Rachel Barney Explained

Region:Western philosophy
Era:21st-century philosophy
Rachel Barney
Birth Date:14 September 1966
Institutions:University of Toronto
Main Interests:ancient philosophy
Thesis Title:A Reading of Plato's Cratylus
Thesis Url:https://philpapers.org/rec/BARARO-9
Thesis Year:1995
Doctoral Advisor:John Madison Cooper
Education:Princeton University (PhD)
Website:http://individual.utoronto.ca/rbarney/Home.html

Rachel Barney (born 14 September 1966) is a Canadian philosopher and Professor and Acting Associate Chair at the department of philosophy at the University of Toronto. She is known for her works on ancient philosophy.[1] [2] [3]

Education

Barney got her undergraduate degree from the University of Toronto. She earned her PhD at Princeton.[4] She returned back to the University of Toronto after teaching at the University of Chicago, the University of Ottawa, and Harvard.Barney did research that ranged from the early sophists to the late Neoplatonic commentator Simplicius; nevertheless, most of her research focused on Plato. Her most prominent areas of research are ethics, psychology, philosophical methods, and epistemology.

Publications

External links

Notes and References

  1. Kraut . Richard . Review of The Blackwell Guide to Plato's Republic . NDPR . 4 July 2006 . en . 1538-1617.
  2. Hyman . Malcolm . Review of: Names and Nature in Plato's Cratylus . Bryn Mawr Classical Review . 1055-7660.
  3. Lautner . Peter . Review of: Plato and the Divided Self . Bryn Mawr Classical Review . 1055-7660.
  4. Web site: Rachel Barney . 2024-08-30 . Department of Philosophy . en-US.