Memoirs of an Obscure Professor


Book Description

During the heyday of McCarthyism, the Chicago Tribune, offended by something he had written, contemptuously dismissed Paul Boller as "an obscure professor" - he was then teaching at Southern Methodist University in Dallas, Texas. Some forty-five years later, reflecting on the incident, Boller wrote an essay on what it was like to be an obscure professor at one of America's less publicized campuses in a conservative community during the late 1950s and early 1960s. That essay became the foundation for this collection of autobiographical selections reflecting the interests and pursuits of a man who gained national recognition, both inside the academic community and beyond, but still values his obscurity. Whether it is a study of the much-maligned Calvin Coolidge or an account of his Navy service as a translator of Japanese during World War II, Boller brings to his writing a fresh approach and a lively and wry wit.




Random Reminiscences


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Kripke


Book Description

Saul Kripke has been a major influence on analytic philosophy and allied fields for a half-century and more. His early masterpiece, Naming and Necessity, reversed the pattern of two centuries of philosophizing about the necessary and the contingent. Although much of his work remains unpublished, several major essays have now appeared in print, most recently in his long-awaited collection Philosophical Troubles. In this book Kripke’s long-time colleague, the logician and philosopher John P. Burgess, offers a thorough and self-contained guide to all of Kripke’s published books and his most important philosophical papers, old and new. It also provides an authoritative but non-technical account of Kripke’s influential contributions to the study of modal logic and logical paradoxes. Although Kripke has been anything but a system-builder, Burgess expertly uncovers the connections between different parts of his oeuvre. Kripke is shown grappling, often in opposition to existing traditions, with mysteries surrounding the nature of necessity, rule-following, and the conscious mind, as well as with intricate and intriguing puzzles about identity, belief and self-reference. Clearly contextualizing the full range of Kripke’s work, Burgess outlines, summarizes and surveys the issues raised by each of the philosopher’s major publications. Kripke will be essential reading for anyone interested in the work of one of analytic philosophy’s greatest living thinkers.







The Well-Tanned Professor


Book Description

Roman Adrian Cybriwsky narrates his memoirs from soon after birth in Austria in 1945 to the present in Philadelphia, where he has been sheltering from the Covid-19 pandemic. We follow him from Europe to immigration to the United States in 1949, through schooling from kindergarten to Ph.D., and then marriage, family life, a 46-year career as a professor of Geography, and then retirement. We see him as son, student, nerd, and ballplayer, as well as Ukrainian-American, husband, father of three, widower, grandfather, and prolific author of books that are worth reading. He is a traveler too, with long chapters of work and residence in Japan and Ukraine, and visits to famous beaches around the world in search of the perfect tan. The many memoirs that he relates are touching and thought-provoking, or funny and self-deprecating. The book is easy to read and fun. You will like the author and want to hug him.