
Meet the faculty:
Timothy Schoettle

- “How Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Inverted Spectrum” Pacific Philosophical Quarterly. Vol. 90(1) 2009
- “The Form Content Distinction in Husserl and Kant” Chronos. Vol. X 2008-2009
- “Whatever happened to John McTaggart?” Chronos. Vol. IX 2007-2008
- “The Shocking Non Sequitur” International Philosophical Quarterly. Vol. 48(4) 2008
- Review of Robert Brandom’s Tales of the Mighty Dead. De Philosophia. (2004) 18(1), 118-121.
- “Showing and Saying” and Co-Author of “Causal Analysis” Humanity Core Course Guide 2001-2002 (Instruction material used in the instruction of over 1000 students)
- “Can Consciousness be Explained?”, co-author.
- Invited talk on the inverted spectrum
NYU Philosophy Department, fall 2012 - “Whatever Happened to John McTaggart?”, peer reviewed application
American Philosophical Association, Central Division, spring 2008
Philosophy of Time Society - “The Shocking Non Sequitur”, peer reviewed application
Society of Christian Philosophers, Eastern Division, spring 2006 - “A Problem for Perry (and Lycan)”, peer reviewed application
American Philosophical Association, Pacific Division, spring, 2002
- Ph.D., Philosophy: University of California, Irvine, spring, 2003 U.C.I. Summer dissertation fellowship, summer 2001 Brython Davis fellowship award, 2001-2002
- M.A., Philosophy: University of Michigan, fall, 1997 Regent’s Scholarship, 1993-1994
- Harvard (1991-1992) and Tufts (1992-1993) post-undergraduate, non-degree, graded work
- B.A. English: Yale, spring, 1990 Magna cum laude, distinction in the English major
- Aesthetics
- Existentialism
- Early Modern Philosophy
- Problems of Philosophy
- Feminism
- Critical Thinking
- Metaphysics and Epistemology
- Ethics
- Paradox
- Philosophy of Mind
- Perception
- Philosophy of Language
- Phenomenology
- Critical Theory