Message from the Chair

Matthias Steup

Dear Philosophy Graduates, Parents, Family Members of our Graduates, and Friends:
    
For us in Philosophy, the highlight of the academic year is to see our graduating majors, MA students, and PhD students receive their degrees at our wonderful graduation ceremony in May. Unfortunately, because of the 2020 coronavirus pandemic, this year we cannot have a face-to-face, on-campus commencement. Instead, we are celebrating our graduates' accomplishments on our 2020 graduation webpage.

This is not going to be the new "normal" but only a temporary change from our common practice. I invite all of you to come back to Boulder for a physical ceremony on our beautiful campus, which will take place when the virus is under control. With good luck, this will be around one year from now, and I hope to see all of you then face-to-face.  
    
In difficult times like these, it is worthwhile to look for something positive to hold onto. In this spirit, I offer you the following thought.

For quite some time, the humanities in general and philosophy in particular have not, in the political arena, enjoyed the level of appreciation they deserve. Public funding has instead been directed to STEM disciplines: Science, Technology, Economics, and Mathematics. These are viewed as areas that benefit society the most and offer students the best career opportunities.
    
While the importance of STEM is of course indisputable, I think it would be a mistake to think that the humanities are less important. After all, only the latter, and especially philosophy, equip students to think critically about the things that matter most in life. Philosophy, and the critical thinking skills its study teaches, are never more important than during a serious crisis of the kind we are experiencing now.
    
Perhaps, then, this is going to be a silver lining of the coronavirus pandemic.

The magnitude of the problems we are now facing--both medical and economic--will make it clear to everybody, including politicians and government officials, how important it is to reflect on our highest values and ultimate moral obligations. Perhaps the pendulum will start swinging back in the right direction: towards a recognition of the importance of the kind of wisdom that only the study of philosophy can teach.  I believe, sooner or later, this will happen.
    
When the pandemic has ended, when jobs are being created again and our economy starts coming back, philosophy graduates-because they excel as critical thinkers-will be needed more than ever before. Therefore, your education will pay dividends and will serve you well throughout your life. Whether you will go on to graduate school in philosophy, or go to law school, or embark on a career in health care, business, or politics, you will have an excellent foundation to face the challenges you will certainly encounter.

Congratulations on a job well done, and good luck to all of you!

- Matthias Steup, Department Chair

 

Graduating Majors

Remarks from Garrett Bredeson, Director of Undergraduate Studies

Remarks from Department faculty

Graduating Undergraduates Spring 2020

Alexander Argente
Oliver Ash
Benjamin Ausbrooks
Alexander Brack
Corey Brixey
Sarah Bustamante
Young Mi Cho
Andrew DeRose
Thomas Dolan
Mimi Eshleman
Julia Fontana
Justin Greer
Caley Halloran
Cole Harner
Annie Hubbard
Katherine Hughes
Alejandro Irizarry
Erik Jenssen
Teresa Mankovich
Alec Robinson
Alex Rosenthal
Angelique Sayler
Karch Schwartz
Michael Sena
Thomas Smith
Jayda Taylor
Phoenix Taylor-Carter
Stephen Troy
Maira Velasco
Porter Verfurth
Devon Viart
Tory Walker
Alison Weinberger

Graduating Undergraduates Fall 2019

Joshua Albert
Brendan Bunker
David Connor
Kaylyn Czarnecki
Connor Dripps
Andrew Kihn
Meghan Lalittle
Rosa Lawrence
Chandler Padilla
Tara Ritchey
Hugh Ronald
Samuel Schiff
Charles Schmidt
Schuyler Schwarz
Christopher Smith
Olesia Stockhold

Graduating Undergraduates Summer 2020

Grayson Arndt
Alexander Beal
Kieran Britt
Adam Gonzales
Emily Harris
Brian Leeburg
Xianqi Yuan
Easton Zucker

 

Undergraduate Prizes

Essay Prizes

History of Philosophy Essay Prize
The History of Philosophy Essay Prize is awarded to the best undergraduate essay submitted on any topic in the area of history of philosophy (where the history of philosophy is understood as including figures, texts, topics, and debates prior to 1950). This year's winner is Alison Weinberger for her paper “Correlation is not Causation: Understanding the Scope of Aristotle’s Teleology in Light of Physics II 8". This essay carefully examines Aristotle’s argument for the existence of final causes in Physics II 8; Weinberger argues against a broad interpretation of Aristotle’s teleology which holds that Aristotle thinks that all regularly occurring natural phenomena are to be explained in terms of final causes (they happen “for an end”). Instead, she argues that Aristotle is better interpreted as holding that, for a natural phenomenon to be finally caused, it must necessarily but not sufficiently exhibit regularity. This narrow scope for teleology is better able to handle the damaging objections which can be raised against the broader interpretation.

Morris Judd Essay Prize
The Morris Judd Undergraduate Essay Prize is awarded to the best undergraduate essay submitted on any topic in the values area. This year's winner is Kelly Dinneen for her paper “On the Uniqueness of Epistemic Buck Passing”. This paper critiques Sandford Goldberg’s claim that knowledge based on testimony involves a unique form of epistemic buck passing and argues that some of the insights from Goldberg’s analysis that survive this critique can be used to explain the asymmetry between moral and non-moral testimony.

Career Achievement Prizes

Socrates Prize
The Socrates Prize is awarded each year to the undergraduate philosophy major(s) with the highest overall GPA.This year's winners are Kieran Britt, Stephen Troy, and Alison Weinberger.

Scholarships

Morris Judd Scholarship
The Morris Judd Scholarship is named after Morris Judd, who in the early 1950s was a faculty member in CU Boulder’s Philosophy Department. This year's winner is Kelsey Grant for AY 2020/21; congratulations also to graduating senior Alison Weinberger, who was the winner for AY 2019/20

Paduano Family Scholarship
The Paduano Family scholarship is based on both merit and need. This year's winner is Charles Doremieux for AY 2020/21.

 

Majors Graduating with Honors

Comments by Iskra Fileva, Honors Advisor

Kieran Britt

Kieran Britt

"Against Equal Treatment"

 

Ami Cho

Ami Cho

"Why the Adaptive Preferences of those with Bipolar Disorder are Oppressive"

 

Julia Fontana

Julia Fontana

"The Function and Purpose of the Criminal Justice System"

 

Annie Hubbard

Annie Hubbard

"Attorney-Client Confidentiality: Protecting the Freedom of the Wrongfully Accused Individual"

 

Katherine Hughes

Katherine Hughes

"Evaluating the Basis for Equating Atheism with Immorality"

 

Stephen Troy

"Science is a Religion"

 

Alison Weinberger

"Just Die Already! Why Existence is not Evidence of Immortality"

 

Graduating MA Students

 

The Philosophy Faculty wish to congratulate our students who are graduating with an M.A. (Master of Arts) in Philosophy. We commend you for completing the rigorous requirements of the M.A., whether you took the thesis or non-thesis option. Both programs include distribution requirements in logic, values, history of philosophy, and metaphysics and epistemology. The thesis option requires eight graduate-level seminars as well as a master’s thesis, a substantial (typically 50- to 75-page) philosophical work on a focused topic.  The non-thesis option requires twelve graduate-level seminars.  Congratulations, M.A. graduates!

- Mi-Kyoung Lee, MA advisor

 

Roger Conarroe

"Relations and Peirce's Graphical Logic" under Raul Saucedo

Remarks from Raul Saucedo, thesis supervisor

 

Richard Fyfe

"Manufacturing Reasons" under Iskra Fileva

Remarks from Iskra Fileva, thesis supervisor

 

Julia Uhr

Non-thesis option

Remarks from Mi-Kyoung Lee, MA advisor

 

Graduating PhD students

The Philosophy Faculty congratulate the seven graduates from our doctoral program this academic year.  Each is being awarded a Ph.D. (Doctor of Philosophy) in Philosophy.  A Ph.D. in Philosophy from the University of Colorado Boulder represents the completion of quite a rigorous and intense program, including fifteen graduate-level seminars, two substantial extra-circular papers that are evaluated by anonymous committees, several years as a Teaching Assistant followed by several years designing and teaching one’s own courses as a Graduate Part-Time Instructor, and culminating in the production and oral defense of the dissertation, a book-length philosophical treatise.  Congratulations, Doctors, on attaining the highest possible degree in your field!

- Chris Heathwood, Director of Graduate Studies

Mark Boespflug

Mark Boespflug

"Voluntary Belief and Its Consequences in Locke and Descartes" under Robert Pasnau

More information at: https://sites.google.com/colorado.edu/mark-boespflug/home

Remarks from Robert Pasnau, dissertation supervisor

 

Philip Choi

Philip Choi

"Rethinking Later Medieval Epistemology" under Robert Pasnau

More information at: http://philchoiphil.wordpress.com

Remarks from Robert Pasnau, dissertation supervisor

 

Anthony Kelley

Anthony Kelley

"Well-Being and Alienation" under Chris Heathwood

More information at http://sites.google.com/view/anthonykelley

Remarks from Chris Heathwood, dissertation supervisor

 

Zak Kopeikin

Zak Kopeikin

"Values, Parts and Wholes" under Graham Oddie

More information at www.zakthephilosopher.com

Remarks from Graham Oddie, dissertation supervisor

 

Caleb Pickard

Caleb Pickard

"Boycott Ethics" under David Boonin

Remarks from David Boonin, dissertation supervisor

 

Joseph Wilson

Joseph Wilson

"Paleoclimate Modeling and Simulation" under Carol Cleland

Remarks from Carol Cleland, dissertation supervisor

 

Alexander Wolf-Root

Alexander Wolf-Root

"Conceptual Issues in Sport and Games" under Alastair Norcross

More information at sites.google.com/view/alex-wolf-root/

Remarks from Alastair Norcross, dissertation supervisor

 

 

Graduate Student Prizes

Morriston and Mills Teaching Prizes

In 2014, the Philosophy Department established two teaching prizes for our graduate student teachers: the Claudia Mills Teaching Prize for the outstanding Teaching Assistant of the year, and the Wes Morriston Teaching Prize for the outstanding Graduate Part-Time Instructor of the year. The prizes are awarded each year to two graduate students and are intended both to recognize outstanding teaching of undergraduates in the Philosophy Department and to acknowledge Prof. Mills’s and Prof. Morriston’s own outstanding contributions to undergraduate teaching during their own careers.
 
This year’s winner of the Claudia Mills Teaching Prize for the outstanding Teaching Assistant of the year is Tommy Bonn.
 
This year’s winner of the Wes Morriston Teaching Prize for the outstanding Graduate Part-Time Instructor of the year is Maggie Taylor.
 
Each prize comes with $500 and formal recognition of the honor.
 

Stahl Prize: Alexander Wolf-Root

The Stahl Prize is given in memory of Professor Gary Stahl, who taught at CU from 1962 to 1996. It recognizes a graduate student who has made a significant contribution toward bringing the discipline of philosophy to bear on some demanding and crucial human problem. This year's winner of the Stahl Prize is Alexander Wolf-Root.

Remarks from Garrett Bredeson

Jentzsch Prize

The Jentzsch Prize is awarded once a year for the best graduate student paper submitted to the Jentzsch Prize Committee. This year's winner of the Jentzsch prize is Bret Donnelly for his paper "Vagueness, Degrees of Truth, and Dutch Books".