Malcolm David Eckel
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Malcolm David Eckel is the current Associate Professor of Religion at Boston University. He earned two bachelors degrees: one in English at Harvard University and another in Theology at Oxford University. Eckel received his masters in Theology at Oxford and his PhD at Harvard in Comparative Religion.
Eckel has held positions at Ohio Wesleyan University, Middlebury College in Vermont, and later at the Harvard Divinity School as the Acting Director of the Center for the Study of World Religions. He now teaches courses specializing in eastern religions. Eckel is also the head of Boston University’s Core Curriculum, a groundbreaking program for the development of the humanities. The Core Curriculum challenges its students with a rigorous course load while allowing students to explore the multifarious concepts of worldly philosophies.
The Metcalf Award for Teaching Excellence, Boston University’s highest award for teaching, was awarded to Eckel in 1998.
He is currently the director of The Institute for Philosophy and Religion Lecture Series, an educational forum on various philosophical and religious ideas and their application in contemporary society.
[edit] Bibliography
- Jnanagarbha's Commentary on the Distinction Between the Two Truths (1987)
- To See the Buddha: A Philosopher's Quest for the Meaning of Emptiness (1994)
- Buddhism: Origins, Beliefs, Practices, Holy Texts, Sacred Places (2002)
- India and The West: The Problem of Understanding and Selected Essays of J. L. Mehta (editor)