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Stanley
Rosen
Borden Parker Bowne Professor of Philosophy
Office: STH 640A
E-mail: srosen@bu.edu
Education: Ph.D., University
of Chicago
Interests: History of Philosophy,
Metaphysics, Contemporary Philosophy, Social
and Political Thought |
Prior to coming to Boston University in the fall
of 1994, Stanley Rosen was Evan Pugh Professor
at Pennsylvania State University. He has also
taught as a Visiting Professor at the University
of California in San Diego, the University of
Nice, and the Scuola Superiore in Pisa.
Dr. Rosen is author of:
Plato's Symposium: A Study (Yale University Press, 2005)
La production platonicienne (Presses Universitaires de France, 2005)
The Web of Politics, French translation (J.
Vrin, Paris, 2004)
The Mask of Enlightenment: Nietzsche's Zarathustra,
2nd edition (Yale University Press, 2004)
Hermeneutics as Politics, 2nd edition (Yale University
Press, 2003)
The Elusiveness of the Ordinary (Yale University
Press, 2002)
Metaphysics in Ordinary Language (Yale University
Press, 1999)
The Mask of Enlightenment: Nietzsche's Zarathustra
(Cambridge University Press, 1995)
Plato's Statesman: The Web of Politics (Yale
University Press, 1995)
The Question of Being: A Reversal of Heidegger
(Yale University Press, 1993)
The Ancients and the Moderns (Yale University
Press, 1989)
The Quarrel Between Philosophy and Poetry (Routledge,
1988)
Plato's Symposium (Yale University Press, 1987)
Hermeneutics as Politics (Oxford University Press,
1987)
Plato's Sophist (Yale University Press, 1983)
The Limits of Analysis (Basic Books, 1980)
G. W. F. Hegel: An Introduction to the Science
of Wisdom (Yale University Press, 1974)
Nihilism: a Philosophical Essay (Yale University
Press, 1969)
In addition, Professor Rosen has published over
thirty papers in books and over sixty articles
in professional journals, many in French, Spanish,
Italian, Portuguese, German, Serbian, Polish,
Chinese, Japanese, and Hebrew translations. He
has held a variety of fellowships and honorary
positions, including the Companys Professorship
at the University of Barcelona and the presidency
of the Metaphysical Society of America. Dr. Rosen
is also the recipient of an honorary doctorate
from the University of Lisbon (1997). In 1999
he was chosen to be the recipient of the Neu Family
Award for Excellence in Teaching from the College
of Arts and Sciences. In 2003, he was elected
an honorary member of the Serbian National
Academy and his book, The Limits of Analysis,
was published in Serbian.
Dr. Rosen has delivered over 190 lectures in
the United States and abroad including, over the
last decade or so, at the Universities of Padua,
Torino, Paris, Mainz, Barcelona, California (Berkeley),
Texas (Austin), and Chicago; the Heidelberg, Stockholm,
Tübingen, Bonn, Manchester, Essex, Duke,
Brandeis, Emory, Cornell, Harvard, and Yale Universities;
the Ecole normale supérieure (Paris); the
Ecole Saint-Jacques (Brussels); and Williams College.
In 1997 he presented the Priestley Lectures at
the University of Toronto, and in 1998 he was
the Cardinal Mercier Lecturer at the Catholic
University of Leuven. In November and December
2003, he was the Etienne Gilson Lecturer at the
Institut Catholique in Paris. The lectures will
be published in French this fall by Presses Universitaires
de France.
In November 2001, there was a colloqium on his
work at the University of Paris, and in April
2002, there was another at Boston University.
Dr. Rosen's graduate level courses treat of
ancient philosophy, metaphysics, political philosophy,
and of various figures in the history of philosophy.
In the fall 1994 semester, he taught a graduate
level course on Plato's Philebus, and in the spring
1995 semester a course on metaphysics. During
the 1995/96 year he taught a two semester course
on Hegel's Logic. In the spring 1997 semester,
Dr. Rosen taught a seminar in the Philosophy of
the Enlightenment and in the fall a seminar on
Plato's Philebus. In 1998/99 he taught Book One
of Hegel's Logic and Book Theta of Aristotle's
Metaphysics. In 2001/2002, Dr. Rosen taught a
year-long course on Plato's Republic.
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