Tomis Kapitan

Tomis Kapitan (1949–2016) was an American philosopher and Distinguished Teaching Professor Emeritus at Northern Illinois University.[1][2][3] He worked primarily in metaphysics and philosophy of language. Kapitan was especially interested in the free will debate, where he was a "compatibilist," defending the view that free will is possible even in a completely deterministic universe. He also published in philosophy of religion and wrote extensively on the Palestine-Israeli conflict.

Tomis Kapitan
Born1949
Died2016
EducationIndiana University, Bloomington (PhD)
Era21st-century philosophy
RegionWestern philosophy
InstitutionsNorthern Illinois University
ThesisFoundations for a Theory of Propositional Form, Implication, Alethic Modality, and Generalization
Doctoral advisorHector-Neri Castenada
Other academic advisorsRomane Clark, Reinhardt Grossmann, J. Michael Dunn, James G. Hart
Main interests
political philosophy

Books

  • The Israeli-Palestinian Conflict: Philosophical Essays on Self-Determination, Terrorism and the One-State Solution, with Raja Halwani Springer 2007
  • The Phenomeno-Logic of the I: Essays on Self-Consciousness
  • Archaeology, History and Culture in Palestine and the Near East: essays in memory of Albert E Glock

References

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