In addition to the separate posts announcing (generally tenured) faculty moves, I will keep a running list of all lateral moves (and retirements and deaths) not reflected in the faculty lists for the 2024 PGR (some moves that took place after the 2024 PGR were reflected in the faculty list, because the editors knew of them--the ones listed here were not reflected in the faculty lists evaluators saw). I will start a new list for each academic year, so that the list does not get unwieldy. I will move this to the front periodically, putting recent additions in bold. Untenured lateral moves will be noted as such, otherwise the move is with tenure. A lateral move is one from one tenure-stream position to another either into or out of a program offering the PhD or terminal MA. In addition I will list retirements and also deaths of non-emeritus faculty. Please e-mail me with additions or corrections.
Santiago Amaya (moral psychology, philosophy of action) from the University of Los Andes (Colombia) to Rice University.
Jc Beall (philosophical logic; philosophy of logic, mathematics & language; metaphysics) had to rescind (for personal reasons) acceptance of an offer from the National University of Singapore, so remains at the University of Notre Dame.
Jeremy Fantl (epistemology) from the University of Calgary to Ohio State University.
Michael Friedman (Kant, philosophy of science, 20th-century philosophy) has taken emeritus status at Stanford University.
Graciella de Pierris (early modern philosophy) died in fall 2024.
Lawrence Shapiro (philosophy of mind & psychology) will retire from the University of Wisconsin, Madison at the end of the 2024-25 academic year.
Stewart Shapiro (philosophy of mathematics, philosophical logic) retired from Ohio State University in 2024, but continues to teach half-time at both Ohio State and teh University of Connectcut, Storrs (he was listed as full-time, and not emeritus, at OSU in the fall 2024 PGR).
Changes in the senior ranks typically affect specialty rankings, although can also affect the "overall" rankings (e.g., without de Pierris and Friedman, I would expect Stanford to drop out of the top 15 but remain in the top 20).
Recent Comments