Richard
Manning
Associate Professor
J.D. Northwestern, 1985; Ph.D. Northwestern,
1992. Joined the USF Department in 2007. Prior to this
he taught at Carleton University and Ohio University,
and has held visiting positions at the University of
Victoria, Georgetown University , The Johns Hopkins University
and the University of Oregon. His research is centered
around an interest in the relation between norms, especially
epistemic norms, and the natural; this interest has led to publications on a
wide range of figures and topics, including Spinoza, Kant, Davidson, McDowell,
Rorty, epistemology, philosophy of language, philosophy of biology and aesthetics.
This work has appeared in such publications as The British Journal for Philosophy
of Science, The Canadian Journal of Philosophy, Inquiry, The Stanford Encyclopedia
of Philosophy, and The Cambridge Companion to Rationalism. Manning is
currently working on a typescript tentatively entitled "The Ontology of
Interpretation", which presents and defends an interpretivist account of
meaning in the context of a direct realist account of the contents of perceptual
experience and judgment, and on a paper assessing the relationship between Spinozistic
individuals and Kantian natural ends.
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