Paul Franks | |
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Born | Paul Walter Franks Newcastle upon Tyne, England |
Occupation |
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Paul Walter Franks is the Robert F. and Patricia Ross Weis Professor of Philosophy and Judaic Studies at Yale University.[1] He graduated with his PhD from Harvard University in 1993. Franks' dissertation, entitled "Kant and Hegel on the Esotericism of Philosophy", was supervised by Stanley Cavell and won the Emily and Charles Carrier Prize for a Dissertation in Moral Philosophy at Harvard University. He completed his B.A (First Class) and M.A, in Philosophy, Politics and Economics at Balliol College, Oxford. Prior to this, Franks received his general education at the Royal Grammar School, Newcastle, and studied classical rabbinic texts at Gateshead Talmudical College.[2]
Franks' primary areas of research and specialization are Jewish philosophy, Immanuel Kant, German idealism, metaphysics, epistemology, the foundations of human sciences, and post-Kantian approaches within Analytic philosophy and Continental philosophy. His 2005 book, All or Nothing: Systematicity, Transcendental Arguments, and Skepticism in German Idealism, has been described as a "brilliant and highly stimulating book,"[3] "a truly indispensable book,"[4] which "attempts to answer a significant question ("Why were the German Idealists convinced that Philosophy had to have a single absolute principle, and that it had to be absolutely systematic?"), [and to] create a historical reconstruction of the emergence of German Idealism and show how German Idealism is still very much relevant to us today."[5]
He has taught at Indiana University (Bloomington) between 1996 and 2000, University of Notre Dame from 2000 to 2004, the University of Chicago in 2003, and the University of Toronto from 2004 to 2011. Franks has been Faculty Fellow at the Jackman Humanities Institute, University of Toronto; Brackenbury Scholar at Balliol College, Oxford; Lady Davis Graduate Research Fellow at the Hebrew University; Mrs. Giles F. Whiting Dissertation Fellow in the Humanities at Harvard University; Junior Fellow of the Michigan Society of Fellows; and Fellow of the American Council of Learned Societies.[6]
Franks was appointed as the inaugural holder of the Senator Jerahmiel S. and Carole S. Grafstein Chair in Jewish Philosophy at the University of Toronto in 2008. He was appointed in 2011 to a senior position at Yale University, in New Haven, Connecticut.[7] He teaches in the Department of Philosophy, the Program in Judaic Studies, the Department of Religious Studies, and the Department of Germanic Languages and Literatures.
In December 2012, Franks gave a lecture entitled "From Indeterminacy to Idealism" at the opening of the Forschungskolleg Analytic German Idealism at the University of Leipzig.[8] In 2014, he gave a keynote lecture, "What becomes of Jewish Law in the wake of Emancipation?" at the British Association of Jewish Studies annual meeting in Dublin, Ireland. In 2015, he gave the keynote address, "Schelling and Maimon on the World-Soul", at the annual meeting of the North American Schelling Society in Newfoundland, Canada. Franks gave the M. Holmes Hartshorne lecture at Colgate University in 2018.[9] Honoring his teachers, he spoke at Harvard University's Celebration of the Life and Work of Hilary Putnam in 2016,[10] at Harvard University's Celebration of the Life and Work of Stanley Cavell in 2018,[11] and at Harvard University Center for Jewish Studies' event, "The Legacy of Isadore Twersky: Twenty Five Years after his Passing" in 2023.[12]