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Use the alphabet below to locate an Assistant Professor by last name:

A - B - C - D - E   /  F - G - H - I - J  /  K - L - M - N - P  Q - R - S - T - U  /  V - W - X - Y - Z

 

Stephen C. Ferguson, Ph.D., Assistant Professor
scfergus@ncat.edu

Dr. Stephen C. Ferguson II is an Assistant Professor in University Studies. He holds a Bachelors degree in History and Philosophy with a minor in Black Studies from the University of Missouri-Columbia and a MA and doctorate in Philosophy from the University of Kansas. Dr. Ferguson has previously taught at Auburn University. Dr. Ferguson's area of expertise include Africana philosophy, Marxist philosophy ad social-political philosophy. His past publications have focused on the Black Marxist philosopher and activist C. L. R. James. He is currently working on a book-length philosophical critique of Afrocentrism, the dominant trend in African American Studies.

Galen Foresman, Ph.D., Assistant Professor
gaforesm@ncat.edu

Galen Foresman graduated with his Doctor of Philosophy in Applied Philosophy in 2008 from Bowling Green State University where he also completed his Master’s of Philosophy in 2004. He completed his Bachelor of Arts in Philosophy with honors and English from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. He has been awarded the Louis I. Katzner Philosophy Graduate Assistant Teaching Excellence Award for his independent teaching at Bowling Green State University. 

Joseph Goeke, Ph.D., Assistant Professor
jfgoeke@ncat.edu
 

Dr. Joseph Goeke teaches UNST 110: Critical Writing. He earned his Ph.D. at the University of South Carolina, with a major in nineteenth-century American literature and a minor in creative writing. He is currently in the process of completing his first novel and seeking a publisher. Dr. Goeke was born and raised in St. Louis, Missouri. 

Wendy C. Hamblet, Ph.D., CCC Reg., SAC (Dip.)

Assistant Professor

whamblet@ncat.edu

Wendy C. Hamblet is a Canadian philosopher, alumna of Brock University, Canada, and Pennsylvania State University, U.S.A. She is a dual-term alumna of the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum's Center for Advanced Holocaust Studies, and UNC Asheville's NonProliferation Institute. Dr. Hamblet comes to A&T from a Research Fellow position at the Dominican University College, Ottawa, Canada, as well as from a professional career in counseling, mediation, and conflict resolution/anti-corruption training in the public and private sector in Canada's Capital Region. Hamblet’s research centers about the problem of violence, from identity politics and the politics of memory to the philosophical roots of Western imperialism. Hamblet is a member of the permanent faculty of the Zoryan Institute's International Institute for Genocide and Human Rights. She is author of The Sacred Monstrous: A Reflection on Violence in Human Communities (Lanham, Maryland: Lexington Books, 2004) and co-editor (with Richard Koenigsberg, Library of Social Science, New York) of Psychological Interpretations of War (New York: Peace Review, 2006). Hamblet's latest books, Savage Constructions: The Myth of African Savagery: Plato and Levinas on Justice and Ethics; and The Lesser Good: The Problem of Justice in Plato and Levinas are forthcoming. Hamblet has also authored many chapters in edited volumes of collected scholarly essays, as well as dozens of articles in peer-refereed journals such as Monist, Appraisal, Prima Philosophia, Journal of the British Society for Phenomenology, Existentia Meletai Sophias, and the Journal of Genocide Research. Hamblet is an active member of the Concerned Philosophers for Peace (where she serves as associate editor for the Newsletter), the International Association of Genocide Scholars, and the Globalization for the Common Good Initiative (where she serves on the Board of Advisors and as editor).


John F. Humphrey, Ph.D., Assistant Professor
jfhumphr@ncat.edu

Dr. John F. Humphrey is an assistant professor in the North Carolina Agricultural and Technological State University, College of University Studies. His research interests are in the history of philosophy. He has published a translation of Joan Stambaugh's Untersuchungen zur Problem der Zeit bei Nietzsche under the title of The Problem of Time in Nietzsche. He is a member of the American Philosophical Association and the National Forensic League.


 

 

 





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