Edward Feser

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Edward Feser
Born 1968 (age 55–56)[citation needed]
United States
Notable work The Last Superstition: A Refutation of the New Atheism; Aquinas; Locke; The Cambridge Companion to Hayek; On Nozick
Website edwardfeser.com
Era Contemporary philosophy
Region Western philosophy
School Christian philosophy
Institutions Pasadena City College

Edward C. Feser (born 1968)[citation needed] is an American associate professor of philosophy at Pasadena City College. He has also been a visiting assistant professor of philosophy at Loyola Marymount University and a visiting scholar at the social philosophy and policy center at Bowling Green State University in Ohio.[1] He graduated from the University of California, Santa Barbara in 1999 with a PhD in philosophy; his thesis was entitled "Russell, Hayek, and the mind-body problem".[2]

By his own account, Feser had been an atheist for ten years during his early adulthood. However, as a graduate student in philosophy, his deep readings of Aristotle and St. Thomas Aquinas led him back to a Christian belief in God and the Catholic Church (he had been baptized and confirmed as a child). He is now harshly critical of the "New Atheists" for what he claims are their straw man caricatures and distortions of classical theological arguments.[3][4] He also considers intelligent design to be incompatible with the classical Thomistic arguments for the existence of God.[5] Feser has also voiced support for felony disenfranchisement.[6]

In recent years, Feser has become well known for his polemical book, The Last Superstition: A Refutation of the New Atheism, in which he makes a philosophical argument for the classical Aristotelian-Thomistic worldview over and against the materialist assumptions and scientistic prejudices of contemporary atheists such as Richard Dawkins, of whom he is particularly critical.[7] Additionally, Feser has written a number of articles for the website of the politically conservative Witherspoon Institute.[8]

Reception

Feser has been called "one of the best contemporary writers on philosophy" by National Review.[9] In the Review of Metaphysics, Michael O'Halloran wrote that in The Last Superstition, Feser "melds philosophical acumen with an acute sense of humor."[10] In Booklist, Ray Olson wrote of the same book that "With energy and humor as well as transparent exposition, Feser reestablishes the unassailable superiority of classical philosophy."[11] D. Q. McInerny of Our Lady of Guadalupe Seminary wrote in the Fellowship of Catholic Scholars Quarterly that "Of all the books written in response to “the new atheists"...this one has to be counted among the very best."[12] However, a more lukewarm review of the book came from Mary McWay Seamen, who wrote that "The loquacious Feser sometimes belabors well-made arguments, but his meanderings into allegorical sideshows are often delightful. Alas, his brief discourse concerning the world’s evil seems simplistic, even dismissive with the proclamation that “God can and will bring out of the sufferings of this life a good that so overshadows them that this life will be seen in retrospect to have been worth it."[7]

Personal life

Feser is married, and lives in Los Angeles with his wife and six children.[1]

Books

References

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External links