Robert A. Wilson
I am professor of philosophy at La Trobe University in Melbourne, having taught over the past 25 years in North America at the University of Alberta (2000-2017), the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign (1996-2001), and Queen’s University (1992-1996). I was born in Broken Hill in New South Wales and grew up there and in Perth in Western Australia. I have a B.A. with first class honours in philosophy from the University of Western Australia, and an M.A. and Ph.D. from Cornell University in Ithaca, New York, where I was a Fulbright Scholar from late 1987 until early 1992.
My philosophical interests are various, and on this site you can find representative work in the areas I’ve published in, such as mind and cognition, biological science, eugenics, social science. For the past ten years or so, I have also led two large-scale projects in engaged philosophy that aim to integrate philosophical thinking more directly with community-based concerns. While they don’t have your standard academic output—complicated talks and papers that can be understood by the author and at most three other people—they do represent ongoing areas of interest for me if there are any students, postdocs, or others interested in developing and deploying their philosophical skills in public and community-oriented spaces.
Books
OpenLibrary works by this author.
Mexico and its religion
Mexico, Its Peasants And Its Priests
Boundaries of the Mind
Epitome of desire
Genes and the Agents of Life
Species
Urban Sociology
Ishtar Rising
Cartesian Psychology and Physical Minds
Character Above All : James Cannon on Gerald Ford, Michael Beschloss on George Bush
Cosmic trigger II
Endless Inspiration
Evolution and Learning
Explanation and Cognition
Gertrude Stein
Graphs, colourings, and the four-colour theorem
Graphs, Colourings and the Four-Colour Theorem
How Did I Teach Myself Fear?
MIT Encyclopedia of the Cognitive Sciences (MITECS)
RMS St. Helena and the South Atlantic Islands
Sex, Drugs and Magick
Why and How of Study
Fetched from OpenLibrary. Some translations may appear as separate works.