GW Philosophy Department

GW Philosophy Department The Philosophy Department at the George Washington University Greetings from the Department of Philosophy at The George Washington University!

We are a pluralist department with ten full-time faculty and ten part-time faculty offering courses in the history of philosophy, ethics, social, political, and legal philosophy, logic, philosophy of mind, philosophy of science, analytic, American, continental philosophy, and philosophy of race and gender. Our philosophy majors in both tracks have enjoyed a wide range of post-graduate careers both

in and outside the academy and find that the analytical skills they develop as philosophy majors help them to be successful in many different professions including law, medicine, teaching, business, and public policy. We offer two different majors in our department:

1. A traditional track that provides a strong background in the history of philosophy (especially recommended for students who intend to pursue a graduate degree in Philosophy).
2. A philosophy and public affairs option that emphasizes value theory and social and political philosophy. Our department is distinctive in offering an MA in Philosophy and Social Policy, an interdisciplinary graduate program that takes full advantage of our downtown Washington, D.C., location. In addition to their philosophy and policy graduate courses, our MA students choose among a wide variety of offerings in the Trachtenberg School of Public Policy and Public Administration and interact closely with graduate students from all over the University. Many of our MA students obtain policy internships in Washington while they are enrolled in the program, creating an exciting synergy between their coursework and their employment experience. These internships have frequently led to full-time positions in prominent policy organizations upon graduation. The GW Department of Philosophy prides itself on offering our philosophy majors and minors the personal attention usually associated with smaller, liberal arts colleges. We are a research-active, congenial group of full and part-time faculty and enjoy sharing our work and exchanging ideas in department brown bag presentations. We also have an annual endowed lecture series that regularly attracts some of the top philosophers in our profession to GW to speak to our students and faculty. We hope you enjoy browsing our website and invite you to attend one of our departmental events if you are in the area! Gail Weiss
Chair, Department of Philosophy
Professor of Philosophy and Human Sciences

06/08/2020

GW Philosophy Department Statement on Political Unrest

Black Lives Matter.

Black Lives Matter, and yet one would not know from the fact that Black people experience poverty in the U.S. at twice the rate that white people do, or that they have died of COVID-19 at three times the rate that white people have, or that disparities in education lead to Black people experiencing the lowest rates of completion for four-year college degrees, that they matter to America.

Black Lives Matter, and yet for the eight minutes and forty-six seconds that Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin pressed his blue-uniformed knee into the throat of George Floyd—as Floyd gasped for air, pleaded that he could not breathe, cried for his mother, and finally, fell silent—you might have been forgiven for wondering whether Black lives really matter to this country at all.

But Black Lives Matter.

We are a philosophical community. We are committed to freedom of thought and expression. We utterly reject racism, sexism, ableism, and all other forms of oppression and prejudice. We denounce our government’s use of violence to terrorize, punish, and silence those fighting for democracy and the right to be heard—a right which we discuss and embody in our classrooms but that in the final instance can only be defended in the street. And so we stand with protesters and we say, “Black Lives Matter.”

President Trump has decried what he calls the “angry mob” that has taken to cities and towns all across this country and across the world. He urges us to distinguish that “angry mob” from so-called other “peaceful protesters,” and to condemn the expressions of rage and pain that are forcing their way into our national discourse and refusing to be quieted. We refuse. Where there is no justice, there can be no real peace.

For too long, the masses—with whom we are in solidarity, and of whom we are a part—have been shut out of political life, sidelined, brutalized, and oppressed. The anger we see pouring out into the streets is triggered by a specific, recent manifestation of a longstanding, historical violation of basic principles of justice. The murder of George Floyd by members of the Minneapolis Police Department is but one instance of the institutional racism that has plagued the United States and its colonial precursors for four hundred years.

That even as the cameras are rolling, agents of the state openly engage in such flagrant violations of basic principles of decency, raises the sickening and horrifying question: What do they do in the dark? There is a lamentable tendency among the white residents of the United States to assume that such practices are rare in the present day, that they are mostly historical relics of antebellum times, or perhaps relegated to the years before the Civil Rights Movement of the 1960s. But state brutality against people of color pervades our culture not as isolated exceptions, but as the rule. As philosophers, we have a duty to help bring this pervasive, institutionalized brutality out into the open, and to struggle against it.

That people have a right to a democratic say in how they are governed is a widely-shared fundamental premise of political philosophy. The alternative is government by arbitrary, non-rational, brute force, and this is anathema to the very concept of political philosophy. By unleashing upon the populace militarized police, border guards, correctional officers, and other official state agents to commit unprovoked acts of brutality, the current U.S. Presidential administration carries out a violent, frontal assault on this basic principle that forms the foundation of any philosophical approach to organizing a polity. The Trump administration is self-consciously and deliberately choosing arbitrary, brute force as its governing principle. If there is anything that we as philosophers must resist with all of our might, it is this.

We believe in true democracy—political power to all who today are silenced and oppressed—and we are in the struggle to win it. We stand up with people around the world and we say, “Black Lives Matter.” We wholeheartedly support this popular movement as the only force capable of making that statement not only an abstract ethical truth, but a concrete reality.

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Check out this documentary by one of our current master’s student Rostam Assadi! In this documentary, Rostam and his tea...
10/30/2018

Check out this documentary by one of our current master’s student Rostam Assadi! In this documentary, Rostam and his team interviewed various leaders, students, activists, and artists to better understand how people interpret Islam and make a positive impact.

Today our faculty spotlight is on Professor Joseph Trullinger! He is currently teaching a course on 19th-Century Philoso...
10/06/2018

Today our faculty spotlight is on Professor Joseph Trullinger! He is currently teaching a course on 19th-Century Philosophy, and is particularly adept at making a great cup of coffee! Keep an eye out for more about our wonderful faculty!

We hope everyone has gotten a good rest since graduation! We're here to kick-start your motivation with another example ...
06/05/2018

We hope everyone has gotten a good rest since graduation! We're here to kick-start your motivation with another example of all the directions you can take with your philosophy degree

This week on famous phil majors: Canadian-American television personality and host of Jeopardy, Alex Trebek!
04/26/2018

This week on famous phil majors: Canadian-American television personality and host of Jeopardy, Alex Trebek!

Thank you so much for everybody who came out to listen to what our get lecturer, Eduardo Mendieta (center), had to offer...
04/20/2018

Thank you so much for everybody who came out to listen to what our get lecturer, Eduardo Mendieta (center), had to offer about truth, post-truth, and his critical insight on the political scene we find ourselves in today!

04/20/2018

STARTING NOW Eduardo Mendieta’s lecture on truth, at 4pm in MPA 310! Come for the snacks, stay for the facts

*Don't miss out!* Eduardo Mendieta's lecture on truth, TOMORROW April 20 at 4pm in MPA 310! Come for the snacks, stay fo...
04/19/2018

*Don't miss out!* Eduardo Mendieta's lecture on truth, TOMORROW April 20 at 4pm in MPA 310! Come for the snacks, stay for the facts

Don't miss out on guest speaker Eduardo Mendieta's lecture on truth this Friday, April 20 at 4pm in MPA 310!
04/16/2018

Don't miss out on guest speaker Eduardo Mendieta's lecture on truth this Friday, April 20 at 4pm in MPA 310!

Mark your calendars for Eduardo Mendieta's lecture "Rorty and Post-Post-Truth" on Friday, April 20 in MPA 310 at 4pm! Ex...
04/08/2018

Mark your calendars for Eduardo Mendieta's lecture "Rorty and Post-Post-Truth" on Friday, April 20 in MPA 310 at 4pm! Examine the concept of truth and how a person like Trump can be so prevalent today.

04/06/2018

"Taking Responsibility for Racial Violence: Shooting the Racist Imagination", presented by guest speaker Jose Medina! Today! 4:30! In SMPA 310! Be there or be square!

You know what to do!
04/03/2018

You know what to do!

Address

801 22nd Street NW, Rm 525
Washington D.C., DC
20052

Opening Hours

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Thursday 9am - 5pm
Friday 9am - 5pm

Telephone

+12029946265

Website

http://www.linkedin.com/pub/gwu-philosophy/8/385/a37

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