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Tuesday, April 5, 2011

21st-century philosophers - Pierre-André Taguieff,Nassim Nicholas Taleb,Charles Margrave Taylor,Eugene Thacker,Evan Thompson,Judith Jarvis Thomson,Xavier Tilliette,Tzvetan Todorov,Vladimir Toporov,Michael Tye

Pierre-André Taguieff (born August 4, 1946 in Paris, France) is a philosopher and director of research at the French National Centre for Scientific Research in an Institut d'Etudes Politiques de Paris laboratory, the CEVIPOF. He is also a member of the Cercle de l'Oratoire think tank.
Taguieff is the author of a number of books and papers on racism and antisemitism, including The Force of Prejudice: On Racism and Its Doubles (2001) and Rising from the Muck: The New Antisemitism in Europe (2004). He is known in particular for his studies on the French National Front and populism.

Nassim Nicholas Taleb (Arabic: نسيم نيقولا نجيب طالب‎, alternatively Nessim or Nissim, born 1960) is a Lebanese American philosopher, essayist and practitioner of mathematical finance. He wrote the 2007 book The Black Swan, which a Sunday Times review described as one of the twelve most influential books since World War II.
He is a bestselling author,and has been a professor at several universities, currently at Polytechnic Institute of New York University and Oxford University.[8][9] He has also been a hedge fund manager and Wall Street trader,and is currently a scientific adviser at Universa Investments.
He criticized the finance industry and warned about financial crises, subsequently making a fortune out of the financial crisis of 2007–2010.He advocates what he calls a "black swan robust" society, meaning a society that can withstand difficult-to-predict events.[10] He favors "stochastic tinkering" as a method of scientific discovery, by which he means experimentation and fact-collecting instead of top-down directed research.

harles Margrave Taylor, CC, GOQ, FRSC (born November 5, 1931) is a Canadian philosopher from Montreal, Quebec best known for his contributions in political philosophy, the philosophy of social science, and in the history of philosophy. His contributions to these fields have earned him both the prestigious Kyoto Prize and the Templeton Prize, in addition to widespread esteem among fellow philosophers. In 2007, Taylor served with Gérard Bouchard on the Bouchard-Taylor Commission on Reasonable Accommodation with regard to cultural differences in the province of Quebec. Taylor currently teaches at McGill University in the Department of Philosophy. He is a practicing Roman Catholic.

Eugene Thacker is an author and associate professor in the Media Studies program at The New School in New York. Thacker is known for his work in philosophy, media studies, and the study of genre horror and science fiction. In addition to his writing on science and technology, Thacker has written on the work of Georges Bataille, Gilles Deleuze, Michel Foucault, Arthur Schopenhauer, H.P. Lovecraft, and medieval mysticism. Thacker’s most recent book is After Life, and a forthcoming book is titled Horror of Philosophy.Thacker's earlier books include The Exploit (co-written with Alexander Galloway) and Biomedia.
Thacker is also an author of experimental fiction. His writing has appeared in anthologies such as Degenerative Prose (published by the Black Ice imprint) and Debug: Primary Techno Noir (edited by Kenji Siratori); he has also produced book arts projects, including an "anti-novel" titled An Ideal for Living (Quodlibet Books, 2006). Thacker helped establish Alt-X Press, for which he edited the anthology Hard_Code.Thacker has previously collaborated with Fakeshop, Biotech Hobbyist, and Merzbow.

Evan Thompson is professor of philosophy at the University of Toronto. He writes about cognitive science, phenomenology, and the philosophy of mind.
As a child, Thompson was home-schooled at the Lindisfarne Association, an thinktank and retreat founded by his father, William Irwin Thompson. In 1977, Thompson met Chilean phenomenologist Francisco Varela when Varela attended a Lindisfarne conference which was organized by Thompson and Gregory Bateson. Thompson received a Ph.D. in Philosophy from the University of Toronto in 1990 and an A.B. in Asian Studies from Amherst College in 1983.
Thompson has taught at the University of Toronto, Concordia University, Boston University, and York University. While at York University, Thompson was also a member of the Centre for Vision Research. Thompson has held visiting appointments at the Center for Subjectivity Research in Copenhagen, and at the University of Colorado, Boulder. Thompson worked with Francisco Varela at CREA (Centre de Recherche en Epistemologie Applique) at the Ecole Polytechnique in Paris. During this time, Varela and Thompson wrote The Embodied Mind: Cognitive Science and Human Experience.Thompson's latest book, Mind in Life: Biology, Phenomenology, and the Sciences of Mind, explores how life relates to mind.

Judith Jarvis Thomson (born 1929) is an American moral philosopher and metaphysician, best-known for her effective use of intuition-pumping examples to make philosophical points.

Xavier Tilliette is a French philosopher, historian of philosophy and theologian, born on July 23, 1921, in Corbie (Somme). Former student of Jean Wahl and of Vladimir Jankélévitch, he is a member of the Society of Jesus (1938) and professor emeritus at the Catholic Institute of Paris (1969), at the Pontifical Gregorian University of Rome (1972), at the Lateran University and at the Centre Sèvres in Paris.

Tzvetan Todorov (Bulgarian: Цветан Тодоров) (born March 1, 1939 in Sofia) is a Franco-Bulgarian philosopher. He has lived in France since 1963 with his wife Nancy Huston and their two children, writing books and essays about literary theory, thought history and culture theory.

Vladimir Nikolayevich Toporov (5 July 1928 - 5 December 2005) was a leading Russian philologist associated with the Tartu-Moscow semiotic school. His wife was Tatyana Elizarenkova.
Toporov authored more than 1500 works, including Akhmatova and Dante (1972), Towards the Reconstruction of the Indo-European Rite (1982), Aeneas: a Man of Destiny (1993), Myth. Rite. Symbol. Image (1995), Holiness and Saints in the Russian Spiritual Culture (1998), and Petersburg Text of Russian Literature (2003). He translated the Dhammapada into Russian and supervised the ongoing edition of the most complete vocabulary of the Prussian language to date (5 volumes).
Among Toporov's many honours were the USSR State Prize (1990), which he turned down to voice his protest against the repressive policies of the Soviet administration in Lithuania; the first ever Solzhenitsyn Prize (1998), and the Andrei Bely Prize for 2004. He was a member of the Russian Academy of Sciences and many other scholarly societies.

Michael Tye is a philosopher at the University of Texas at Austin who has made significant contributions to the philosophy of mind. He was educated at Oxford University in England, studying first physics and then physics and philosophy. Before moving to Texas, Tye taught at Temple University in Philadelphia. He was also a visiting professor at King’s College, London for some ten consecutive years while at Temple and briefly took up a chair at the University of St. Andrews. Besides philosophy of mind, Tye has interests in cognitive science, metaphysics, and philosophical logic, especially problems relating to vagueness.
Tye's third book, Ten Problems of Consciousness (1995), was an alternate selection of the Library of Science Book Club. Along with Fred Dretske, Tye defends the representationalist view of consciousness.

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