Faculty Member, Philosophy
Assistant Professor
About
My research deals with how phenomenological and post-structuralist philosophies can contribute to contemporary thinking about the human relation to nature. Since those lines of thinking both question traditional understandings of the natural world and the human subject, it rapidly becomes clear that to accept their criticisms makes the vast majority of moral speculation concerning human duties to nature highly problematic. Currently I am attempting to indicate the ways in which this is so and articulate a response to the traditional moral views in the form of a place-based, feminist ethic.
Contact Information
| Address: | Department of Philosophy and Religious Studies |








