Graham Oddie

Graham Oddie is a New Zealand philosopher who lives and works in the United States. He has been Professor of Philosophy at the University of Colorado since 1994.[1]

Oddie was educated at the University of Otago, where he received a first class honors degree in philosophy, and at the London School of Economics, where he received a PhD in logic and philosophy of science (1979). His teachers at the University of Otago included Pavel Tichý and Alan Musgrave, and at the LSE, John Watkins (his supervisor), and Colin Howson. Before moving to the United States he held positions at the University of Otago and Massey University (where he was Professor and Chair of Philosophy from 1988 to 1994). At the University of Colorado he was elected Chair of Philosophy in 1997, and appointed Associate Dean for Humanities and the Arts in 2002. He is a past President of the Australasian Association of Philosophy, and has held visiting positions at the University of Helsinki, Tantur Institute Jerusalem, the University of London, the Australian National University, the University of Sydney, the University of Canterbury, and Oxford University.[2]

Oddie is best known for his work in the theory of value—including the nature of value, the logic of value and our knowledge of value. He is also known for work on cognitive values (truth, truthlikeness and probability).[3] His books include Likeness to Truth[4] (the first monograph on the notion of verisimilitude, or closeness to the truth), and Value, Reality, and Desire[5] (an extended defense of the thesis that value is real and irreducible).

Publications

Books

Selected papers

References

  1. Oddie Faculty page at University of Colorado
  2. Oddie CV
  3. Oddie, Graham, "Truthlikeness", The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (Summer 2014 Edition), Edward N. Zalta (ed.)
  4. Graham Oddie, Likeness to Truth, (Reidel, 1986).
  5. Graham Oddie, Value, Reality and Desire, (Oxford University Press, 2005 and 2009).
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