Religion & Philosophy

Philip Hopkins

Associate Professor of Philosophy

Positions

Chair
Dept. of Religion and Philosophy
September 01, 2008 - present

Courses: Fall 2009

Paideia Seminar 2A
Philosophy of Religion
History of West Phil: Ancient
Colloquium in Philosophy

Research

I have two areas of primary research, both related around concerns with the ways we talk to each other (our discourse and rhetorical practices), and questions of how we come to know and judge the world. One area is the relation between the discourse practices of what I call the "truth-telling media," i.e. marketing and journalism and our moral heuristics. This investigation focuses on the growing moralism in mass media, the way that marketing and journalism explicitly build and maintain moral meaning systems and use these to leverage their interests. I explore how this explicit moralism impacts our everyday thinking about ethical and moral issues and affects our moral heuristics. Another area investigates pre-socratic insights into our most fundamental ways of seeing the world, i.e., such concepts as space, time, language and order or pattern. I am particularly interested in the unusual expositional practices of these earliest thinkers and the relation of what they think about the world to how they choose to talk about those insights.

Publications

"Weaving the Fishbasket: Heraclitus on Riddles and the Relation of Word and World" Epoché © 13:2 (2009).

"To Say What is Most Necessary: Expositional and Philosophical Practice in Thucydides and Plato," in Philosophy in Dialogue: Plato's Many Devices, Gary Scott, ed. (Northwestern University Press, Topics in Historical Philosophy Series, John McCumber, ed., 2007).

"Zeno's boêtheia tôi logôi: Thought Problems about Problems for Thought," Epoché © 11:1 (2006).


Honors & Awards

Southwestern University Teaching Award, 2004