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Dale
L. Clark
Ph.D. Student
Department of
Philosophy
University of Utah
260 S. Central Campus Drive
Orson Spencer Hall, Room 345
Salt Lake City, UT 84112
karamazov@comcast.net
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Office hours: MWF 11-12
Phone: (801) 585-5514
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Brief
Biography: Dale L. Clark has written on virtue ethics and
its relation to the primary attribution fallacy and depressive realism.
He is currently writing a dissertation on the bearing of empirical
psychological research on the problem of first-person authority.
His other philosophical interests include moral theory, personal
identity, practical reasoning and existentialism.
Curriculum
Vitae
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Courses:
Speaking
Engagements:
- “Skilled
Disconnections,”
Rosenblatt Jr. Lecture (University of Utah); Salt Lake City, Utah,
October 2003.
- Respondent to
John Beer's “The Significance of Form in Wittgenstein’s Later
Philosophy,” Intermountain West Philosophy Conference (University of
Utah); Salt Lake City, Utah, February 2004.
- "Vice
Virtue" Intermountain West Philosophy Conference (University of Utah);
Salt Lake City, Utah, February 2005.
- Respondent
to Nat Hansen's "Groucho's Joke" Intermountain West Philosophy
Conference (University of Utah); Salt Lake City, Utah, February 2005.
- "Vice
Virtue" American Philosophical Association (Eastern Division); to be
presented December 2005.
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