
1 CURRICULUM VITAE (2011) David Joseph Depew Professor of Communication Studies and Rhetoric of inquiry, Emeritus University of Iowa, Iowa City, IA 52244 Project of the Rhetoric of Inquiry (POROI). 230 North Clinton, 100 Bowman House, Iowa City, Iowa 52242. Phone: 319-335-2752 FAX: 319-335-1745 E-Mail: [email protected] EDUCATIONAL AND PROFESSIONAL HISTORY l. Higher Education Ph.D. 1978 University of California, San Diego, Philosophy M.A. 1972 University of California, San Diego, Philosophy B.A. 1965 St. Mary's College of California, Philosophy and English. Additional graduate work University of Chicago (1965-6); New School for Social Research (1969-70). 2. Academic Positions University of Iowa, Professor l996 -2010 California State University, Fullerton: Assistant Professor, l975-l978; Associate Professor, l978- l983; Professor, l983-l996. Loyola University of Chicago. Visiting Lecturer, l992 New School for Social Research, College, Full-Time Lecturer, l969-l970 3. Honors and Awards Mellon Emeritus Fellowship, 2011 Hancher Finkbine Award for Leadership, University of Iowa, 2010 Distinguished Fellow, Institute for Advanced Studies, University of Durham, 2011 (declined) FIRST Visiting Lecturer-Scholar, Department of Communication, University of Colorado, Summer 2009 Director, Obermann Summer Seminar 2002, “The Emergence of Modern Disciplines.” Visiting Scholar, Center for Philosophy of Science, University of Pittsburgh, November, 200l Arts and Humanities Initiative, University of Iowa (AHI), 200l-2002 Obermann Fellow, University of Iowa, June, 2000. Obermann Humanities Symposium Award, University of Iowa, l998 Obermann Interdisciplinary Research Grant, Summer l998-l999, National Endowment for the Humanities Fellowship for College Teachers, 1990-l National Endowment for the Humanities Seminars and Institutes, l994, l988, l982, l987 2 Distinguished Professor, School of Humanities and Social Sciences, CSUF, l990. University of California Dissertation Fellowship, 1973-74. NDEA Fellowship, University of California, San Diego, 1970-73. Woodrow Wilson National Fellowship, 1965-66. Undergraduate Award for English, St. Mary's College, l965. 4. Current Memberships Association for the Rhetoric of Science and Technology (ARST) International Society for the History, Philosophy and Social Sciences of Biology (ISHPSB). SCHOLARSHIP Refereed Publications. Books: Grene, M. & D. Depew (2004). Philosophy of Biology: An Episodic History. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Poulakos, T. & D. Depew (eds.) (2004). Isocrates and Civic Education. Austin: University of Texas Press. Valentino, R., C. Blum, and D. Depew (eds.) (2004). Carlo Michelstaedter’s La Persuasione e la Rettorica: A Translation and Commentary New Haven: Yale University Press. Weber, B. & D. Depew (eds.) (2003). Evolution and Learning: The Baldwin Effect Reconsidered. Cambridge, MA: Bradford Books/MIT Press. Hollinger, R. and D. Depew (eds) (l995). Pragmatism From Progressivism to Post- Modernism Westport, CT: Praeger Press. Depew, D. and B. H. Weber (eds.) (l995). Darwinism Evolving: Systems Dynamics and the Genealogy of Natural Selection. Cambridge, MA: Bradford Books/MIT Press. Weber, B., J. Smith, and D. Depew (eds.) (1988). Entropy, Information, and Evolution: New Perspectives on Physical and Biological Evolution. Cambridge, MA: Bradford Books/MIT Press. Depew, D. and B. H. Weber ( l985). Evolution at a Crossroads: The New Biology and the New Philosophy of Science. Cambridge MA: Bradford Books/MIT Press Depew, D. (ed.) (l980). The Greeks and the Good Life: Proceedings of the Ninth Annual CSUF Philosophy Symposium. Indianapolis, IN: Hackett Publishing Company. Articles and Book Chapters (since 2000) Depew, D. & B. Weber (in press). “Challenging Darwinism: Expanding, Extending, or 3 Replacing the Modern Evolutionary Synthesis.” In M. Ruse (Ed.) The Cambridge Encyclopedia of Darwin. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press Depew, D. & B. Weber (in press). “Darwinismo: Il Destino Dell'evoluzione Dopo la Sintesi Moderna”. In J. Davies and F, Michelini : Frontiere Della Biologia. Prospetive Filosofiche Sulle Scienze Della Vita. Mimesis, Milano-Udine. Depew, D. & B. Weber (2011). ‘The Fate of Darwinism: Evolution after the Modern Synthesis’. Biological Theory 6.1: 89-102. English translation of “Darwinismo: Il destino dell’ evoluzione dopo la Sinthesi Moderna.” Depew, D. (in press). “Accident, Adaptation, and Teleology in Empedocles, Aristotle, and Darwin.” In Sloan, P, K. Eggleson, & Gerald McKenny, Darwin in the Twenty-First Century: Nature, Man, and God. University of Notre Dame Press. Reprint of Depew, 2011a) Depew, D. (2011a). “Accident, Adaptation, & Teleology in Aristotle, Empedocles, and Darwinism “ In Auletta, G., M. Leclerc & R. Martinez, eds. Biological Evolution: Facts and Theories: A Critical Appraisal after 150 Years After The Origin of Species. Rome: Gregorian and Biblical Press pp. 461-478. Depew, D. (2011) “Adaptation as Process: The Future of Darwinism and the Legacy of Theodosius Dobzhansky.” Studies in the History and Philosophy of Biology and the Biomedical Sciences 42: 89-98 Depew, D. (201l) “Adam Smith and Edmund Burke: Texts in Context.” POROI: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Rhetorical Analysis and Invention 7: 1. e-journal. D. Depew (2010). “Inheriting Inherit the Wind.” Social Issues in Literature: Freedom of Thought in Jerome Lawrence and Robert Edwin Lee's Inherit the Wind, Vol. I. Gale Publishing. Reprint in part of Larson, Depew, and Isetti, 2008. Depew, D. (2010). “Revisiting Richard McKeon’s Architectonic Rhetoric: A Response to McKeon’s ‘The Uses of Rhetoric in a Technological Age: Architectonic Productive Arts’.” In M. Porrovecchio, ed. Reengaging The Prospects Of Rhetoric: Current Conversations And Contemporary Challenges. New York: Routledge, pp. 37- 56. Depew, D. (2010). “Incidental Causation, Spontaneous Generation, and Homonymous Predication in Aristotle’s Physics II and Other Texts.” In S. Föllinger, ed., Was Ist ‘Leben’? Stuttgart: Franz Steiner Verlag, pp. 285-287 Depew, D. 2010. “Darwinian Controversies: An Historiographical Recounting,” Science and Education 19 (4-5): 323-360 4 Depew, D (2008). “The Ethics of Aristotle’s Politics,” in R. Belot, ed., A Companion to Ancient Political Philosophy. New York: Blackwell, Depew, D. (2009). “The Rhetoric of Darwin’s Origin of Species.” In M. Ruse & R. Richards, eds. The Cambridge Companion to The Origin of Species. Cambridge: Cambridge Univerity Press, pp. 237-255 Depew, D (2008). “Consequence Etiology and Biological Teleology in Aristotle and Darwin,” Studies in History and Philosophy of Biological and Biomedical Sciences (Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part C) 38: 4: 379-390 Depew, D., R. Isetti & E. Larson (2008). ”Inheriting Inherit the Wind.” Evolution: Outlook and Education I. 2. Depew, D. (2006) “From Hymn to Tragedy: Aristotle’s Biological Genealogy of Poetic Kinds,” in Czapo, E. and M. Miller, eds., From Ritual to Drama. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp. 126-149. Depew, D. (2005) “Darkness in El Dorado: The Textual Construction of Ethos in an Anthropological Controversy,” in C. Willard et. al. eds., Critical Problems in Argumentation: Selected Papers of the Thirteenth NCA/AFA Conference on Argumentation.Washington: NCA, pp. 689-93. Depew, D. (2004). “Empathy, Psychology, and Aesthetics: Reflections on a Repair Concept,” POROI: A Journal of Interdisciplinary Inquiry, Vol. 3 Weber, B. and D. Depew (2004), “Darwinism, Design and Complex Systems Dynamics,” in W. Dembski & M. Ruse (eds.), Debating Design: From Darwin to DNA. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp. 173-190 Depew, D. (2003). “From Heat Engines to Digital Printouts: A Tropology of the Organism from the Victorian Era to the Human Genome Project.” In L. Rabinovitz (ed.), Memory Bytes: History, Technology, and Digital Culture. Durham: Duke University Press, pp. 47-75 Depew, D. (2004) “The Inscription of Isocrates into Aristotle’s Practical Philosophy.” In Poulakos and Depew, Isocrates and Civic Education, pp. 157-185 Depew, D. & T. Poulakos (2004). “Introduction,” in Poulakos and Depew, Isocrates and Civic Education, pp. 1-20 Depew, D. (2004) “Intelligent Design and Irreducible Complexity (2004). In J. A.Campbell & M. Medhurst, (eds), Darwinism, Design, and Public Education, Michigan University Press, pp. 441-454 [Reprint, with small changes, of Depew, D. Rhetoric and Public Affairs 1(4) (1998), pp. 571-578]. Depew, D. (2003) “Baldwin and His Many Effects,” in Weber and Depew, Evolution and 5 Learning, pp. 3-31. Depew, D. (2002) “Philosophical Naturalism Without Naturalized Philosophy: Aristotelian and Darwinian themes in Marjorie Grene's philosophy of biology.” In The Philosophy of Marjorie Grene. Library of Living Philosophers. La Salle, Ill: Open Court Publications, pp. 285-309. Depew, D. (2002). “Genetically Altered Crops, Ecological Irreversibility, and the Precautionary Principle.” In G. Goodnight (ed.), Arguing Communication and Culture. Washington DC: National Communication Association, v. l, pp. 161-166 Depew, D. (200l). “Genetic Biotechnology and Evolutionary Theory: Some Unsolicited Advice to Rhetors,” Journal of Medical Humanities 22, 15-28. Depew, D. & J. Peters (200l). “Communication and Community: The Conceptual Background.” In Shepherd, G. & E. W. Rothenbuhler (eds.), Communication and Community. Mahwah, N.J.: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, pp. 3-21. Weber, B. & D. Depew. (2001).”Developmental systems, Darwinian Evolution, and the Unity of Science. In Oyama, S. et al. (eds.), Cycles
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