Faculty
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Dr. Mark Alfino
Professor of Philosophy Gonzaga University 502 E Boone Ave. AD Box 49 Spokane, WA 99258 Phone: (509) 313-6753 Office Location Mark Alfino teaches for the Philosophy Department at Gonzaga University. His teaching and research interests are broad, but tend to focus on two general problems: the nature of language and the nature of values. He publishes on topics in ethics and, in recent years, has been working on the topics of Happiness and Wisdom. |
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Dr. Kirk Besmer
Associate Professor of Philosophy Gonzaga University Philosophy Dept AD Box 47 Spokane, WA 99258 Phone: 6746 Kirk Besmer received his Ph.D.from the University of Notre Dame. His interests include Continental philosophy, especially Phenomenology and Existentialism, and the philosophy of technology. His most recent publication is: "Embodying a Translation Technology: The Cochlear Implant and Cyborg Intentionality." Techne: Research in Philosophy and Technology. Vol 16 (3) Fall 2012. 296-316. He is currently on sabbatical. |
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Dr. Dan Bradley
Assistant Professor 502 E. Boone Ave. AD Box 47 Spokane, WA 99258 Phone: (509) 313-5976 Office Location Dan was awarded a PhD from the National University of Ireland in 2008, an MA in Ethics and Cultural Studies from University College Galway in 2003 and BAs in Philosophy and Biology from Gonzaga University in 1999. His research focuses on the phenomenology of religion engaging Continental thinkers (including Ricoeur, Marion, Derrida, Levinas, Heidegger, Husserl, and Kierkegaard) and the neo-Platonic mystical tradition (including Augustine, Ignatius of Loyola, and Teresa of Avila). This year he is teaching Human Nature, Ethics, Phenomenology, and Philosophical Hermeneutics. |
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Dr. David H. Calhoun
Associate Professor of Philosophy and Director of Graduate Studies Philosophy Department Gonzaga University AD Box 50 Spokane, WA 99258 Phone: 509 313 6743 Office Location B.A. in Philosophy, Louisiana State University, 1981 (Phi Beta Kappa); M.A. in Philosophy, Northwestern University, 1985; Ph.D. in Philosophy, Northwestern University, 1989. My teaching and research interests are in ancient Greek philosophy (especially Socratic method, Aristotelian virtue ethics, and friendship), philosophical anthropology/human nature, Christian existentialism, and philosophy of education. Most recently, my research has focused on the historical and conceptual relationships between philosophy, Christianity, and natural science, and the problematic status of the "war narrative" that has emerged in the last century to characterize the Christian-science relationship. I have offered a course covering this material, PHIL 446 Philosophical Reflections on Christianity and Science, each spring since 2006. My most recent graduate seminar, in Spring 2010, examined Aristotle's First Philosophy in the Metaphysics. I am the coordinator of the Gonzaga Socratic Club, which promotes philosophical inquiry into Christian doctrine, worldview, and practice. Information about the club can be found at http://guweb2.gonzaga.edu/faculty/calhoun/socratic/. Recent publications: “Human Exceptionalism and the Imago Dei: The Tradition of Human Dignity.” Human Dignity in Bioethics: From Worldviews to the Public Square, ed. Steven C. Dilley and Nathan J. Palpant. Routledge Annals of Bioethics. Routledge (forthcoming December 2012). “Prospects for Human Dignity before and after Darwin.” Human Dignity in Bioethics: From Worldviews to the Public Square, ed. Steven C. Dilley and Nathan J. Palpant. Routledge Annals of Bioethics. Routledge (forthcoming December 2012). “From Solitary Individualism to Post-Christian Stoic Existentialism: Quests for Community, Moral Agency, and Transcendence in the Films of Clint Eastwood.” The Moral Vision of Clint Eastwood, ed. Brian Clayton and Richard McClelland. University of Kentucky (in press). |
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Dr. Mark Chakoian
Lecturer 502 E. Boone Ave. AD Box 47 Spokane, WA 99258 Office Location Office Hours Education: Ph.D. Philosophy, Loyola University (Chicago, IL 2011); M.A. Philosophy, Loyola University (Chicago, IL 2007); B.A. Philosophy, Mathematics, Bradley University (Peoria, IL 2004)
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Dr. Jay Ciaffa
Associate Professor of Philosophy AD Box 47 Office Location Jay Ciaffa received his BA in Philosophy and History from Cal State, Chico (1982), and his MA and PhD in Philosophy from Tulane University (1991). He regularly teaches courses in African American Philosophy and Healthcare Ethics. In the Fall of 2011, he offered a graduate seminar entitled "Nietzsche and the Ancients." He also serves as an Ethics Consultant on the Deaconess Hospital Ethics Committee. HIs publications include articles on Heidegger, African and African American Philosophy, as well as a book entitled Max Weber and the Problems of Value-free Social Science. |
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Fr. Timothy Clancy
Associate Professor of Philosophy and Director of Honors Gonzaga University Philosophy AD Box 30 Spokane, WA 99258 Phone: 509-313-6701 Office Location Education: B.A. Gonzaga University (1980), M.A. Loyola University of Chicago (1982), M.Div. from Jesuit School of Theology at Berkeley (1989), S.T.L. from Jesuit School of Theology at Berkeley (1991), Ph.D. Loyola University of Chicago (1999) |
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Dr. Brian Clayton
Associate Professor AD Box 62 Spokane, WA 99258-0062 Phone: 509/313-6744 Fax: 509/313-5718 Office Location Office Hours BA (Philosophy) 1978, Trinity College (Deerfield, IL); MA (Philosophy) 1980, University of Notre Dame (Notre Dame, IN); PhD. (Philosophy) 1987, University of Notre Dame (Notre Dame, IN). Dr. Clayton has taught at Gonzaga since 1986. He is currently the Director of the Gonzaga University Faith and Reason Institute. He regularly teaches courses on Human Nature, Ethics, C.S. Lewis, Walker Percy and Faith & Reason. He has a special interest in contemporary popular film and its relationship to philosophical topics, especially virtue ethics. |
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Dr. Theodore Di Maria
Associate Professor, Chair, Philosophy Department Gonzaga University Philosophy AD Box 47 Spokane, WA 99258 Ted received both his B.A. (1986) and M.A. (1988) in philosophy from Northern Illinois University, and his Ph.D. from Marquette University in 1999. His primary research interests are currently in modern philosophy, particularly the theoretical philosophy of Kant, but he also has research interests in existentialist thinkers and ancient philosophy. |
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Dr. Brian G. Henning
Professor of Philosophy 502 E. Boone Ave. AD Box 47 Spokane, WA 99258 Phone: 509.313.5885 Office Location Education: B.A.,summa cum laude, Seattle University (1998); M.A., Fordham University (2001); M.Phil., Fordham University (2002); Ph.D., Fordham University (2003) |
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Dr. Charles A. Hobbs
Philosophy Lecturer AD Box 47 Phone: (509) 313-4249 Fax: (509) 313-5718 Education: M.A. and Ph.D. from Southern Illinois University; B.A., West Georgia College. -"Reconsidering John Dewey's Relationship with Ancient Philosophy". International Philosophical Quarterly Vol. 53, No 2, September 2013 -“Why Classical American Pragmatism is Helpful for Thinking about Death”. Transactions of the C.S. Peirce Society Vol. 47, No. 2, 2011 -"Naturalism, Death, and Functional Immortality”. Contemporary Pragmatism Vol. 6, No. 1, June 2009 -“Peirce’s Tychism and the Epicurean Swerve”. Southwest Philosophical Studies Vol. 30, Spring 2008 |
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Dr. Thomas Jeannot
Professor of Philosophy 502 E. Boone Ave. AD Box 47 Spokane, WA 99258 Education: A.B. Saint Louis University (1978), Ph.D. Saint Louis University (1992). Areas
of expertise: Marxism, Hermeneutics, Ethics, and Classical American Philosophy. |
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Dr. Douglas Kries
Bernard J. Coughlin, S.J., Professor of Christian Philosophy Department of Philosophy Gonzaga University AD Box 49 Spokane, WA 99258 Phone: (509) 313-6720 Office Location Ph.D.: Boston College, 1988 B.A.: Seattle Univerisity (philosophy), 1982 B.A.: Seattle University (theology), 1982 |
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Dr. Quanhua Liu
Associate Professor of Philosophy 502 E. Boone Ave. AD Box 47 Spokane, WA 99258 Phone: (509)313-3950 Office Location Quanhua Liu received Ph.D. in philosophy from Duke University (1994), MA and BA in philosophy from Peking (Beijing) University (1985 and 1982 respectively). His current research interests lie in Chinese philosophy, comparative philosophy, and modern and contemporary philosophy. |
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Dr. Ellen Maccarone
Associate Professor of Philosophy AD Box 47 Phone: (509) 313-3955 My BA is in Political Science from The George Washington University (1995); my MA is in Philosophy from Colorado State University (1998) and my PhD is in Philosophy from The University of Florida (2004). My areas of interest are Normative and Applied Ethics, particularly Business Ethics and Feminist Ethics. I am also interested in International Developmental Ethics, Ethics and Food, and Ethics and the Professions. Graduate Seminar taught Fall 2008: Theories of Justice |
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Dr. Richard McClelland
Professor of Philosophy Gonzaga University Philosophy AD Box 47 Spokane, WA 99258 Phone: 509-313-6761 Office Location Graduated from Reed College in 1970 (BA in Literature; elected to Phi Beta Kappa);attended Princeton Theological Seminary, Princeton, NJ 1970-71; graduated from Oxford University (Jesus College; BA, 1975; MA, 1980; both in Theology) and Cambridge University (Corpus Christi College; Ph.D., Ancient Greek Philosophy, 1985). I have taught at the University of Notre Dame (1981-85), Seattle Pacific University (1985-92), Seattle University (1993-99), and have been at Gonzaga since 1999. My special areas of interest are philosophy of mind, moral psychology, and the intersection of both with contemporary cognitive neuroscience, anthropology and ethology (animal behavior). I have special interests in the emotions, empathy, other forms of nonrational cognition and their regulation. |
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Dr. Wayne P. Pomerleau
Professor of Philosophy and The Robert K. and Ann J. Powers Chair of the Humanities 502 E. Boone Ave. AD Box 50 Spokane, WA 99258 Phone: (509)313-6750 Office Location Degrees: Ph.D. from Northwestern Univ., 1977; M.A. from Northwestern Univ., 1972; AB from Georgetown Univ., 1968 |
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Dr. Erik Schmidt
Associate Professor of Philosophy Gonzaga University Philosophy Department AD Box 48 Spokane, WA 99258 Phone: (509) 313 - 5975 Office Location Office Hours BA (Philosophy) 1993, Wheaton College (Wheaton, IL); PhD (Philosophy) 2003, Syracuse University (Syracuse, NY). Dr. Schmidt has taught at Gonzaga since 2003. His current research addresses the intersection of moral psychology and practical reason and he is also working on issues related to the philosophy of art. |
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John Shuford, J.D., Ph.D.
Adjunct Instructor, Department of Philosophy and School of Law; Director, Institute for Hate Studies 502 East Boone Ave. AD Box 47 Spokane, WA 99258 Phone: (509) 313-5585 Office Location Office Hours Education: J.D. (University of Oregon, 2006), Ph.D. (Philosophy, University of Oregon, 2002), M.A. (Philosophy, University of Oregon, 1997), B.A. (English Literature, University of Washington, 1991). |
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Dr. Michael W. Tkacz
Professor of Philosophy 502 E. Boone Ave. AD Box 62 Spokane, WA 99258 Phone: (509)313-6760 Professor Tkacz specializes in the history of medieval philosophy and the philosophy of nature. Much of his research is devoted to recovering the contributions of the thirteenth-century thinker Albertus Magnus to the development of scientific method and the metaphysical foundations of empirical science. Professor Tkacz also serves as President of the Society for Thomistic Natural Philosophy. |
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Dr. Rose Mary Volbrecht
Professor of Philosophy 502 E. Boone Ave. AD Box 48 Spokane, WA 99258 Phone: (509)313-6756 Office Location BA, Mathematics, Houghton College, 1974 With Anita Tarzian, Dianne Hoffman, and Judy Meyers. "The Role of Healthcare Ethics Committee Networks in Shaping Healthcare Policy and Practices." Healthcare Ethics Committees Forum, 18 (March 2006): 85-94. “Schaivo Uncertainty Can Be Avoided.” Guest column for The Spokesman-Review, April 10, 2005. With Judy Meyer, RN, PhD. “The Story of the With Myron Bloom, MD. An Ethics Primer for the Nursing Ethics: Communities in Dialogue. |
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Dr. John Wagner
Associate Professor of Philosophy 502 E. Boone Ave. AD Box 47 Spokane, WA 99258 Phone: (509)313-6752
Education: B.A.
Catholic University of America (1970), M.A.
Catholic University of America (1971), Ph.D.
Catholic University of America (1979). Areas of expertise/interest: Medieval Philosophy, Metaphysics, Chinese Philosophy |
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Dr. Thomas Rukavina
Professor Emeritus of Philosophy Office Location Office Hours |
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Fr. William Ryan
Associate Professor of Philosophy Emeritus 502 E. Boone Ave. AD Box 111 Spokane, WA 99258 |
