Harry Frankfurt
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Harry Gordon Frankfurt | |
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Professor Frankfurt
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Born | May 29, 1929 |
Harry Gordon Frankfurt (born May 29, 1929) is a professor emeritus of philosophy at Princeton University. He previously taught at Yale University and Rockefeller University. He obtained his Ph.D. in 1954 at Johns Hopkins University. His major areas of interest include moral philosophy, philosophy of mind and action, and 17th century rationalism. He recently republished his 1986 paper On Bullshit, a philosophical look at "bullshit" and how it is both used and understood today. He appeared on Jon Stewart's The Daily Show on March 14, 2005 to publicize his latest book.
Among philosophers Frankfurt is best known for his interpretation of Descartes's rationalism, for his account of freedom of the will based on his concept of higher-order volitions, and for developing what are known as "Frankfurt counterexamples", thought experiments in the philosophy of action designed to show the possibility of situations in which a person could not have done other than he/she did but in which, our intuition is to say that, he/she nonetheless chose freely.
[edit] Bibliography
- On Truth. Random House (2006)
- Taking Ourselves Seriously and Getting it Right. Stanford University Press (2006)
- Frankfurt, Harry (2005). On Bullshit. Princeton University Press. ISBN 0-691-12294-6.
- The Reasons of Love. Princeton University Press (2004)
- Necessity, Volition, and Love. Cambridge University Press (1999)
- The Importance of What We Care about. Philosophical Essays. Cambridge University Press (1988)
- "Freedom of the Will and the Concept of the Person" (1971) Journal of Philosophy
- Demons, Dreamers, and Madmen. Bobbs-Merrill (1970)