The New York University Department of
Philosophy offers
B.A.,
M.A., and
Ph.D. degrees in philosophy, as well as a
minor in philosophy and a joint
major in language and mind with the NYU Departments of
Linguistics and
Psychology.[1] It is home to the New York Institute of Philosophy, a
research center that supports multi-year projects, public lectures, conferences, and workshops in the field, as well as outreach programs to teach
New York City high school students interested in philosophy.[2]
The faculty and students have close relations with the philosophy department of Columbia University. Every year, NYU and Columbia philosophy graduate students organize the Annual NYU/Columbia Graduate Student Philosophy Conference.[3] Furthermore, doctoral students are able to cross-register to take courses at
Columbia University, as well as at the other members of the Inter-University Doctoral Consortium (IUDC):
Princeton University,
CUNY Graduate Center,
Rutgers University,
Fordham University,
Stony Brook University, and
The New School.[4] Within NYU, the department works especially closely with the
School of Law, whose Center for Law and Philosophy hosts the Colloquium in Legal, Political, and Social Philosophy on a weekly basis during the fall semester of each academic year.[5] Many former and current faculty members of the department have held or currently hold dual appointments in both philosophy and law, including
Ronald Dworkin,
Thomas Nagel, Liam Murphy,
Samuel Scheffler,
Jeremy Waldron, and
Kwame Anthony Appiah. Other research centers affiliated with the department are the Center for
Bioethics and the Center for Mind, Brain, and Consciousness.[6]
Anja Jauernig, Kant, early modern philosophy, 19th and early 20th century German philosophy, history of philosophy of science, aesthetics, and animal ethics
Marko Malink, ancient philosophy, philosophical logic
Matthew Mandelkern, philosophy of language, semantics, philosophy of cognitive science
The following people are notable philosophers not affiliated with the Department of Philosophy who currently hold or have held faculty positions within other departments at
New York University
At the graduate level, students can participate in the NYU chapter of Minorities and Philosophy (MAP), an international organization consisting of philosophy students committed to addressing minority issues in the profession, theoretical issues regarding philosophy of gender, race, sexual orientation, class, disability, native language, etc., and philosophy done from minority perspectives.[8] The MAP chapter at NYU pursues these goals through a variety of events, including talks, film screenings, workshops, trainings, and collaborative events organized with other NYC-area chapters.
At the undergraduate level, students can participate in the NYU Philosophy Forum, which hosts talks and panels with faculty members, postdoctoral fellows, and graduate students throughout the academic year.[9][10] In addition, the Philosophy Forum organizes the Annual Undergraduate Philosophy Conference @ NYU.[11] The conference is held at the end of the spring semester of each academic year, is open to the public, and generally features undergraduate students selected from various universities giving presentations of their original work on any philosophical topic, panels on philosophical topics of interest, as well as lectures by notable philosophers who are invited from both the faculty at NYU and other institutions.[12] Past keynote lecturers for the conference include
Thomas Nagel,
David Chalmers, and
Saul Kripke, with other notable speakers and panelists including
Kwame Anthony Appiah,
Ned Block,
Paul Boghossian,
S. Matthew Liao,
Michele Moody-Adams,
Sharon Street, and
Paul Thagard.[13]