Samuel Scheffler | |
Birth Name: | Samuel Ira Scheffler |
Nationality: | American |
Parents: | Israel Scheffler |
Thesis Title: | Agents and Outcomes |
Thesis Year: | 1977 |
School Tradition: | Analytic philosophy |
Doctoral Advisor: | Thomas Nagel |
Discipline: | Philosophy |
Doctoral Students: | Agnes Callard |
Samuel Ira Scheffler (born 1951) is a moral and political philosopher, who is University Professor of Philosophy and Law in the Department of Philosophy and the School of Law at New York University.[1] [2]
Before moving to NYU in 2008, Scheffler taught for 31 years at the University of California, Berkeley.[3] Scheffler received his PhD from Princeton University, where he was a student of the philosopher Thomas Nagel. He was elected a fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 2004.[4]
He is the son of the Harvard philosopher Israel Scheffler.
He is a member of the Norwegian Academy of Science and Letters.[5]
His most recent book, Death and the Afterlife, based on his Tanner Lectures at University of California, Berkeley has generated considerable attention for its argument that much that we value in life depends on the assumption that life will continue long after our death. As the Princeton philosopher Mark Johnston explained in Boston Review: Assessing the argument, the English philosopher John Cottingham wrote: "Scheffler has produced a superb essay – indeed it seems to me about as good as analytic philosophy gets. It is entirely free from obfuscating jargon and other tiresome tricks of the trade, yet it is meticulously argued and demanding in exactly the right way – forcing us to think about hitherto unexamined implications of our existing beliefs."[6]