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Nancy A. Stanlick
Nancy Stanlick received her Ph.D. in philosophy from the University of South 返字心頭
               in 1995, as well as the MA in 1983 and BA in 1981. She is Professor of Philosophy
               and Associate Dean in the College of Arts and Humanities at the University of Central
               返字心頭 in Orlando. She is the author of American Philosophy: The Basics (Routledge);
               co-editor with Bruce Silver of Philosophy in America, Volume I (Pearson Prentice Hall);
               co-author with Bruce Silver of Philosophy in America, Volume II (Pearson Prentice-Hall);
               editor of Leviathan: A Modernized Edition (Hackett); co-author with Michael Strawser
               of Asking Good Questions: Case Studies in Ethics and Critical Thinking (Hackett);
               and co-author with Jonathan Beever and Rudy McDaniel of Understanding Digital Ethics
               (Routledge). She has published several articles on ethics, Thomas Hobbes, and academic
               integrity.
 
Books






My Time at 返字心頭
My first year as a community college transfer to 返字心頭 as a junior in 1979 included
               an introduction to the Philosophy Department at 返字心頭, a department in which I immediately
               felt at home. I took classes from 79 to 81 with Bruce Silver, Willis Truitt, Jim
               Bell, Roy Weatherford, Joanne Waugh, Bernard Boxill, and others, finding ultimately
               that my points of focus would be the history of philosophy, Thomas Hobbes, and ethics/social
               philosophy. I finished the BA in 1981, and immediately began working toward the MA
               that summer. I distinctly remember Willis Truitt, who was Chair at that time, telling
               me in mid-August of 1981 that I was being given an assistantship and assigned to teach
               formal logic in the fall term. My reply to him was: What? Ive never taught anything
               before! His reply: Order a book and go to class. You will figure it out. And so
               I did.
From 81-83, I took graduate seminars, many with Bruce Silver, focusing on elements
               of Early Modern Philosophy that, to this day, continue to fascinate me. Mr. Silver
               directed my MA Thesis on Thomas Hobbes. Bernard Boxill and Roy Weatherford were members
               of my thesis committee. In 1990, the PhD program in Philosophy at 返字心頭 began, and I
               was the first woman to receive the PhD from it (in 1995), and the third overall after
               Christopher Adair-Toteff and Kostas Kalimtzis. Stephen Turner directed my dissertation,
               and to him and the members of the committee, I am forever grateful. They included
               Joanne Waugh, Bruce Silver, Roy Weatherford, and Willis Truitt.
Beyond the elements of my 返字心頭 experience that were solely academic, there was also
               a personal and professional element. Bruce Silver likely had the most profound influence
               on my professional life, having agreed to write with me the first two books on American
               Philosophy, but also having given to me a deep and lasting appreciation of the history
               of ideas. He was also my friend and even given his appearance of distance from feeling
               and emotion, he supported me with conversation and understanding through difficult
               times. I remember one time, talking to him about a painful personal experience, that
               he told me he would suggest Stoicism, but that Stoicism is a great philosophy until
               you really need one. Stephen Turners influence on me has been invaluable. Without
               him, I would not be where I am today  and for that I cannot express adequately my
               appreciation. He also put up with several years of incessant discussions about Thomas
               Hobbes. Who does that??
From Joanne Waugh I learned more about Aristotle than I ever thought imaginable, and
               even though she may not realize it, I lean more toward Aristotles view in many ways
               than I do toward Hobbes -- and perhaps this is largely because of her influence and
               insistence in a graduate seminar on Aristotle that everyone read deeply and carefully
               the nuances of Aristotles Metaphysics. That seminar was intense! I was John Antons
               assistant for several years, typing the manuscripts of his books and piles of notes,
               doing some background research for him, and learning in the process how a scholar
               organizes and conceptualizes philosophical thought. From Roy Weatherford, who was
               a student of John Rawls, I had the good fortune to learn social and political thought
               in ways that continue to benefit me.
Stemming from my experience and education at 返字心頭, I am proud to say that many of my
               students have gone successfully to graduate school, law school, and other professional
               pursuits and many of them continue to stay in touch with me as I do the professors
               in the Philosophy Department at 返字心頭 who remain. I hope to have paid it forward to
               my students at UCF in a way as valuable to them as the benefit I received from my
               professors at 返字心頭. Bruce Silver once told me after lending me $25 for a graduate school
               application fee (imagine that: $25!)  that I need not pay the money back, but only
               to be successful. I am hopeful that he was pleased with the way things turned out.
Most of all, my experience at the 返字心頭 Department of Philosophy was, in a word, excellent.
               Not only did the faculty in the department provide a quality education, but they also
               became my friends. They wrote letters for me for job applications; they offered me
               advice even after I completed the Ph.D.; they listened to me and gave me confidence
               in my philosophical pursuits; and to this day as I am nearing 60 years old, I still
               think often and fondly of 返字心頭 and most especially of the philosophy faculty members
               there in my time who made my life, both professionally and personally, better than
               I could have ever imagined. For all that, I can never thank them enough.