Akeel Bilgrami
Akeel Bilgrami is an Indian-born philosopher of
language and of mind, and the author of Belief and Meaning, Self-Knowledge
and Resentment, and Politics
and the Moral Psychology of Identity, as well as various articles in Philosophy
of Mind as well as in Political and Moral Psychology.
Some of his articles in these latter subjects speak
to issues of current politics in their relation to broader social and cultural
issues. He has also increasingly joined debates in the pages of
larger-circulation periodicals such as The New York Review of Book and The Nation.
He has two upcoming books, "What is a
Muslim?" and "Gandhi the Philosopher". Bilgrami is currently the
Johnsonian Professor of Philosophy and Director of the Heyman Center for the
Humanities at Columbia University in New York.
Bilgrami received a degree in English Literature
from Bombay University before switching to philosophy. He attended
Oxford University as a Rhodes Scholar, leaving with a Bachelor's degree in
Philosophy, Politics, and Economics.
He earned his Ph.D from the University of
Chicago with a dissertation titled "Belief and Meaning",
focusing on Michael Dummett's critique of realist accounts of meaning and on
the indeterminacy of translation, in which he argues in support of Donald
Davidson's thesis that meaning is a form of invariance between underdetermined
theories of meaning.
He has been in the Department of Philosophy at
Columbia University since 1985 after spending two years as an Assistant
Professor at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor.
Bilgrami is a secularist and an atheist who
advocates an understanding of the community-oriented dimension of religion. For
Bilgrami spiritual yearnings are not only understandable but also supremely
human.
He has argued in many essays that in our modern
world, "religion is not primarily a matter of belief and doctrine but
about the sense of community and shared values it provides in contexts where
other forms of solidarity—such as a strong labor movement—are missing."
BOOKS
1-Belief and Meaning (Blackwell, 1992)
2-Self-Knowledge and Resentment (Harvard University Press,
2006)
3-Politics and The Moral Psychology of Identity (Harvard University Press,
Forthcoming 2012).
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