Andrew Pessin, Connecticut College, professor of philosophy

Contact Andrew Pessin


Education
Yale University;
MA, PhD, Columbia University

"What if the hokey-pokey IS what it's all about?"

Sample Published Articles (PDF)

  1. Malebranche doctrine of Freedom/Consent
  2. Malebranches distinction between General and Particular Volitions
  3. Does Continuous Creation entail Occasionalism?

Philosophy Songs
The following are songs I've composed and performed in a style of which the best one can say is that it ought to be expunged completely from this earth. You listen at your peril.

  1. Not-P
  2. The Present King of France is Bald
  3. The Category Blues
  4. It's Not Lonely At The Top: The Incredible and True story Of My Life as a Dominant Monad
  5. Back in the Vat

Feel free to distribute, but please cite me.
All songs © 2006
Andrew Pessin

Andrew Pessin
Professor of Philosophy

Joined Connecticut College: 2005

Specializations:

  • Early Modern Philosophy
  • Metaphysics
  • Philosophy of Mind
  • Philosophy of Language
  • Philosophy of Religion

These days, Andrew Pessin has mostly been working on spreading the word – that philosophy can be accessible, useful, and even fun, in addition to being (of course) provocative and profound. He can be heard on the radio, read in the newspaper or on various blogs, queried as a panelist on AskPhilosophers.org, or found at the bookstore in the form of his two newest books, both philosophical books for the general reader: The God Question: What Famous Thinkers From Plato to Dawkins Have Said About the Divine and The 60-Second Philosopher: Expand Your Mind on a Minute or so a Day! For more information about these books, and all these activities, visit his personal webpage at www.andrewpessin.com.

Pessin’s more scholarly work, in recent years, has focused on the history of early modern philosophy. He has published several papers each on the seminal thinker René Descartes (1596-1650) and his less-well known but equally important follower and critic, Nicolas Malebranche (1638-1715), examining various aspects of their views on God, causation, perception, and knowledge. Pessin has also published a paper on G. W. Leibniz’s (1646-1716) conception of time. In the more distant past Pessin worked in contemporary philosophy of mind, publishing several articles in this field as well as two books: Gray Matters: An Introduction to the Philosophy of Mind (co-authored) and The Twin Earth Chronicles: Twenty Years of Reflection on Hilary Putnam's "The Meaning of 'Meaning' " (co-edited).

"I’ve always found almost everything interesting,” Pessin notes, “including the fact that almost everything is interesting. But ultimately I gravitated towards philosophy, because in studying philosophy, one gets to learn (and think) about pretty much almost everything else: there's philosophy of science, of mind, of religion, of art and literature, etc. So philosophy is the perfect way to explore just about everything!"

View the philosophy department website.


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