gray bar black bar
 
 

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










Office hours: MWF 11-12
Phone: (801) 585-5514


                   


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

 

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.

 

[ home ] [ people ] [ programs ] [ courses ] [ news ]
[ college of humanities ] [ university of utah ]

comments: Dale Clark
2005 © university of utah, college of humanities
* disclaimer *