My favorite thing about working at Greenville College is the camaraderie that exists between faculty, staff, and students. The community is close-knit-I worship with those I teach; my children go to school with my colleagues' children. There's a strong sense that we're all in this together, and we work hard to maintain a feeling of consensus and love, even when we disagree.
What attracted me to philosophy was simply that I could not master it-it sounds stuck-up, I know! Philosophy kept me up at night with questions that wouldn't stop coming; philosophy keeps me humble by constantly reminding me how little I know or can know. It encourages me to think critically and historically about situations, rather than just taking them at face value. Whether it's a social problem like poverty, or a political issue, or my daughter's behavior, my discipline points me in the direction of asking questions rather than assuming I have all the answers.
Ph.D. in Philosophy, DePaul University, 2003.
M.A. in Philosophy, DePaul University, 1998.
B.A. in Philosophy/English, Trevecca Nazarene University, 1995.
"The Failure of Hate: Anti-Semitism and Hate in Sartre" in Philosophy Today, Spring 2010;
"'And G-d Said:' Language, Translation, and Scripture in Two Works by Walter Benjamin." In Shofar: An Inter-Disciplinary Journal of Jewish Studies, Purdue University Press, Spring 2009;
"'Catholic' Continental Philosophers: Nancy and Vattimo on Incarnation and Christianity," in Via Media, Cambridge Scholars Press, Fall 2009.
"No Other Place to Be: Globalization, Monotheism, and Salut in Nancy" in "Thinking Plural:Expositions of Jean-Luc Nancy on World, Art, and Meaning", SUNY Press, 2012.
Studied in Berlin, Germany for 4 months as part of the Richardson Fellowship through DePaul University.