Helen De Cruz Explained

Helen Lucretia De Cruz
Birth Place:Ghent, Belgium
Alma Mater:Vrije Universiteit Brussel, Groningen University
Doctoral Advisor:Igor Douven
Known For:Philosophy of Religion
Field:Philosophy of religion

Helen De Cruz (born 1978) is a Belgian philosopher and Danforth Chair of Philosophy at Saint Louis University who specialises in philosophy of religion, experimental philosophy, and philosophy of cognitive science. She is also an activist supporting the rights of EU citizens in the context of Brexit.

Biography

De Cruz received her BA in archaeology and art studies and an MA in anthropology of art from Ghent University. In 2007 she completed a PhD in archaeology and art studies at Vrije Universiteit Brussel, and in 2011 she completed a PhD in philosophy at Groningen University, entitled Through a Mind Darkly: An Empirically-informed philosophical perspective on systematic knowledge acquisition and cognitive limitations, under the supervision of Igor Douven. After post-doctoral research positions at University of Leuven and Somerville College, Oxford, she joined VU Amsterdam as an assistant professor of philosophy in 2015, before moving to Oxford Brookes University in 2016.[1] She has held the Danforth Chair of Philosophy at Saint Louis University since September 2019.[2]

She is currently an Executive Editor of the Journal of Analytic Theology,[3] and a member of the editorial boards of the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, the Journal of Mind & Behavior,[4] and Religious Studies.

In 2014 De Cruz published a series of interviews with philosophers working outside of academia for the NewAPPS blog.[5] She was a signatory on a 2018 open letter from academic philosophers to Amber Rudd, which urged the then home secretary to reconsider a request for asylum. The letter described a request which had been denied on the grounds that the applicant had not mentioned Plato or Aristotle when asked about humanism. The letter's signatories argued that the applicant should not have been expected to mention them.[6]

De Cruz regularly engages in public philosophy and has been featured on several public philosophy podcasts discussing the public sphere, religious disagreement, science fiction, philosophy of science, and experimental philosophy of religion.[7] [8] [9] [10] [11]

In addition to being a prolific philosopher, De Cruz is also a player of the Renaissance lute and a digital artist.[12]

Books

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Helen De Cruz: Curriculum Vitae.
  2. Web site: De Cruz from Oxford Brookes to Saint Louis. Weinberg. Justin. 2019-03-29. Daily Nous. en-US. 2019-12-17.
  3. Web site: Journal of Analytic Theology. journalofanalytictheology.com.
  4. Web site: Home - The Journal of Mind and Behavior - University of Maine. The Journal of Mind and Behavior.
  5. News: Rosen. Rebecca . 2014-07-08 . What do philosophers do? . The Atlantic . 2018-07-24.
  6. News: . 2018-01-26 . You don't need to know Plato and Aristotle to be a humanist . The Guardian . 2018-07-24.
  7. Web site: Brennan . John . Owning the Public Square . Radio National . October 11, 2021.
  8. Web site: Howard . Jeffrey . Religious Disagreement and Whether Religious Expertise Exists w/ Helen De Cruz . Damn the Absolute! . November 25, 2020.
  9. Web site: Peña-Guzmán . David M. . Anderson . Ellie . Episode 42. Overthink podcast . March 9, 2021.
  10. Roundtable Discussion on Experimental Philosophy of Religion . June 6, 2019 . Center for Philosophy of Religion . April 20, 2023.
  11. Web site: Owning the Public Square . February 28, 2021 . ABC Radio National . April 20, 2023.
  12. Web site: Sporadic pics. helendec.tumblr.com. en. 2018-07-24.
  13. Reviews of A Natural History of Natural Theology:

    Book Symposium on A Natural History of Natural Theology, in Religion, Brain & Behavior 6 (4), 2016:

    • Clark, Kelly James, "Trusting intuitions?", pp. 336–337,
    • Green, Adam, "Natural theology as model-based reasoning", pp. 337–342,
    • Jensen, Jeppe Sinding, "The naturalness of natural theology – an exercise in collective imagination", pp. 342–346,
    • Liénard, Pierre, "Natural theology, verification, and growth of knowledge", pp. 346–349,
    • Shults, F. LeRon, "Can theism be defeated? CSR and the debunking of supernatural agent abductions", pp. 349–355,