1 CURRICULUM VITÆ PERSONAL Gary Michael Gurtler, SJ Address
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CURRICULUM VITÆ PERSONAL Gary Michael Gurtler, S.J. Address: Campion Center 319 Concord Road Weston, MA 02493-1398 Telephone: 781-419-1346 (home) 617-552-3872 (office) E-Mail: [email protected] A. EDUCATION Institution Years Degree Date Major, Minor School Weston School of Theology, 1976-1979 MDiv 1979 Patristics Cambridge, MA Fordham University 1974-1978 PhD 1978 Ancient, Medieval Graduate School of Arts & Sciences Philosophy Fordham University 1970-1972 MA 1973 Philosophy Graduate School of Arts & Sciences St. John Fisher College, 1965-1969 BA 1969 History, Classics Rochester, NY B. TEACHING EXPERIENCE (All full time positions.) 1. Dates University Department Rank Courses per semester School 1992- Boston College Philosophy Associate Professor 2.5 College of Arts & Sciences (tenured 1995) 2004F Fordham University Philosophy Visiting Associate 3 Professor 1998 John Carroll University Classics Visiting Associate 1.5 Professor 1 1991-92 Loyola University of Chicago Philosophy Associate Professor 3 College of Arts & Sciences 1980-91 Loyola University of Chicago Philosophy Assistant Professor 3 College of Arts & Sciences (tenured 1988) 1972-74 Canisius High School History, English Instructor 5 2. Courses taught. Doctoral Dissertations David Ellis (in progress) first reader, “Plotinus and Pedagogy.” Steven Cain (in progress) second reader, “The Standing of the Soul: the Search for a Middle Being between God and Matter in the De statu animae of Claudianus Mamertus.” Santiago Ramos (2015) second reader, “Beauty and Eros in the Hippias Major.” Anthony Coleman (2014) outside reader for the Theology Department, “Lactantius and the Doctrine of Providence.” M. Ross Romero, S.J. (2012) second reader, “Without the Least Tremor: Sacrifice in the Phaedo.” Joshua Smickler (2012) third reader, “Confronting the Philosophers: Socrates and the Eleatic Stranger in Plato’s Sophist.” Hussain Esmail (2005) first reader, “The Possibility of Philosophical Discourse in Plato’s Theaetetus.” John Manoussakis (2005) second reader, “God After Metaphysics: A Theological Aesthetic.” Mark Reuter (17 June 1994) external examiner for the Department of Philosophy, University of Toronto, “Plotinus on the Role of Nous in Self-Knowledge,” (at Loyola University of Chicago:) Atsushi Sumi (1990-92), first reader, “The One’s Knowledge in Plotinus.” 2 Lloyd Aultman-Moore (1989-1991), first reader, “Aristotle and Sophocles on the Elements of Moral Virtue.” Stephen Calogero (1988-1993), first reader, “Meaning and Action: Relating Knowledge and Action in the Thought of Saint Thomas Aquinas.” Roman Ciapolo (1981-1987), second reader, “Life (Ζωή) in Plotinus Explanation of Reality.” a) Boston College Graduate PHIL 7791: Aristotle & Plotinus: On the Soul PHIL5529: Metaphysics PL 720: Platonic Theories of Knowledge PL 737: Introduction to Platonism PL 703: Aristotle & Plotinus: Ethics PL 791: Aristotle & Plotinus on the Soul PL 788: Aristotle: Metaphysics & Ethics PL 779: Plato: Logos & Myth PL 799: Readings & Research (Philosophical Anthropology) PL 799: Readings & Research (Platonic Dialogues) PL 799: Readings & Research (Ancient & Medieval) PL 596: Soul in Plato & Plotinus PL 565: Ancient Philosophy: Aesthetics PL 563: Logos and Beauty PL 528: Metaphysics PL 504: Plotinus: the One and the Many AD 712: Critical Analysis Undergraduate PHIL4419: Friendship PL 405: Greek Philosophy PL 423: Spanish American Philosophy (Cultural Diversity) PL 407: Medieval Philosophy PL 423: Spanish Philosophy PL 419: Philosophers on Friendship PL 399: Readings & Research PL 71: Philosophy of the Person, II PL 70: Philosophy of the Person, I PL & TH 90: Perspectives on Western Culture, I PL & TH 91: Perspectives on Western Culture, II 3 b) Fordham University (Visiting Professor, Fall 2004) 2004 Fall: Graduate PHGA 5001: Introduction to Plato Upper Division PHRU 3501: Ancient Philosophy Honors Program HPRU 1002: Ancient Philosophy c) John Carroll University (Visiting Professor, Spring and Fall 1998) 1998 Spring GK 232: Greek Authors, Plato’s Symposium 1998 Fall LT 498: Advanced Reading, Augustine’s Confessions CL 450, HM 597: Classical Literary Criticism C. ADMINISTRATIVE EXPERIENCE Director of the Graduate Program in Philosophy, June 2003–September 2009; and from September 2013. Acting Director of the Graduate Program in Philosophy, Spring 2003. Hiring Committee, Spring 2003 and Spring 2004. Organized annual meeting of the Ancient Philosophy Society, 12-14 April 2007, at Boston College, including selection of the program, inviting keynote speakers, arranging for accommodations, events on and off the Boston College campus, printing program and proceedings, and arranging transportation; 75-85 participants, 23 speakers, on campus budget of $16,888 D. SCHOLARLY ACTIVITIES 1. Publications a. Books Plotinus: Ennead IV.4.30–45 and IV.5 “Problems concerning the Soul” Translation, Introduction and Commentary. Las Vegas, NV, Parmenides Publishing, 2015. Plotinus: the Experience of Unity. Bern, New York, Peter Lang Publishing Co., 1988. b. Articles and Chapters in Books 31. “Aristotle on Friendship: Insight from the Four Causes,” Ancient and Medieval Concepts of Friendship, ed. by Gary M. Gurtler, S.J. and Suzanne Stern-Gillet (Albany, SUNY, 2014), 35–50. 4 30. “The Distorted City in the Republic,” Literary, Philosophical, and Religious Studies in the Platonic Tradition, ed. by John. Finamore and John Phillips (Sankt Augustin, Academia Verlag, 2013), 115-134. 29. “Imitations of Beings Enter and Exit: Plotinus on Incorporeal Matter in Plato: III 6[26] 11-15,” Philosophy Study (ISSN 2159-5313), Vol.3, No.1 (2013) 123-130. 28. “Emanationism,” New Catholic Encyclopedia Supplement 2012-13. (Detroit: Gale, 2013) 438-440. Original article, Charles Dubray, William Wallace, revised Gary M. Gurtler, S.J. 27 “Comment on Smith,” Proceedings of the Boston Area Colloquium in Ancient Philosophy, Vol. XXVII, (Brill, 2012), 21-28. 26. “Plotinus on the Limitation of Act by Potency,” The Saint Anselm Journal, Volume 7, Number 1 (Fall 2009), http://www.anselm.edu/library/SAJ/SAJindex.html 25. “Neoplatonism,” New Catholic Encyclopedia Supplement 2009. 2 Vols. (Detroit: Gale, 2009) 674-678. Original article, Pierre Hadot, revised Gary M. Gurtler, S.J. 24. “Happiness and Teleology in Aristotle,” Yearbook of the Irish Philosophical Society Fealsúnacht, ed. Fiachra Long (Maynooth, 2008) 17-31. 23. “Neoplatonism,” in THE HUMANITIES AT WORK International Exchange of Ideas in Aesthetics, Philosophy, and Literature, ed. Yubraj Aryal (Kathmandu, Sunlight Publication, 2008) 277-279. 22. “Plotinus on the Soul’s Omnipresence in Body,” International Journal of the Platonic Tradition, 2 (2008) 113-127. 21. “Commentary on Gonzalez,” Proceedings of the Boston Area Colloquium in Ancient Philosophy, Vol. XXIII, (Brill, 2008), 112-119. 20. “Plotinus: Omnipresence and Transcendence of the One in VI 5[23],” Reading An- cient Texts. Volume II: Aristotle and Neoplatonism. Essays in Honour of Denis O’Brien, eds. Suzanne Stern-Gillet & Kevin Corrigan (Brill, 2007) 137-152. 19. “Tensions in the Papal Presentation,” John Paul II on the Body: Human, Eucharistic, Ecclesial, Festschrift in Honor of Avery Cardinal Dulles, S.J., eds. J. McDermott and J. Gavin (Philadelphia, St. Joseph’s University Press, 2007) 349-351. 18. “St. Paul and Plotinus: The Ontology of Evil,” St. Paul: Between Athens and Jerusa- lem, ed. J. Panteleimon Manoussakis (Athens, The American College of Greece, 2006) 57-66. 5 17. “Commentary on Brown,” Proceedings of the Boston Area Colloquium in Ancient Philosophy, Vol. XXI, (Brill, 2006) 82-86. 16. “Plotinus: Self and Consciousness,” History of Platonism: Plato Redivivus (University Press of the South, 2005) 113-129. 15. “Plotinus: Matter and Otherness, ‘On Matter’ (II 4[12]),” Epoche, 9 (2005) 197-214. 14. “The Activity of Happiness in Aristotle’s Ethics,” The Review of Metaphysics, 56 (2003) 801-834. 13. “Providence: The Platonic Demiurge and Hellenistic Causality,” Neoplatonism and Nature, ed. Michael Wagner (SUNY, 2002) 99-124. 12. “Sympathy: Stoic Materialism and the Platonic Soul,” Neoplatonism and Nature, ed. Michael Wagner (SUNY, 2002) 241-276. 11. “Zubiri, Post-Modernism, and Plato,” Revista Portuguesa de Filosofía, 56 (2000) 559-72. 10. “La Noética de Zubiri y la Noética de Aristóteles,” Analogía, Revista de Filosofía, 13 (1999) 197-211. 9. “Standing on Philosophy’s Own Ground: Zubiri’s Critique of Plato’s Dualism,” International Philosophical Quarterly, 38 (1998) 409-22. 8. “Plotinus and the Alienation of the Soul,” The Perennial Tradition of Neoplatonism (Ancient and Medieval Philosophy Series), ed. John J. Cleary (Leuven, University Press, 1997) 221-34. 7. “Commentary on Schroeder,” Proceedings of the Boston Area Colloquium in Ancient Philosophy, Vol. XII, (Lanham, MD, University Press of America, 1997) 23-29. 6. “Commentary on De Groot,” Proceedings of the Boston Area Colloquium in Ancient Philosophy, Vol., X, (Lanham, MD, University Press of America, 1996) 24-34. 5. “The Spirituality of John Paul II: A Response,” The Thought of John Paul II (Rome, Pontificia Università Gregoriana, 1993) 115-121. 4. “Plotinus and the Platonic Parmenides,” International Philosophical Quarterly, 32 (1992) 441-455. 3. “Plotinus and Byzantine Aesthetics,” The Modern Schoolman, 66 (1989) 275-284. 2. “The Origin of Genera: Ennead VI 2[43] 20,” Dionysius, 12 (1988) 3-15. 1. “Sympathy in Plotinus,” International Philosophical Quarterly, 24 (1984) 395-404. 6 c. Other i) Edited Works Ancient and Medieval Concepts of Friendship, ed. by Gary M. Gurtler,