View text source at Wikipedia
Tomis Kapitan | |
---|---|
Born | 1949 |
Died | 2016 |
Education | Indiana University, Bloomington (PhD) |
Era | 21st-century philosophy |
Region | Western philosophy |
Institutions | Northern Illinois University |
Thesis | Foundations for a Theory of Propositional Form, Implication, Alethic Modality, and Generalization |
Doctoral advisor | Hector-Neri Castenada |
Other academic advisors | Romane Clark, Reinhardt Grossmann, J. Michael Dunn, James G. Hart |
Main interests | metaphysics, philosophy of language, free will, philosophy of religion, political philosophy |
Tomis Kapitan (1949–2016) was an American philosopher and Distinguished Teaching Professor Emeritus at Northern Illinois University.[1][2][3] He worked primarily in metaphysics and philosophy of language. Kapitan was especially interested in the free will debate, where he was a "compatibilist," defending the view that free will is possible even in a completely deterministic universe. He also published in philosophy of religion and wrote extensively on the Palestine-Israeli conflict.