag, 2012). 17. “Intentionality,” in The Routledge Companion to Phenomenology, ed. S. Luft and S. Overgaard, 125–34 (New York: Routledge, 2011). 18. “Self-Responsibility and Eudaimonia,” in Philosophy, Phenomenology, Sciences: Essays in Commemoration of Edmund Husserl, ed. C. Ierna, H. Jacobs, F. Mattens, 411–30 (Dordrecht: Springer, 2010). 19. “Universal Goods, Cultural Specificity,” in Identity and Alterity: Phenomenology and Cultural Traditions, ed. Tze-wan Kwan, Chan-fai Cheung, and Kwok-ying Lau, 247–57 (Würzburg: Verlag Königshausen und Neumann, 2010). 20. “Feelings, Emotions, and Truly Perceiving the Valuable,” The Modern Schoolman 86 (2009): 363–79. 21. “Phénoménologie et ontologie,” trans. G. Fréchette, Philosophiques 36 (2009), 593–607. 22. “The Limitation of Formal Ontology by Formal Logic” (in French translation by Claudio Majolino, Methodos 9 (2009): 16–38. • Electronically published at http://methodos.revues.org/ document2131.html#ndlr. 23. “Moral Self-Identity and Identifying with Others,” The New Yearbook for Phenomenology and Phenomenological Philosophy 8 (2008): 1–15. 24. “Wholes, Parts, and Phenomenological Methodology,” in Edmund Husserl Logische Untersuchungen, ed. Verena Mayer, 105–22 (Berlin: Akademie Verlag, 2008). 25. “The Transcendental and the Psychological,” Husserl Studies 24 (2008): 193–204. 26. “Moral Phenomenology and Moral Intentionality,” Phenomenology and the Cognitive Sciences (special edition on moral phenomenology edited by Uriah Kriegel) 7 (2008): 35–49. 27. “Personal Perspectives,” The Southern Journal of Philosophy 45 (2007 Supplement): 28–44. 28. “Phenomenology: Neither Auto- Nor Hetero- Be,” Phenomenology and the Cognitive Sciences (special edition on Daniel Dennett edited by Alva Noë) 6 (2007): 57–74. 29. “Pure Logical Grammar: Identity Amidst Linguistic Differences,” in Husserl’s Logical Investigations in the New Century: Western and Chinese Perspectives, ed. Kwok-Ying Lau and John J. Drummond, 53–66 (Dordrecht: Springer, 2007). • Chinese translation: Phenomenological and Philosophical Research in China, 102–124 (Shanghai: Shanghai Translation Publishing House, 2003). 30. “The Good and Negative Obligation, the Tolerable and the Intolerable,” in Tolerancia / Toleration / Tolerância: Interpretando la experiencia de la tolerancia / Interpreting the Experience of Tolerance, ed. Rosemary Rizo-Patrón de Lerner, 27–40 (Lima, Peru: Fondo Editorial, 2006). 31. “Respect as a Moral Emotion: A Phenomenological Approach,” Husserl Studies 22 (2006): 1–27. 32. “The Case(s) of (Self-)Awareness,” in Self-Representational Approaches to Consciousness, ed. Uriah Kriegel and Kenneth Williford, 199–220 (Cambridge, Mass.: The MIT Press, 2006). 33. “Self, Other, and Moral Obligation,” Philosophy Today 49 (2005 Supplement): 39–47. 34. “Husserl, Edmund,” in The Encyclopedia of Philosophy, ed. Donald Borchert, IV: 521-27 (2nd ed., Farmington Hills, Mich.: Macmillan Reference USA, 2005). John J. Drummond 4 35. “Value-Predicates and Value-Attributes,” in Erfahrung und Analyse / Experience and Analysis: Proceedings of the 27th International Wittgenstein Symposium, ed. Johann C. Marek and Maria E. Reicher, 363–71 (Vienna: öbv&hpt, 2005). 36. “Sokolowski, Robert,” Dictionary of Modern American Philosophers, 4: 2276–2280 (Bristol: Thoemmes Continuum, 2005). 37. “Personalism and Metaphysics,” American Catholic Philosophical Quarterly 79 (2005): 203–12. 38. “‘Cognitive Impenetrability’ and the Complex Intentionality of the Emotions,” Journal of Consciousness Studies 11, No. 10–11 (2004): 109–26. • Reprinted in Hidden Resources: Classical Perspectives on Subjectivity, ed. Dan Zahavi, 109–26 (Exeter, UK: Imprint Academic, 2004). 39. “On Welton on Husserl,” The New Yearbook for Phenomenology and Phenomenological Philosophy 3 (2003): 315–32. 40. “Judging One’s Own Case,” in Ethics and Theological Disclosures: The Thought of Robert Sokolowski, ed. Guy Mansini, O.S.B. and James G. Hart, 1–17 (Washington, DC: The Catholic University of America Press, 2003). 41. “The Structure of Intentionality,” in The New Husserl: A Critical Reader, ed. Donn Welton, 65–92 (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 2003). • Reprinted in Edmund Husserl: Critical Assessments of Leading Philosophers, ed. Rudolf Bernet, Donn Welton and Gina Zavota, 3: 31–60 (New York: Routledge, 2005). 42. “Pure Logical Grammar: Anticipatory Categoriality and Articulated Categoriality,” International Journal of Philosophical Studies 11 (2003): 125–39. 43. “Husserl’s Third Logical Investigation: Parts and Wholes, Founding Connections, and the Synthetic A Priori,” in Husserl’s Logical Investigations, ed. Daniel O. Dahlstrom, 57–68 (Dordrecht: Kluwer Academic Publishers, 2003). 44. “The Political Role of the Philosopher,” (http://opo-phenomenology.org/essays/DrummondArticle.pdf, 2003). 45. “Complicar las emociones” (trans. Martín Oyata), Areté: Revista de Filosofía 14 (2002): 175–89. 46. “Aristotelianism and Phenomenology,” in Phenomenological Approaches to Moral Philosophy, ed. John J. Drummond and Lester Embree, 15–45 (Dordrecht: Kluwer Academic Publishers, 2002). 47. “Introduction: The Phenomenological Tradition and Moral Philosophy,” in Phenomenological Approaches to Moral Philosophy, ed. John J. Drummond and Lester Embree, 1–13 (Dordrecht: Kluwer Academic Publishers, 2002). 48. “The Logical Investigations: Paving the Way to a Transcendental Logic,” in One Hundred Years of Phenomenology, ed. D. Zahavi and F. Stjernfelt, 31–40 (Dordrecht: Kluwer Academic Publishers, 2002). 49. “Forms of Social Unity: Partnership, Membership, and Citizenship,” Husserl Studies 18 (2002): 123–40. 50. “Paradox or Contradiction?”, Human Studies 25 (2002): 89–102. 51. “Moral Encounters,” Recherches husserliennes 16 (2001): 39–60. 52. “Ethics,” in The Reach of Reflection: Issues for Phenomenology’s Second Century, ed. Steven Crowell, Lester Embree, and Samuel J. Julian, 1: 118–41, (<http://www.electronpress.com>, 2001). 53. “Paradox or Contradiction: David Carr on the Transcendental Self. Review of The Paradox of Subjectivity: The Self in the Transcendental Tradition by David Carr,” in Research in Phenomenology 31 (2001): 266–276. 54. “Paradox or Contradiction,” Philosophy Today 44 (Supplement, 2000): 140–49. 55. “Time, History, and Tradition,” in The Many Faces of Time, ed. J. Brough and L. Embree, 127–47 (Dordrecht: Kluwer Academic Publishers, 2000). John J. Drummond 5 56. “Political Community,” in Phenomenology of the Political, ed. K. Thompson and L. Embree, 29–53 (Dordrecht: Kluwer Academic Publishers, 2000). 57. “Edith Stein: Philosopher, Nun, Saint,” Delta Epsilon Sigma Journal 44 (1999): 100–11. 58. “From Intentionality to Intensionality and Back,” Études phénoménologiques 27–28 (1998): 89–126. 59. “Noema,” in The Encyclopedia of Phenomenology, ed. L. Embree et al., 494–99 (Dordrecht: Kluwer Academic Publishers, 1997). 60. “Space,” in The Encyclopedia of Phenomenology, ed. L. Embree et al., 670–75 (Dordrecht: Kluwer Academic Publishers, 1997). 61. “Downstream from Pittsburgh,” Delta Epsilon Sigma Journal 42 (1997): 84–89. 62. “Agency, Agents, and (Sometimes) Patients,” in The Truthful and the Good: Essays in Honor of Robert Sokolowski, ed. J. Drummond and J. Hart, 145-157 (Dordrecht: Kluwer Academic Publishers, 1996). 63. “The ‘Spiritual’ World: the Personal, the Social, and the Communal,” in Issues in Ideas II, ed. T. Nenon and L. Embree, 237–254 (Dordrecht: Kluwer Academic Publishers, 1996). 64. “Moral Objectivity: Husserl’s Sentiments of the Understanding,” Husserl Studies 12 (1995): 165–183. • Reprinted in Edmund Husserl: Critical Assessments of Leading Philosophers, ed. Rudolf Bernet, Donn Welton, and Gina Zavota, 5: 80–98 (New York: Routledge, 2005). 65. “Synthesis, identity, and the a priori,” Recherches husserliennes 4 (1995): 27–51. 66. “De–Ontologizing the Noema: An Abstract Consideration,” in Phenomenology of the Noema, ed. J. Drummond and L. Embree, 89–109 (Dordrecht: Kluwer Academic Publishers, 1992). • Reprinted in Edmund Husserl: Critical Assessments of Leading Philosophers, ed. Rudolf Bernet, Donn Welton, and Gina Zavota, 4: 286–302 (New York: Routledge, 2005). 64. “Husserl’s Reformation of Philosophy: Premodern, Modern, Postmodern?,” American Catholic Philosophical Quarterly 66 (1992): 135–154. 65. “Husserl and Willard on Logical Form,” in Phenomenology and the Formal Sciences, ed. J. N. Mohanty, D. Føllesdal, and T. Seebohm, 243–255 (Dordrecht: Kluwer Academic Publishers, 1992). 66. “Indirect Mathematization in the Physical Sciences,” in Phenomenology of Natural Science, ed. L. Hardy and L. Embree, 71–92 (Dordrecht: Kluwer Academic Publishers, 1992). 67. Review Article, Phenomenological Method: Theory and Practice by F. Kersten, in Husserl Studies 9 (1992): 219–26. 68. “Phenomenology and the Foundationalism Debate,” Reason Papers 16 (1991): 45–71. 69. Review Article, Investigations in Philosophy of Space by Elisabeth Ströker, tr. by A. Mickunas, in Husserl Studies 6 (1989): 73–78. 70. “Modernism and Postmodernism: Bernstein or Husserl,” The Review of Metaphysics 42 (1988): 275–300. 71. “Realism versus Anti-realism: A Husserlian Contribution,” in Edmund Husserl and the Phenomenological Tradition: Essays in Phenomenology, ed. R. Sokolowski, 87–106 (Washington, DC: The Catholic University of America Press, 1988). 72. Review Article, Essays in Memory of Aron Gurwitsch, 1983, ed. by L. Embree, in Husserl Studies 4 (1987): 63–70. 73. “Frege and Husserl: Another Look at the Issue of Influence,” Husserl Studies 2 (1985): 245–65. 74. “The Perceptual Roots of Geometric Idealizations,” The Review of Metaphysics 37 (1984): 785–810. 75. Review Article, Passive Synthesis und Intersubjectivität bei Edmund Husserl by Ichiro Yamaguchi, in Husserl Studies 1 (1984): 218–25. 76. Review Article, Studien zur Arithmetik und Geometrie. Texte aus dem Nachlass (1886–1901) by Edmund Husserl, ed. by I. Strohmeyer, Husserliana XXI, in Man and World 17 (1984): 217–27. John J. Drummond 6 77. “Objects’ Optimal Appearances and the Immediate Awareness of Space in Vision,” Man and World 16 (1983): 177–205. 78. “Indivisible Lines and the Timaeus,” APEIRON: A Journal for Ancient Philosophy and Science 16 (1982): 63–70. 79. “A Note on Physica 211 b 14–25,” The New Scholasticism 55 (1981): 219–28. 80. “A Critique of Gurwitsch’s ‘Phenomenological Phenomenalism’,” The Southern Journal of Philosophy 18 (1980): 9–21. 81. “On Seeing a Material Thing in Space: The Role of Kinaesthesis in Visual Perception,” Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 40 (1979–80): 19–32. • Reprinted in Phenomenology: Critical Concepts in Philosophy, ed. Dermot Moran and Lester Embree, 2: 43–55 (New York: Routledge, 2004). • Reprinted in Edmund Husserl: Critical Assessments of Leading Philosophers, ed. Rudolf Bernet, Donn Welton, and Gina Zavota, 3: 192–204 (New York: Routledge, 2005). 82. “The Phenomenology of Perceptual Sense,” Southwestern Journal of Philosophy 10 (1979): 139–46. 83. “On the Nature of Perceptual Appearances or is Husserl an Aristotelian?”, The New Scholasticism 52 (1978): 1–22. 84. “Husserl on the Ways to the Performance of the Reduction,” Man and World 8 (1975): 47–69. • Reprinted in Phenomenology: Critical Concepts in Philosophy, ed. Dermot Moran and Lester Embree, 1: 231–51 (New York: Routledge, 2004). • French translation (by Julien Farges): “Husserl et les voies de l’accomplissement de la réduction,” Alter 16 (2008): 263–88. Book Reviews 1. Anthony Steinbock, Moral Emotions: Reclaiming the Evidence of the Heart, in Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews, https://ndpr.nd.edu/news/53564-moral-emotions-reclaiming-the-evidence-of-the-heart-2/ 2. Simon Glendinning, In the Name of Phenomenology, in Mind 118 (2009): 830–34. 3. Donn Welton, The Other Husserl: The Horizons of Transcendental Phenomenology, in International Philosophical Quarterly 43 (2003): 241–42. 4. Henry Pietersma, Phenomenological Epistemology, in International Philosophical Quarterly 42 (2002): 134–36. 5. Joseph J. Kockelmans, Edmund Husserl’s Phenomenology, in International Philosophical Quarterly 36 (1996): 107–109. 6. Robert Sokolowski, Pictures, Quotations, and Distinctions: Fourteen Essays in Phenomenology, in American Catholic Philosophical Quarterly 68 (1994): 105–10. 7. Edmund Husserl, The Phenomenology of Internal Time-Consciousness, tr. by John Barnett Brough, in The Review of Metaphysics 46 (1993): 848–50. 8. J. Claude Evans, Strategies of Deconstruction: Derrida and the Myth of the Voice, in The Review of Metaphysics 46 (1993): 842–44. 9. Herman Rapaport, Heidegger and Derrida: Reflections on Time and Language, in The Review of Metaphysics 46 (1993): 868–70. 10. Richard Cobb-Stevens, Husserl and Analytic Philosophy, in The Review of Metaphysics 45 (1991): 117–18. 11. Edmund Husserl, Aufsätze und Vorträge (1922–1937), ed. by T. Nenon and H. R. Sepp, Husserliana XVII, in The Review of Metaphysics 44 (1991): 637–38. John J. Drummond 7 12. Anna-Teresa Tyminiecka, Logos and Life. Volume 2: The Three Movements of the Soul, in The Review of Metaphysics 44 (1990): 444–45. 13. Edmund Husserl, Aufsätze und Vorträge (1911–1921), ed. by T. Nenon and H. R. Sepp, Husserliana XXV, in The Review of Metaphysics 42 (1989): 841–42. 14. Robert S. Tragesser, Husserl and Realism in Logic and Mathematics, in The Review of Metaphysics, 38 (1985): 913–16. 15. Donn Welton, The Origins of Meaning: A Critical Study of the Thresholds of Husserlian Phenomenology, in The Review of Metaphysics 38 (1985): 697–99. 16. Franz Brentano, Sensory and Noetic Consciousness: Psychology from an Empirical Standpoint, tr. by L. McAlister and M. Schättle, in The Review of Metaphysics 39 (1985): 141–42. 17. Rudolf Boehm, Vom Gesichtspunkt der Phänomenologie II: Studien zur Phänomenologie der Epoché, in The Review of Metaphysics 37 (1983): 106–109. 18. Robert Sokolowski, Presence and Absence: A Philosophical Investigation of Language and Being, in The Journal of the British Society for Phenomenology 11 (1980): 192–94. 19. Erazim Kohàk, Idea and Experience: Edmund Husserl’s Project of Phenomenology in Ideas I, in The Review of Metaphysics 33 (1980): 788–89. 20. Bernward Grünewald, Der phänomenologische Ursprung des Logischen, in The Review of Metaphysics 32 (1979): 544–45. OTHER PROFESSIONAL EXPERIENCE Addresses (1) “Emotions, Value, Action,” Keynote Address, Copenhagen Summer School in Phenomenology and the Philosophy of Mind,” University of Copenhagen, August18, 2016. (2) “Anger and Indignation,” Husserl Circle, Loyola University of Chicago, June 17, 2016. (3) “Emotions, Value, and Action,” Keynote Address, North American Society for Early Phenomenology, St. John’s University, May 20, 2016. (4) “Emotions, Value, and Action,” Workshop in Phenomenological Philosophy, University of San Diego, April 29, 2016. (5) “Phenomenology and Meta-Ontology,” Metaphysics and Mind Workshop, Fordham University, November 3, 2015. (6) “Nature and Goals of Philosophy Education at Jesuit Colleges and Universities,” panelist at a meeting of the Society of Philosophers in Jesuit Education, American Catholic Philosophical Association, Boston, October 9, 2015. (7) “Intentionality, Ontology, and Non-Existence,” La conférence universitaire de Suisse occidentale (CUSO) Workshop on Existence, Non-Existence and Intentionality, University of Geneva, Switzerland, July 4–5, 2015. (8) “Husserl, Buck-Passing, and Fitting-Attitude Theories of Value,” Husserl Circle, University of Helsinki, Finland, June 9–12, 2015. (9) “Appropriate Emotions, Response-Dependency, and Buck-Passing,” Workshop in Phenomenological Philosophy, Creighton University, May 20–22, 2015. (10) “Phenomenology and Embodied Cognition,” Plenary Address, Fordham University Graduate Student Conference, April 24, 2015. (11) “Objects,” Husserl Circle, Dartmouth College, May 30, 2014. (12) “Intuitions,” Workshop in Phenomenological Philosophy, Rice University, April 24, 2014. John J. Drummond 8 (13) “‘Who’d ’a thunk it?’ Celebrating the Centennial of Husserl’s Ideas I,” invited Keynote Lecture at the Workshop on Husserl’s Ideas: Pertaining to a Pure Phenomenology and a Phenomenological Philosophy, Boston College, November 8, 2103. (14) “The Doctrine of the Noema and the Theory of Reason,” Workshop on Husserl’s Ideas: Pertaining to a Pure Phenomenology and a Phenomenological Philosophy, Boston College, November 10, 2103. (15) “Love and Admiration” (short version), Husserl Circle, University of Graz, Graz, Austria, June 20, 2013. (16) “Love and Admiration: Varieties of Founding Structures,” (long version), Workshop in Phenomenological Philosophy, Fordham University, May 24, 2013. (17) “Exceptional Love?”, invited Keynote Address, Husserl-Arbeitstage 2012, Feeling and Value, Willing and Action, Leuven, Belgium, November 21, 2012. (18) “The Intentional Structure of Emotions,” Society for Phenomenology and Existential Philosophy, Rochester, NY, November 3, 2012. (19) “The ‘___ful’ and the ‘___ous’: Some Phenomenological Reflections on Some Emotions,” Keynote Address, Reapproaching the Foundations of Phenomenology, New York City Phenomenology Group Graduate Student Conference, March 31, 2012. (20) “The ‘___ful’ and the ‘___ous’: Some Phenomenological Reflections on Some Emotions,” Keynote Address, Dowling College Undergraduate Philosophy Conference, Dowling College, Oakdale, NY, March 30, 2012. (21) “Time and the ‘Antinomies’ of Deliberation,” Conference on Time and Agency, The George Washington University, Washington, DC, November 18–19, 2011. (22) “Intentionality,” New York City Phenomenology Group, New School, November 2, 2011. (23) “Hopkins on Husserl’s Eidç,” Society for Phenomenology and Existential Philosophy, Philadelphia, PA, October 22, 2011. (24) “Intentionality Without Representation,” Workshop in Phenomenological Philosophy, Boston University, May 13, 2011. (25) “Hopkins on Husserl,” Meeting of the Husserl Circle, Florence, Italy, April 29, 2011. (26) “Intentionality Without Representationalism,” invited lecture, Boston University, Boston, Mass., December 10, 2010. (27) “Who One Isn’t: Ipseity and the Person, or Love, Warts and All,” Society for Phenomenology and Existential Philosophy, Montreal, Canada, November 4, 2010. (28) “Comment on John Davenport’s ‘A Narrative Approach to Personal Autonomy’”, Fordham University, September 15, 2010. (29) “Neo-Aristotelian Ethics: Naturalistic or Phenomenological?”, Workshop in Phenomenological Philosophy, Seattle University, April 23, 2010. (30) “Having the Right Attitudes,” invited lecture, McGill University, Montreal, Canada, March 26, 2010. (31) “Neo-Aristotelian Ethics: Naturalistic or Phenomenological?”, faculty address, Graduate Student Conference, Philosophy Department, Fordham University, March 5, 2010. (32) “Having the Right Attitudes,” invited lecture, The Catholic University of America, Washington, DC, November 20, 2009. (33) “Virtuous Persons,” Conference on “Self-Ego-Person,” invited lecture, Center for Subjectivity Research, University of Copenhagen, October 8–9, 2009. (34) “Feelings, Emotions, and Wertnehmungen,” invited plenary address at the meeting of the Deutsche Gesellschaft für phänomenologische Forschung, September 30–October 3, 2009. (35) “An Axiological Approach to Virtue Ethics,” Husserl Circle, Paris, June 22–25, 2009. John J. Drummond 9 (36) “Philosophy in Jesuit Colleges and Universities,” keynote address at the “Seattle Summit on the Role of Philosophy in Jesuit Higher Education, Seattle University, April 16–17, 2009. (37) “Self-Responsibility and Eudaimonia,” invited plenary address at the conference “Phenomenology Sciences - Philosophy / Phänomenologie - Wissenschaften - Philosophie” celebrating the 150th birth anniversary of Edmund Husserl, Husserl Archives, Katholieke Universiteit Leuven, Belgium, April 1–4, 2009. (38) “Values and Virtues,” invited paper at L’Institut Jean Nicod of L’École Normale Supérieure, Paris, France, February 18, 2009. (39) “The Enactive Approach and Perceptual Sense,” invited paper at L’École Normale Supérieure, Paris, France, February 14, 2009. (40) “Imagination and Appresentation, Sympathy and Empathy,” invited paper at the Conference on Intersubjectivity and Objectivity in Adam Smith and Edmund Husserl, University of Oslo, September 10, 2008. (41) Four lectures on “Intentionality in Husserl,” Master Class in Phenomenology for Asian Scholars 2008, Chinese University of Hong Kong, August 12–16, 2008. (42) “Comment on Alva Noë’s ‘Presence in Pictures,’” Henle Conference “Varieties of Perception,” St. Louis University, April 4–5, 2008. (43) “Axiology, Eudaimonia, and Virtue Ethics,” invited paper at a conference on “The Aristotelian Critique of Modernity,” Helsinki Collegium of Advanced Studies, University of Helsinki, November 23–25, 2007. (44) “Back to the Future: Transcendental Phenomenology at 100,” invited symposium paper, Society for Phenomenology and Existential Philosophy, Chicago, November 8–10, 2007. (45) “Imagination and Appresentation, Sympathy and Empathy,” invited paper at the Workshop on Intersubjectivity and Objectivity in Adam Smith and Edmund Husserl, University of Oslo, September 14–15, 2007. (46) “Goods That Bind” (short version), Husserl Circle, Prague, April 23, 2007. (47) “Comment on Ronald Bruzina’s ‘What Phenomenology Has to Say About Grounding the Ethical,’” Husserl Circle, Prague, April 23, 2007. (48) “Moral Self-Identity and Identification with Others,” invited plenary lecture at the meeting of the Nordic Society for Phenomenology, April 20–22, 2007. (49) “Goods That Bind,” invited lecture at Marquette University, March 23, 2007. (50) “Moral Phenomenology and Moral Intentionality,” invited paper for symposium on “Moral Phenomenology,” American Philosophical Association, Eastern Division, December 2006. (51) “Personal Perspectives,” invited paper at the Spindel Conference on “The First-Person Perspective in Philosophical Inquiry,” University of Memphis, September 28–30, 2006. (52) “Comment on Walter Hopp’s ‘Sense, Perception and Interpretation in Husserl’s Theory of Intentionality,’” Husserl Circle, Wellesley, MA, June 22, 2006. (53) “Moral Phenomenology and Moral Intentionality,” invited paper for symposium on Moral Phenomenology, American Philosophical Association, Pacific Division, March 23, 2006. (54) “Comment on Sebastian Luft’s ‘Husserl’s Hermeneutical Phenomenology,’” Eastern Division, American Philosophical Association, New York, December 28, 2005. (55) “Pragmatism and Phenomenology: A Conversation in a Time of Moral Crisis” (with Bruce Wilshire, Rutgers University), New York Pragmatist Forum, December 2, 2005. (56) “Having Reasons to Act: Moral ‘Perception,’ Moral Judgment, Moral Argument,” Moral Phenomenology Workshop, University of Arizona, November 3–5, 2005. (57) “Internalism and Externalism in Ethics: Motives and Practical Rationality” (short version), Husserl Circle, University College Dublin, Ireland, June 9–12, 2005. John J. Drummond 10 (58) “Internalism and Externalism in Ethics: Motives and Practical Rationality,” meeting on Mind, World and Intentionality: New Perspectives on the Internalism-Externalism Debate, Danish National Research Foundation: Center for Subjectivity Research, University of Copenhagen, May 27–29, 2005. (59) “Self, Other, and Moral Obligation: Comment on James Mensch’s Ethics and Selfhood: Alterity and the Phenomenology of Obligation,” Society for Phenomenology and Existential Philosophy, October 28, 2004. (60) “Moral Goods and Moral Obligations,” Fordham University, September 29, 2004. (61) “Value-predicates and Value-attributes,” International Wittgenstein Symposium, Kirchberg, Austria August, 2004. (62) “Value-predicates and Value-attributes,” Husserl Circle, Georgetown University, Washington, DC, June 10, 2004. (63) “Universal Goods, Cultural Specificity,” inaugural meeting of P.E.A.C.E. (Phenomenology in East Asia Circle), Hong Kong, May 28, 2004. (64) “Comment on Professor Kent Greenawalt’s ‘Natural Law: Its Plausible Scope and Relation to Public Reason,’” Natural Law Colloquium, Fordham University, February 4, 2004. (65) “The Good and Negative Obligation, the Tolerable and the Intolerable,” joint meeting of the 15th Inter-American Congress of Philosophy and the 2nd Ibero-American Congress of Philosophy, Lima, Peru, January 12–16, 2004. (66) “The Emotions and Moral Normativity,” Rice University, November 14, 2003. (67) “Comment on Tom Nenon’s ‘Husserl’s Conception of Reason as Authenticity,’” Society for Phenomenology and Existential Philosophy, Boston, MA, November 7, 2003. (68) “The Case(s) of Presence,” panel discussion of Leonard Lawlor’s Derrida and Husserl, Husserl Circle, Fordham University, New York, June 12, 2003. (69) “On Welton on Husserl,” “Author Meets Critics” session on Donn Welton’s The Other Husserl, American Philosophical Association, Eastern Division, Philadelphia, December 30, 2002. (70) “The Political Role of the Philosopher,” inaugural meeting of the Organization of Phenomenological Organizations commemorating the work of Jan Patoèka, Prague, Czech Republic, November 7–10, 2002. (71) “Presentation of the Aquinas Medal to Robert Sokolowski,” American Catholic Philosophical Association, November 1–3, 2002. (72) “The Ontology Of and Beyond Natur and Geist,” conference entitled “Technology, Nature & Life: Contemporary Social and Cultural Problems in the Light of Phenomenology,” National University of Seoul, Seoul, Korea, October 24–26, 2002. (73) “Comment on Marcus Brainard’s Belief and Its Neutralization: Husserl’s System of Phenomenology in Ideas I,” book session at the meeting of the Society for Phenomenology and Existential Phenomenology, Chicago, October 10–12, 2002. (74) “Complicating the Emotions,” Husserl Circle, Pontificia Universidad Católica del Perú, Lima, Peru, July 11–14, 2002. (75) Comment on Professor Elisabeth Rigal’s “The Phenomenological Foundation of Logic,” Husserl Circle, Pontificia Universidad Católica del Perú, Lima, Peru, July 11–14, 2002. (76) “The Limitation of Formal Ontology by Formal Logic,” presented at a conference entitled “Husserl e l’ontologia formale. Heidegger oggi,” University of Rome, March 22, 2002. (77) Comment on J. Bryan Hehir’s “Changing Challenges for the Ethic of War,” Natural Law Colloquium, Fordham University, February 6, 2002. (78) “Pure Logical Grammar: Identity Amidst Linguistic Differences,” Keio University, Tokyo, Japan, October 19, 2001. John J. Drummond 11 (79) “Pure Logical Grammar: Identity Amidst Linguistic Differences,” inaugural conference of the Research Center for Phenomenology at Peking University entitled “The Centenary of Husserl’s Logical Investigations and Phenomenology and Chinese Culture,” Peking University, Beijing, October 13–16, 2001. (80) “Logical Analysis versus Phenomenology, Otherwise Known as Formal versus Transcendental Logic,” conference entitled “Phenomenology in the Nordic Countries,” Copenhagen, May 30, 2001. (81) “Husserlian Noemata and Fregean Senses,” University College Dublin, May 2, 2001. (82) “Pure Logical Grammar: Anticipatory Categoriality and Articulated Categoriality,” conference entitled “Recherches catégoriales: autour de la logique de Husserl,” École Normale Supérieure, Paris, April 28, 2001. (83) “Respect as a Moral Emotion: A Phenomenological Approach” (short version), Husserl Circle, Indiana University, Bloomington, February 2001. (84) “Ethics and Moral Philosophy,” research symposium entitled “The Reach of Reflection: Issues for Phenomenology’s Second Century,” Florida Atlantic University, Boca Raton, FL, January 2001. (85) “Forms of Social Unity: Partnership, Membership, Citizenship,” Gurwitsch Memorial Lecture, Society for Phenomenology and Existential Philosophy, Pennsylvania State University, October, 2000. (86) “Paradox or Contradiction,” current scholarship session on David Carr’s The Paradox of Subjectivity: The Self in the Transcendental Tradition, Society for Phenomenology and Existential Philosophy, Pennsylvania State University, October, 2000. (87) “The Logical Investigations: Intimations of a Transcendental Logic,” Husserl Circle, Seattle University, Washington, June 2000. (88) “The Logical Investigations: On the Road to Transcendental Logic,” international conference honoring the centenary of the publication of Husserl’s Logical Investigations, Copenhagen, Denmark, May, 2000. (89) “Judging One’s Own Case,” conference on “Christian Distinctions and Theological Disclosures: Robert Sokolowski and the God of Faith,” St. Meinrad Abbey and School of Theology, St. Meinrad, IN, April 7, 2000. (90) “Husserl’s Third Logical Investigation: Parts and Wholes, Founding Connections, and the Synthetic A Priori,” centennial commemoration of Husserl’s Logical Investigations, Boston Colloquium for Philosophy of Science, Boston University, March 27, 2000. (91) “Respect as a Moral Emotion: A Phenomenological Approach,” Loyola College, MD, February 9, 2000. (92) “Respect as a Moral Emotion: A Phenomenological Approach,” Boston College, September 30, 1999. (93) “Husserlian Architectonics,” comment on Professor Donn Welton’s “The Systematicity of Husserl’s Transcendental Philosophy: From Static to Genetic Method,” Husserl Circle, University of Memphis, February 20, 1999. (94) “Respect as a Moral Emotion,” Fordham University, February 1, 1999. (95) “Edith Stein: Philosopher, Nun, Saint,” Mount Saint Mary’s College, MD, November 18, 1998. (96) “Phenomenological Approaches to the Political,” Society for Phenomenology and Existential Philosophy, Denver, CO, October 1998. (97) “Moral Encounters,” Husserl-Archief (Husserl Archives) and the Hoger Instituut voor Wijsbegeerte (Institute of Philosophy), Katholieke Universiteit Leuven, Belgium, April 1998. (98) “Intentionality, Intensionality, and Non-Existent Objects,” Husserl Circle, University of Louisville, February 1998. John J. Drummond 12 (99) “Situated Objectivity and Secondary Empathy,” comment on Professor William McKenna’s “Situated Objectivity,” Husserl Circle, University of Louisville, February 1998. (100) “Intentionality and the Noema,” conference on Cognitive Science and Intentionality, Royal Danish Academy of Arts and Sciences, Copenhagen, Denmark, September 1997. (101) “A Phenomenological Communitarianism,” research symposium on “Phenomenology and the Political,” Florida Atlantic University, Boca Raton, FL, October 1996. (102) “Toward a Phenomenology of Social Reason,” panel on “The Phenomenology of Reason,” Society for Phenomenology and Existential Philosophy, Georgetown University, Washington, DC, October 1996. (103) “Time, History, and Tradition,” research symposium on “More Phenomenology of Time,” Florida Atlantic University, Boca Raton, FL, October 1995. (104) “Downstream from Pittsburgh,” Comment on William L. Portier, “What Does It Mean to be Ex Corde Ecclesiae,” Mount Saint Mary’s College, September 25, 1995. (105) “Agency, Agents, and (Sometimes) Patients,” Conference Honoring the Work of Professor Robert Sokolowski, School of Philosophy, The Catholic University of America, November 11–12, 1994. (106) Comment on Professor Edward Blatnik’s “On the Very Idea of Anti-Representationalism,” Eastern Division, American Philosophical Association, Atlanta, GA, December 1993. (107) “Noema, Sense, and Object: Identities and Differences” for a panel on “Noema, Sense, and Object: The Most Recent Round of the Debate,” Society for Phenomenology and Existential Philosophy, New Orleans, LA, October 22, 1993. (108) “The ‘Spiritual’ World: The Personal, the Social, and the Communal,” research symposium on “Issues in Ideas II,” Florida Atlantic University, Boca Raton, FL, May, 1993. (109) “De-Ontologizing the Noema: An Abstract Consideration,” research symposium on “The Phenomenology of the Noema,” Florida Atlantic University, Boca Raton, FL, May, 1991. (110) “Comment on Professor David Michael Sickel’s ‘The Intentionality of Being,’ Eastern Division, American Philosophical Association, New York, NY, December 1991. (111) “Mathematical Descriptions of Nature: Historical and Philosophical Reflections,” Lecture Series Scientific Rationality, Mount Saint Mary’s College, March 19, 1990. (112) “Appraising Pietersma on Epistemic Appraisal,” comment on Professor Henry Pietersma’s “Phenomenological Remarks on Epistemic Appraisal,” Husserl Circle, Washington University, St. Louis, June 1987. (113) “Phenomenological Method as Historical and Philosophical Critique,” Comment upon Professor Osborne Wiggins’ “Historical and Philosophical Critique: Husserl’s Methodology in Formal and Transcendental Logic,” Husserl Circle, DePaul University, June 1986. (114) “Willard and Husserl on Logical Form,” Comment upon Professor Dallas Willard’s “Sentences Which Are True in Virtue of Their Color,” research conference on Phenomenology and the Formal Sciences, University of Pittsburgh and Duquesne University, Pittsburgh, PA, September 26, 1985. (115) “Rescher and Realism,” Comment upon Professor Nicholas Rescher’s “Metaphysical Realism,” The Metaphysical Society of America, Vanderbilt University, March 15, 1985. (116) “Husserl and the Issue of Realism and Anti-Realism,” Faculty Colloquium, The Catholic University of America, December 12, 1984. (117) “The State of Faculty Salaries in Iowa Private Colleges,” Iowa Conference of the American Association of University Professors, Iowa State University, November 1980. (118) “What Started Out as ‘Drummond’s Protreptic’ and Nearly Ended Up Otherwise,” Faculty Colloquia on “The Nature of the Liberal Arts,” Coe College, November 1979. John J. Drummond (119) “Dance and Choreography,” panel on “The Contemporary Development of the Choreographer: A Humanist Examination of Contemporary Work in Dance and in the Arts,” sponsored by NEH, the Iowa Board for Public Programs in the Humanities, the Des Moines Ballet, and Younkers, Inc., Coe College, October 1979. (120) “The Phenomenology of Perceptual Sense,” Southwestern Philosophical Society, University of Kansas, November 1978. Professional Review External reviewer, Philosophy departments at two other institutions. Outside reviewer, NEH Division of Research Programs. Outside reviewer, NEH Division of Education Programs. Member, review panel, Exemplary Projects Program, Division of Education Programs, NEH. Referee for Philosophy and Phenomenological Research. Referee for The American Catholic Philosophical Quarterly. Referee for The Southern Journal of Philosophy. Referee for Husserl Studies. Referee for International Philosophical Quarterly. Referee for International Journal of Philosophical Studies. Referee for The New Yearbook for Phenomenology and Phenomenological Philosophy. Referee for Journal of Consciousness Studies. Referee for Phenomenology and the Cognitive Sciences. Referee for Polity. Referee for Continental Philosophy Review Referee for Dialectica Referee for Inquiry Referee for Education Research Journal Referee for Theoretical Medicine and Bioethics Referee for Logical Analysis and the History of Philosophy Referee for Philosophy Compass Referee for Kluwer Academic Publishers. Referee for SUNY Press. Referee for Broadview Press. Referee for Blackwell Publishers. Referee for Stanford University Press. Referee for Routledge Press. Referee for Oxford University Press. Referee for Northwestern University Press Outside Reviewer for National Humanities Center Outside Reviewer for Czech Science Foundation Outside Reviewer for Austrian Science Foundation Outside Reviewer for the Flanders Research Foundation Professional Offices Editorial Board, Husserl Studies. Co-editor, The New Yearbook for Phenomenology and Phenomenological Philosophy, 2008– 13 John J. Drummond 14 Contributing Editor, The New Yearbook for Phenomenology and Phenomenological Philosophy, 2005–2008. Editorial Board, Contributions to Phenomenology (Kluwer/Springer), 1995–2006. General editor, Contributions to Phenomenology (Kluwer/Springer), 1995–2006. Editorial Board, Series in Continental Philosophy (Ohio University Press), 1995–2006. Consulting Editor, Classics in Phenomenology (Noesis Press). Consulting Editor, Contemporary Phenomenological Thought (Noesis Press). Advisory Board, Journal of Phenomenology and the Human Sciences (Chinese), 2004– Editorial Board, Recherches husserliennes, 1994–2006 Member, Board of Directors, Center for Ethics Education, Fordham University, 2003– Board of Directors, Center for Advanced Research in Phenomenology, 1995–2006; Treasurer, 1998–2006. Executive Council (elected), American Catholic Philosophical Association, 1996–1999. Executive Committee (of the Executive Council) (elected), American Catholic Philosophical Association, 1998–1999. Finance Committee, American Catholic Philosophical Association, 1998–2002 Member, Board of Advisors, Research Center in Phenomenology, Peking University, Beijing, China, 2001– Advisory Board, Archive for Phenomenology and Contemporary Philosophy (Chinese University of Hong Kong), 2004– Board of Directors, Fordham University Press, 2005–, Chair, 2009– 2011 SPEP, Book Selection Committee 2008–2009 ADMINISTRATIVE AND COMMITTEE EXPERIENCE Fordham Graduate Program Mentor, Carlo DaVia Dissertation Defense, April 22, 2015 Examiner, Xingming Hu Dissertation Defense, April 7, 2015 Mentor, Aaron Kagan Dissertation Proposal Defense, May 16, 2013 Mentor, Carlo DaVia Dissertation Proposal Defense, May 8, 2013 Examiner, Walter Wietzke Dissertation Defense, April 17, 2013 Reader, Gregory Lynch Dissertation Defense, April 10, 2013 External Reader, Andres Colapinto Dissertation Defense (Stony Brook University), March 26, 2013 Mentor, Johanna Nashi Dissertation Defense, April 2, 2012 Reader, Gregory Lynch Dissertation Proposal Defense, November 21, 2011 Reader, Eleanor Helms Dissertation Defense, May 2011 Reader, David Zoller Dissertation Defense, April 2011 Reader, Scott O’Leary Dissertation Defense, March 2011 Examiner, Seth Joshua Thomas Dissertation Defense, January 2011 Reader, Dylan Futter Dissertation Defense, April 2010 Reader, Kenneth Knies Dissertation Defense (Stony Brook University), March 2010 Reader, Richard Atkins Dissertation Defense, March 2010 Reader, Michael Sigrist Dissertation Defense (Stony Brook University), December 2009 Mentor, Johanna Nashi Dissertation Proposal Defense, February 2009 Mentor, Anne Ozar Dissertation Defense, November 2008 Mentor, Adam Konopka Dissertation Defense, October 2008 Reader, Eleanor Helms Dissertation Proposal Defense, May 2008 Reader, Dylan Futter Proposal Defense, April 2008 John J. Drummond Examiner, Jane Dryden Dissertation Defense, March 2008 Reader, David Zoller Dissertation Proposal Defense, April 2008 Reader, Seth Joshua Thomas Dissertation Proposal Defense, May 2007 Mentor, Adam Konopka’s Dissertation Proposal Defense, January 2007 Reader, Richard Kenneth Atkins Dissertation Proposal Defense, December 2006 Examiner, Eoin O’Connell’s Dissertation Proposal Defense, December 2006 Reader, Michael Boring Dissertation Defense, October 2007 Mentor, Ryan Gable Dissertation Defense, September 2006 Mentor, Christopher Arroyo Dissertation Defense, September 2006 Examiner, Yutaka Shimada Dissertation Defense, May 2006 Reader, Stephen Minister Dissertation Defense, April 2006 External Reader, John O’Connor Dissertation Defense (Boston College), April 2006 Reader, Katherine Kirby Dissertation Defense, December 2005 Mentor, Anne Ozar Dissertation Proposal Defense, April 2005 Examiner, Craig Condella Dissertation Defense, March 2005 Examiner, Stephen Minister Dissertation Proposal Defense, January 2005 Examiner, John Neubauer Dissertation Defense, December 2004 Mentor, Kem Crimmins Dissertation Proposal Defense, October 2004 Reader, Corey Beals Dissertation Defense, May 2004 Mentor, Michael Kelly Dissertation Defense, April 2004 Examiner, Alan Rhoda Dissertation Defense, December, 2003 Mentor, Christopher Arroyo Dissertation Proposal Defense, October 2003 Examiner, Gwynn Markle Dissertation Defense, May, 2003 Examiner, Matthew Edgar Dissertation Defense, October, 2002 Examiner, Christopher Harless Dissertation Proposal Defense, October 2002 Examiner, John Neubauer Dissertation Proposal Defense, May 2002 Examiner, Craig Condella Dissertation Proposal Defense, May 2002 Mentor, Ryan Gable Dissertation Proposal, 2001–2002 Reader, Changchi Hao Dissertation, December 2001 Examiner, James Murray Murdoch Dissertation Defense, October 2001 Examiner, Robert Vigliotti Dissertation Defense, October 2001 Mentor, Michael Kelly Dissertation Proposal, April 2001 Reader, Sarah Borden Dissertation, April 2001 Examiner, Paul Cheung Dissertation Defense, December 1999. Examiner, Yutaka Shimada Dissertation Proposal Defense, May 2000. Administrative Positions Chair, Department of Philosophy, Fordham University, 2014– Associate Chair for Graduate Studies, Department of Philosophy, Fordham University, 2013–2014 Chair, Department of Philosophy, Fordham University, 2005– 2011 Associate Chair for Graduate Studies, Department of Philosophy, Fordham University, 2002–2005 Chair, Department of Philosophy, Mount Saint Mary’s College, 1988–1999. Chair, Department of Philosophy and Religion, Coe College, 1983–87. Committees Fordham University: 15 John J. Drummond 16 Core Curriculum Committee, 2015– Committee on MA Programs, 2014 Task Force on Liberal Education, 2013– Admissions Committee (Graduate), 2013, 2014 Commencement Committee (Board of Trustees Committee), 2012–2014 Hiring Committee (of the department), Chair, 2012–2013 University Tenure Review Committee, Fordham University, January 2011–December 2013; Chair, 2013 Salary and Benefits Committee, Fordham University, 2010– Hiring Committee (of the department), Chair, 2010–2011 Strategic Plan Review Committee, Fordham University, 2010 Board of Directors, Fordham University Press, 2005–; Chair, 2009–2011 Search Committee, Director, Fordham University Press, 2008–2009 Science Task Force, 2008–2009 Search Committee, Boyd Professor of Poetry, 2006–2008 Arts and Sciences Council, 2005–2011 Graduate Council, 2005–2011 Hiring Committee (of the department), 2005–2006 Hiring Committee (of the department), 2004–2005 Middle States Task Force on General Education, 2004–2005, Chair, Fall 2004–Spring 2005 Planning Committee (of the department), Chair, 2003–2006 Board of Directors, Center for Ethics Education, 2003– Fordham College (RH) Webpage Committee, 2002–2003 Hearings Committee (of the Faculty Senate), 2001–2004, Chair, 2004–2005 Hiring Committee (of the department), Chair, 2001–2002 Ancient Comprehensives Committee, 2000–2002 Mount Saint Mary’s College: Budget Committee (elected), 1998–2000 Mount Saint Mary’s Council (elected), 1997–1998 Planning Council (elected), 1995–1997 Academic Programs Committee, 1995–1997 Financial Resources Committee, 1994–1997 Presidential Search Committee, 1993–1994 Budget Committee, 1993–1994 Faculty Task Force, Middle States Self-Study, Spring 1993–Spring 1994 Academic Computing Advisory Committee, Spring 1993 Executive Committee of the Faculty (elected), Spring 1992–1995 (Chair, 1992–1994) Priorities Committee (elected), Spring 1992–January 1993 Library Committee, Mount Saint Mary’s College, 1990–91 Computer Committee, Mount Saint Mary’s College, 1990–91 Chair, Ad Hoc Committee on Faculty Load, 1989–90 Coe College: Chair, Search Committee for Vice President for Academic Affairs and Dean of the Faculty (a joint appointment of the President of the College and the Executive Committee of the Faculty), 1983–84, 1984–85 (reopened search) Board of Trustees’ Steering Committee of the College (long-range planning and planning for development drive), 1983–85 John J. Drummond Long-Range Planning Commission (elected), 1980–84 Search Committee for Athletic Director, Coe College, 1981 Committee on Academic Policies, 1976–78, 1985–86 (Secretary, 1976–78, 1985–86) Committee on Honors, Independent and Interdisciplinary Study, 1982–1985 (Chair, 1982–85) Committee on Faculty Welfare (elected), 1979–81 Ad Hoc Committee on Faculty Salaries (elected), 1979 Humanities Steering Committee, 1977–79 Committee on Honors and Independent Studies, 1978–79 Orientation Committee, 1978 General Judicial Board, Coe College, 1978–81 Dean’s Advisory Council (elected), 1976–77 Committee on Interdisciplinary Studies, 1975–76 HONORS AND AWARDS Robert Southwell, S.J. Distinguished Professor in the Humanities, Fordham University, 2005– Graduate School of Arts and Sciences Award for Distinguished Contributions to Graduate Teaching and Programs, 2004 Graduate Student Association Teacher of the Year Award, 2003 Gurwitsch Memorial Lecturer, October 2000 Mount Saint Mary’s College Distinguished Professorship, 1997–2000 President’s Pride Faculty Summer Grant, Mount Saint Mary’s College, summer 1994. President’s Pride Faculty Summer Grant, Mount Saint Mary’s College, summer 1991. President’s Pride Faculty Summer Grant, Mount Saint Mary’s College, summer 1990. Faculty Research and Development Grant, Coe College, summer 1986. Faculty Research and Development Grant, Coe College, summer 1983. Recipient, NEH Award to participate in NEH Summer Seminar for College Teachers “Concepts and Controversies in Greek Philosophy of Nature,” directed by David J. Furley, Department of Classics, Princeton University, 1977. Ph.D. Dissertation and Defense with distinction. Ph.D. Comprehensive Examinations with distinction. NDEA Title IV Fellowship, 1971–74. jjd.cv: 092416 17
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