Priscilla Cohn Explained

Priscilla Cohn
Birth Name:Priscilla T. Neuman
Birth Date:14 December 1933
Birth Place:Radnor Township, Pennsylvania, U.S.
Death Place:Villanova, Pennsylvania, U.S.
Education:Bryn Mawr College (Philosophy BA, MA, PhD)
Era:Contemporary philosophy
Thesis Title:The Idea of Nothing in the Philosophy of Martin Heidegger
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Thesis Year:1969
Doctoral Advisor:José Ferrater Mora
Language:English, Spanish

Priscilla T. Neuman Cohn Ferrater Mora (; December 14, 1933 – June 27, 2019) was an American philosopher and animal rights activist. She was Emerita Professor of Philosophy at Pennsylvania State University, associate director of the Oxford Centre for Animal Ethics, and co-editor of the centre's Journal of Animal Ethics.

Biography

Cohn was born to Simon and Helen Neuman, one of five children, in Radnor Township, Pennsylvania, in 1933. She studied at Haverford Friends School, leaving early to study at Baldwin School in Bryn Mawr. In 1951, she eloped with Willard Cohn. Cohn then enrolled in Bryn Mawr College, earning a bachelor's, a master's, and a PhD in philosophy, between 1956 and 1969.[1] She wrote her thesis on the work of Heidegger; her doctoral advisor was the Spanish philosopher José Ferrater Mora.[2] She separated with Willard Cohn in 1969 (they divorced in 1980); Cohn married Ferrater Mora the same year.

She taught philosophy for more than 35 years at Pennsylvania State University, writing on a variety of topics including animals, environmental issues, and ethical problems, as well as on contemporary philosophers and the history of philosophy, publishing in both English and Spanish.

Cohn was made full Professor in Philosophy at Pennsylvania State University in 1982, and was made Professor Emerita at Pennsylvania State University Abington in 2001. She pioneered courses in animal ethics and lectured on five continents. From 1990 to 1993, she was Director of the Summer School Course in animal rights at Complutense University (Madrid) at El Escorial[3] — which were the first courses of their kind in Spain. She also taught the Graduate School Course on Applied Ethics at the University of Santiago de Compostela, in 1991.[4] Her interest in wildlife was reflected in her work as the founder and director of P.N.C. Corp, a nonprofit animal rights foundation that organised the first international conference on contraception in wildlife in the United States and initiated and funded the first PZP fertility control study on white-tailed deer. She was also a board member of The Fund for Animals and Humane USA.

Cohn died at her home in Villanova, Pennsylvania, on 27 June 2019, due to complications relating to Parkinson's disease.[5]

Selected publications

See also

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. Book: Kistler, John M.. People Promoting and People Opposing Animal Rights: In Their Own Words. Greenwood Publishing Group. 2002. 978-0-313-31322-6. Westport, Connecticut. 72. en.
  2. 1969. Doctoral Dissertations, 1969. The Review of Metaphysics. 23. 1. 176–195. 20125529. 0034-6632.
  3. News: Terricabras. Josep-Maria. 2019-07-08. Priscilla Cohn: entre Ferrater Mora y los animales. es. El País. 2020-06-23. 1134-6582.
  4. Web site: 2011-12-18. Transcript of Prof. Priscilla Cohn's Live ARZone Guest Chat. 2020-06-23. ARZone Podcasts. en.
  5. News: Cook. Bonnie L.. 2019-07-02. Priscilla T. Neuman Cohn Ferrater Mora, 85, heiress who became philosophy professor, animal-rights activist. The Philadelphia Inquirer. 2020-06-23.