• Request Info
  • Visit
  • Apply
  • Give
  • Request Info
  • Visit
  • Apply
  • Give

Search

  • A-Z Index
  • Map

Philosophy

  • Undergraduate Programs
    • About Philosophy
    • Majors, Minors, and Concentrations
    • Research Opportunities
    • Undergraduate Course Descriptions
    • Scholarships and Awards
    • Study Abroad
  • Graduate Programs
    • Admissions
    • M.A. Requirements
    • Ph.D. Requirements
    • Graduate Course Descriptions
    • Graduate Student Handbook
    • Graduate Placement History
  • People
    • Faculty
    • Officers & Committees
    • Emeritus and Retired
    • Adjunct
    • Staff
    • Graduate Students
  • About
    • Calendar of Events
    • Bylaws
    • Newsletter – Ergo
    • Student News
    • Faculty News
    • Employment Opportunities
  • Ethics Bowl
    • Ethics Bowl Basics
    • Participation Benefits
  • Alumni and Friends
Home » Archives for Jessica Black
Author: Jessica Black
faculty headshot photo

Professor Thalos awarded Fulbright fellowship

January 24, 2025 by Jessica Black

Filed Under: Faculty News

Shaw teaches Classical Chinese Philosophy

May 1, 2024 by Jessica Black

Professor Clerk Shaw has spent years preparing for the Classical Chinese course by reading texts from the 6th – 3rd centuries BCE, auditing a Chinese Intellectual History course, co-organizing a translation and discussion group that has met weekly. Some of the texts include the Analects (Confucius or Kongzi) and later texts from the entry of Buddhism into China. The course was created in response to undergraduates inquiring as to why there were no non-Western philosophy course taught. The assignments and texts selected for this course are designed to provide the student with an opportunity to “reflect on the intrinsic interest” of the text and “reflecting on how we learn new material in general”.

Course Description: Classical Chinese philosophy discusses the full range of topics familiar from other philosophical traditions: ethics, politics, epistemology, mind, language, and more. Its texts contain some views and arguments familiar from Western philosophy (e.g., forms of virtue ethics and impartialist consequentialism) but often in different forms (e.g., different core virtues or different arguments for impartiality). In other cases, the basic categories and views seem more fundamentally different (e.g. the relationship between the heart-mind [xin] and body as compared to Western discussions of metaphysics of mind). Studying classical Chinese philosophy thus stands to improve philosophical understanding and expand our sense of the views one might hold and of how one might defend them. Further, because its schools and texts have deeply influenced both Chinese and global life, culture, and politics, studying it can improve our grasp of history and of the modern world

Filed Under: Faculty News

Photo of Adam Cureton

Cureton Receives 2024 Research and Creative Achievement Award

May 1, 2024 by Jessica Black

Filed Under: Faculty News

Feldt Receives 2024 Excellence in Teaching Award

May 1, 2024 by Jessica Black

Filed Under: Faculty News

Photo of Adam Cureton

Cureton delivers the Rezendes Ethics Lecture at the University of Maine

April 29, 2024 by Jessica Black

Professor Adam Cureton visited The University of Maine to deliver the Rezendes Ethics Lecture entitled “Disclosing a Disability at Work: Respect, Discrimination, and the Ethics of Informal Attitudes”.

Filed Under: Faculty News

A man making a presentation

Entrekin presents at two conferences

April 25, 2024 by Jessica Black

Graduate teaching assistant Brant Entrekin presented in two conferences during the 2024-2025 academic year. In September 2023, Entrekin traveled to Florida State University to present at their “Free Will, Agency, and Moral Responsibility” and in March 2024 traveled to Boston University to present at “Valuing Research and Researching Values: Bridging the Gap Between Ethics and Science”.

Filed Under: Student News

Photo of a young woman in a pink t-shirt and glasses

Mac receives UT Humanities Center Fellowship

April 24, 2024 by Jessica Black

Graduate student Linh Mac has been chosen as one of the Denbo Center for Humanities and the Arts Fellows for 2024-2025.

Filed Under: Student News

Department of Philosophy

College of Arts and Sciences

801 McClung Tower
Knoxville TN 37996-0480

Phone: 865-974-3255

The University of Tennessee, Knoxville
Knoxville, Tennessee 37996
865-974-1000

The flagship campus of the University of Tennessee System and partner in the Tennessee Transfer Pathway.

ADA Privacy Safety Title IX