Philosophy Department's Honors Reception

19 May 2004

(For the Honors Reception of 2005)
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Phi Sigma Tau Inauguration and Induction:
On May 19th, 2004, the department of philosophy held its first reception for honoring students and faculty. After opening remarks by Prof. Frank Kirkland, chairperson of the philosophy department, Prof. Christa Acampora, faculty advisor to the philosophy club and departmental advisor, began the event by introducing Dr. Ralph Acampora, professor and Phi Sigma Tau (PST) advisor at Hofstra University, as PST's official representative in charge of opening Hunter's new chapter of this honors society.[1] Dr. R. Acampora read the society's mission statement and requirements for approving departmental chapters and for inductees, as well as a letter from a national PST official. Hunter was accepted into PST as the New York Upsilon Chapter with Prof. C. Acampora as its faculty advisor. Hunter established higher selection criteria than the national standard by raising the GPA minimum to 3.5. Our inductees are particularly distinguished. They are:
Ben Abelson    (Chapter Secretary)
Rachel Falkenstern *   
Michael Pallante
Tara Autovino *   
Jonathan Fox
Connie Pedersen
Suha Bady
Galil Gertner    (Chapter Vice President)
Manuela Pizzi
Noam Barzilay
Akiva Glick     (Chapter President)
Allyson Pokres
Ruby Bloom Alexandra Jeronimo
Jennifer Rivera
Celina Bragagnolo*
Bracha Mandel
Sara Susswein
Christina Conroy *
Christopher Myco *
Kimoon Yoon
Brian Crowley *
Laura O'Neil
Pauline Zalkin
* Graduating Seniors--more on this below.

Following this inauguration and induction, Professor Kirkland (along with Professors Acampora and Hausman) announced the following marks of distinction and awards for both students and faculty:

Student Awards and Distinctions:
1)    Tara Autovino will enter the MA program in Film Production at NYU in fall 2004 with fellowship and full tuition paid. She will graduate magna cum laude.

2)    Celina Bragagnolo will enter the doctoral program in Philosophy at Duquesne University in fall 2004 with full tuition paid. She will graduate magna cum laude.

3)    Christina Conroy will enter the doctoral program in Logic and Philosophy of Science at the University of California, Irvine in fall 2004 with fellowship and full tuition paid. She graduated in January 2004 summa cum laude and with department honors for her honors thesis “The History of the Theory of Relations: Metaphysics’ Connection with Logic.” She is the sole recipient of the 2003-04 William Bryar Memorial Award for distinguished academic work in philosophy throughout an undergraduate career. She is also one of two recipients of the 2003-04 James Gordon Clapp Award for best paper submitted to the honors committee of the philosophy department.

4)    Brian Crowley had his paper “Index to Animals in Nietzsche’s Corpus” published in a professional volume, viz., Prof. Acampora’s A Nietzschean Bestiary Becoming Animal Beyond Docile and Brutal. His paper “An Ethics of Possibility in Heidegger” was accepted for presentation at a professional (not undergraduate or graduate student) philosophy conference (Philosophy, Interpretation, Culture Conference) at SUNY Binghamton. He is deferring graduate school for a year. He is one of two recipients of the 2003-04 James Gordon Clapp Award for best paper submitted to the honors committee of the philosophy department.

5)    Rachel Falkenstern will enter the doctoral program in Philosophy at Temple University in fall 2004. She will graduate magna cum laude.

6)    Christopher Myco will enter the law school of either Columbia University or Fordham University in fall 2004.

7)    Tanya Small will enter the MA program in Humanities, specializing in Cinema and Media Studies, at the University of Chicago in fall 2004 with fellowship and full tuition. She graduated in January 2004 magna cum laude.

Full-Time Faculty Accomplishments

1)    Christa Acampora’s co-edited book, A Nietzschean Bestiary: Becoming Animal Beyond Docile and Brutal, was published this year by Rowman & Littlefield Publishers. She also has an article in the volume and wrote the “Introduction” to it. Her article “Demos Agonistes Redux: Reflections on the Streit of Political Agonism” has been published in the journal Nietzsche-Studien. She has been promoted to associate professor and has also been appointed to the doctoral faculty of the CUNY Graduate Center.

2)    Omar Dahbour received an Andrew W. Mellon Residential Fellowship at the CUNY Humanities Center in the CUNY Graduate Center. It goes into effect in the 2004-05 academic year. His article “Three Models of Global Community” has been accepted for publication in the Journal of Ethics and his article “The Difference between Moral and Ethical Evaluations of Terrorism” has been accepted for publication in the Philosophical Forum. He has been appointed to the editorial board of the Journal of Social Philosophy and appointed editor of the American Philosophical Association (APA) Newsletter on International Cooperation. 

3)    James Freeman’s article “The Pragmatic Dimensions of Premise Acceptability” was published in Anyone Who Has a View: Theoretical Contributions to the Study of Argumentation (Kluwer Academic Pub., 2003). His article “Premise Acceptability and Truth” has been accepted for publication in the volume Mistakes of Reason (University of Toronto Press).

4)    Alan Hausman’s co-authored article “Wittgenstein’s Evil Demon” was published in Cartesian Views: Papers in Honor of Richard A. Watson (Brill, 2003).

5)    John Lango received a NEH Summer Fellowship to participate in the faculty seminar on “War and Morality: Re-thinking the Just War Tradition for the 21st Century” at U.S. Naval Academy in Annapolis, Maryland. He received a PSC-CUNY Grant for work on his Alfred North Whitehead project, and his paper “Preventive Wars, Just War Principles, and the United Nations” has been accepted for publication in the Journal of Ethics.

6)    Laura Keating’s article “The Role of the Concept of Sense in Principles IV, 189-98” was published in the British Journal for the History of Philosophy.

7)    Frank Kirkland’s article “Modernisms In Black” was published in The Companion to African-American Philosophy (Blackwell Publishers, Inc., 2004) and his article “The Problem of the Color Line: Normative or Empirical; Evolving or Non-Evolving” has been accepted for publication in the journal Philosophia Africana. He has been appointed chairperson of the APA Committee on the Status of Blacks in the Profession.

8)    Gerald Press’ paper “What is the Subject of Meno 86d-110b?” has been accepted for presentation at the 7th Symposium Platonicum of the International Plato Society to be held at the University of Würzberg in Germany.

9)    Steven Ross’ paper “Real Modest Moral Realism” was presented at the CUNY Graduate Center Philosophy Colloquia and has been accepted for publication in Philosophical Forum.

Part-Time Faculty Accomplishments

1)    Maureen Eckert (part-time instructor) received a tenure-track position in philosophy at the University of Massachusetts, Dartmouth. (She is a graduate of Hunter College.)

2)    Fritz McDonald (part-time instructor) received a Graduate Writing Fellowship to be used at the CUNY Law School.

3)    Daniel Greenspan (part-time instructor) received a Kierkegaard Summer Residency Fellowship at the Hong’s Kierkegaard Library, housed at St. Olaf’s College in Northfield, Minnesota to begin dissertation research.


Emeriti Faculty Accomplishments

1)    Virginia Held, Distinguished Professor Emeritus, was elected President of the American Philosophical Association (APA), Eastern Division, in 2001. Some of her representative publications, since retirement, are “The Ethics of Care” in the Oxford Handbook of Ethical Theory (Oxford University Press, 2004); “Terrorism and War” in the Journal of Ethics (2003); and “Moral Subjects: The Natural and The Normative”—APA Presidential Address in Proceedings and Addresses of the American Philosophical Association (2002).

2)    Charles Landesman, Professor Emeritus, wrote the book Skepticism: The Central Issues (Blackwell Publishers, 2002). He also co-edited the volume Philosophical Skepticism: From Plato to Rorty (Blackwell Publishers, 2003). His article “Rawls on Hiroshima: An Inquiry into the Morality of the Use of Atomic Weapons in August 1945” was published in Philosophical Forum (2003).

3)    Charles Sherover, Professor Emeritus, wrote the book Are We in Time: And Other Essays on Time and Temporality (Northwestern University Press, 2002). He also wrote the book From Kant and Royce to Heidegger: Essays in Modern Philosophy (Catholic University Press, 2002). His book The Human Experience of Time (Northwestern University Press) was reprinted in 2002.



A reception with cake, lemonade, and sparkling wine (the last provided by Prof. Press) followed.

On behalf of the students, the Philosophy Club of Hunter College would like to thank the philosophy department faculty and staff for organizing both this event and the opening of the PST chapter. (From the Web master, thanks go to professors Kirkland and Acampora for supplying a full list of names and details for the PST students, the graduating seniors, and the various faculty.)


[1] It became known in the course of the induction ceremony that phi sigma tau stands for philountōn sophian timē, the honor of those who love wisdom.




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