Charles Larmore

Charles Larmore (born 23 March 1950 in Baltimore, MD) is the W. Duncan MacMillan Family Professor of the Humanities and Professor of Philosophy at Brown University. He is noted for his writings on political liberalism as well as on various topics in moral philosophy (moral realism, the nature of the self) and in the history of philosophy from the 16th to the 20th centuries (including such figures as Montaigne, Descartes, Bayle, Kant, Hölderlin, Schopenhauer, Nietzsche, Sartre). His most recent work focuses on the nature of reason and reasons. He previously taught at the University of Chicago as the Chester D. Tripp Professor and the Raymond W. & Martha Hilpert Gruner Distinguished Service Professor as well as at Columbia University.[1] He received his A.B. at Harvard (1972) and his Ph.D. at Yale (1978).

Prizes, awards and membership in societies

Selected publications

References

  1. Brown University: Charles Larmore (Accessed Sep 2012)
  2. Academie Francaise:Charles Larmore (Accessed Sep 2012)
  3. American Academy of Arts and Sciences:Membership List:L (Accessed Sep 2012)
  4. Card, Claudia (January 1999). "Review: The Morals of Modernity by Charles Larmore". Mind. New Series. 108 (429): 184–187. JSTOR 2659914.
  5. Bagnoli, Carla (October 2009). "Review: The Autonomy of Morality by Charles Larmore". The Philosophical Review. 118 (4): 536–540. JSTOR 41441913.
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