The interdisciplinary approach...
Philosophy departments at UConn and USC expand;  reasons  why
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Defying the Humanities  Crisis





 
April 3, 2013 


 
By: _Carl  Straumsheim_ 
(http://www.insidehighered.com/users/carl-straumsheim)  


 
 
 
 
 
Many humanities programs are fighting off cuts and trying to hold on to  
faculty lines, but two philosophy departments are boosting their enrollments 
and  reputations through a combination of administrations willing to invest 
in the  discipline and departments eager to go beyond them. 
The philosophy department at the University of Connecticut at Storrs has  
added eight new faculty members in the past two years, and it is now about 
twice  as large as it was a few years ago. Meanwhile, the department at the 
University  of Southern California has hired almost a dozen new professors in 
the last  decade.

USC's hiring has caused the program to rocket up 35 spots on the  
_Philosophical Gourmet  Report_ 
(http://www.philosophicalgourmet.com/overall.asp) , 
which ranks graduate programs in philosophy based on the reputation  of their 
faculty members. 
“[N]o department has improved more over the last decade than USC,” Brian  
Leiter, a professor at the University of Chicago Law School who edits the  
report, said in an e-mail. He said USC, tied at No. 11, is likely to crack 
the  top 10 if its upward trajectory continues. 
Common to both departments is an aggressive focus on attracting prominent  
senior and promising junior faculty members, and developing 
interdisciplinary  programs. The departments have also greatly benefited from 
support from 
their  respective administrations -- UConn’s through a partnership with 
President  Susan Herbst, whom faculty members described as being "in sync" with 
the  department’s aspirations, and USC from a plan to recruit 100 instructors 
to the  College of Letters, Arts and Sciences in the early 2000s. 
“What we’ve tried to do is use interdisciplinary contacts to leverage  
university strength to our strength,” said Donald L. M. Baxter, who heads the  
philosophy department at UConn. The department recently announced Dorit 
Bar-On  and Keith Simmons, both professors of philosophy at the University of 
North  Carolina at Chapel Hill, will join the institution in fall 2014. UConn 
has  also poached Bar-On's research partner Mitchell S. Green from the  
University of Virginia. 
The interdisciplinary expansion has granted the philosophy department 
access  to funds otherwise beyond its reach. Connecticut Governor Dannel P. 
Malloy, a  Democrat, _is seeking_ 
(http://www.insidehighered.com/quicktakes/2013/01/31/governor-seeks-15b-new-funds-stem-uconn)
  to advance education in the 
STEM fields -- science,  technology, engineering and math -- with a $1.5 
billion investment over the next  decade. Some of that money, along with 
support from the private sector, is  likely to go toward establishing a 
cognitive 
science institute. With the  department’s focus on philosophy of logic and 
language, Bar-On said philosophy  professors will have a “very central role 
to play” in the institute. 
“That’s not unheard of, but it’s somewhat unusual to have philosophers be  
regarded as such an important part of these kinds of efforts,” Bar-On said, 
 adding that the “substantial support” UConn is providing to projects such 
as the  cognitive science institute is helping to expand the breadth of its 
philosophy  department. 
The department is making similar interdepartmental connections with its 
other  concentrations, including to women’s studies and human rights, 
African-American  studies and math. 
“That’s the nature of the discipline,” Baxter said. “We deal with  
foundational issues of kind of a synoptic view of humans in the world. Any help 
 
we can get from other disciplines in helping us put together a worldview is 
what  we seek.” 
While USC’s ranking stems from the quality and reputation of its faculty, 
the  philosophy department has expanded its interdisciplinary programs for  
undergraduate and graduate students alike. New additions include a 
progressive  5-year master of arts degree in philosophy and law, and an 
interdisciplinary  major in philosophy, politics and law, which has grown from 
18 to 201 
students  in less than four years. In that same time, the department’s total 
number of  philosophy majors has gone from about 125 to 258, said Scott 
Soames, chairman of  USC's philosophy department.

Notable hires at USC include three  professors from the University of 
Oxford: John Hawthorne, Ralph Wedgwood  and Gabriel Uzquiano Cruz. Soames left 
Princeton University to join  USC in 2004 
"At a time in which [humanities programs] are losing majors everywhere, we  
doubled,” Soames said. “We doubled it in large part because we thought 
that  there was a way that we could reach a broader public by combining what we 
had to  offer with what these other units had to offer.” 
Soames said the department is also planning to participate in two new  
interdisciplinary programs -- one involving health ethics and policies, the  
other environmental science. Instead of diluting the study of philosophy by  
combining it with courses in social sciences, Soames said his discipline is  
well-positioned to connect with other disciplines. 
“Philosophy’s specialty, really, is in helping to shape inquiries and  
questions that are initially not at home in any established discipline,” Soames 
 said. “[W]e have to find ways of what we do meet the needs of the students 
of  our university community.” 






http://www.insidehighered.com

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