|
| Research Interests for Owen Flanagan Jr.
Research Interests:
Owen Flanagan (Ph.D. 1978, Boston
University) came to Duke as Chair of department in 1993, a post he held until 1999. He
also holds appointments in Psychology and
Neurobiology and is a Faculty Fellow in
Cognitive Neuroscience and a steering committee member of the "Philosophy, Arts, and Literature" (PAL) program. He has also had visiting
positions at Berkeley, Brandeis, Princeton, Harvard, and
La Trobe in Australia as well as several
fellowships from the National Endowment for
the Humanities. In 1993-94 Flanagan was
President of the Society for Philosophy and
Psychology. In 1998, he was recipient of the
Romanell National Phi Beta Kappa award,
given annually to one American philosopher
for distinguished contributions to philosophy
and the public understanding of philosophy. He has lectured on every continent except Antarctica, where however he has been. Besides writing many
articles, reviews, and
contributions to colloquia, Flanagan has
written the following books and edited several:
- The
Science of the Mind (MIT press, 1984; 2nd
edition, 1991)
- Identity, Character, and
Morality:
Essays in Moral Psychology, edited with
Amelie O. Rorty (MIT Press, 1990)
- Varieties of
Moral Personality: Ethics and Psychological
Realism (Harvard University Press, 1991),
- Consciousness Reconsidered (MIT
Press,
1992)
- Self Expressions: Mind, Morals, and
the
Meaning of Life (Oxford University Press,
1996)
- The Nature of
Consciousness
edited with Ned Block and Güven Güzeldere
(MIT Press, 1998)
- Dreaming Souls: Sleep,
Dreams, and the Evolution of the Conscious
Mind (Oxford University, 1999)
- Narrative
and Consciousness: Literature, Psychology,
and the Brain Co-edited with Gary Fireman and Ted
McVay (Oxford University Press, 2002)
*The Problem of the
Soul: Two Visions of Mind and How to
Reconcile Them*
*The Really Hard Problem: Meaning in a Material World* (MIT Press 2007).
His most recent book is
*The Bodhisattva's Brain: Buddhism Naturalized* (October, 2011), MIT PRESS.
He
was awarded a Fulbright Research Award
in 2001-2002 to study Buddhist and Hindu
conceptions of the self. In 2006 he gave the Templeton research Lectures at USC in Los Angeles on *Human Flourishing in the Age of Mind Science.*
- Areas of Interest:
- Comparative Philosophy (Chinese, Buddhist)
Philosophy & Literature
- Recent Publications
- O. Flanagan Jr., The Bodhisattva's Brain: Buddhism Naturalized
(October, 2011), MIT PRESS
- O. Flanagan Jr., HAN FEI ZI’S PHILOSOPHICAL PSYCHOLOGY: HUMAN NATURE, SCARCITY, AND THE NEO- DARWINIAN CONSENSUS with Jing Hu,
Journal of Chinese Philosophy, vol. 38 no. 2
(June, 2011),
pp. 293-316
- O. Flanagan Jr., Wittgenstein's Ethical Nonnaturalism: An Interpretation of Tractatus 6.41-47 and the "Lecture on Ethics",
American Philosophical Quarterly, vol. 48 no. 2
(April, 2011),
pp. 185-198
- O. Flanagan Jr., SISSELA BOK Exploring Happiness: From Aristotle to Brain Science,
Notre Dame Review of Books
(April, 2011)
- O. Flanagan Jr., My Non-Narrative, Non-Forensic Dasein: The First and Second Self,
in Self and Consciousness, edited by Jee Loo Liu & John Perry
(2011),
pp. 214-240, Cambridge University Press
|