Professor
Philosophy
Richard C. Taylor, 糖心传媒 Philosophy Department and member of the De Wulf-Mansion Centre for Ancient, Medieval and Renaissance Philosophy at the Katholieke Universiteit Leuven in Belgium, has co-taught the KU Leuven graduate course, 鈥淎quinas in Context,鈥 with Prof. Andrea Robiglio of KU Leuven annually since 2011. This course is often linked with a graduate course on Aquinas taught at Marquette through the use live video internet technology. He has also held a Fulbright teaching and research fellowship for short term courses at Marmara University, Istanbul, Turkey, the University of Pisa, Italy, and the Katholieke Universiteit Leuven, Belgium. Prof. Taylor is also a Cooperating Partner in the Jena University DFG-Research Training Group 2792: Autonomy of Heteronomous Texts in Antiquity and the Middle Ages.
His work has ranged from the Greek philosophical tradition and the entr茅 of philosophy into the lands of Islam in the ninth century in the Plotiniana Arabica and the Discourse on the Pure Good (Latin: Liber de causis), through the classical rationalist tradition of al-Farabi, Ibn Sina / Avicenna, and especially Averroes, to the influence of these writings in Latin on the thought of Thomas Aquinas and his teacher Albert the Great in the thirteenth century. He is active as director of the Aquinas and 鈥榯he Arabs鈥 International Working Group () since its inception in 2005 and founding editor of the Brepols series, Philosophy in the Abrahamic Traditions of the Middle Ages. He is past president of the American Catholic Philosophical Association, past president the Society for Medieval and Renaissance Philosophy, and current vice-president of the Soci茅t茅 Internationale D鈥橦istoire des Sciences et de la Philosophie Arabes et Islamiques.
Education
Ph.D. University of Toronto 1982, Philosophy & Medieval Studies
Courses Taught
I have taught graduate courses on Aristotle, Ancient and Medieval Philosophy of Mind, Philosophy and Religion in the Middle Ages, Arabic/Islamic Philosophy, Thomas Aquinas and more. Since 2011 I annually co-teach Aquinas in Context with Prof. Andrea Robiglio at KULeuven (biennially linked with a Marquette graduate seminar on Aquinas and the Arabic tradition). Undergraduate courses I regularly teach include Foundations in Philosophy, Theory of Ethics, Philosophy of Religion and courses in the History of Ancient and Medieval Philosophy.