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  2. Richard Clyde Taylor [2] (November 5, 1919 – October 30, 2003) [3] was an American philosopher renowned for his contributions to metaphysics. He was also an internationally known beekeeper .

  3. Dec 13, 2015 · Richard Taylor (1919 – 2003) was an American philosopher renowned for his controversial positions and contributions to metaphysics. He advocated views as various as free love and fatalism and was also an internationally known beekeeper.

  4. Richard Taylor Remembered. One of the most colourful and engaging of modern philosophers (and of Philosophy Now contributors) is recalled by Robert Holmes, Barry Gan and Tim Madigan. I first became acquainted with Richard Taylor when I was on the editorial board of Free Inquiry magazine, the secular humanist publication of which he was a ...

  5. Undergraduate courses I regularly teach include Foundations in Philosophy, Theory of Ethics, Philosophy of Religion and courses in the History of Ancient and Medieval Philosophy. Meet Richard C. Taylor, Ph.D., professor of philosophy at Marquette University.

  6. Richard Taylor is Professor Emeritus of Philosophy at the University of Rochester and an internationally renowned ethicist. Tim Madigan tracked him down to discuss Schopenhauer, metaphysics and the intriguing art of beekeeping.

  7. The Meaning of Life. by Richard Taylor (1970) The question whether life has any meaning is difficult to interpret, and the more you concentrate your critical faculty on it the more it seems to elude you, or to evaporate as any intelligible question. You want to turn it aside, as.

  8. Richard C. Taylor. I am professor of philosophy at Marquette University in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, where I have worked since 1982. I completed my dissertation at the University of Toronto in Philosophy and Medieval Studies in 1981. Since Fall 2010 I have been affiliated also with the Katholieke Universiteit Leuven in the Philosophy Institute’s ...

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