Dr. Ross Channing Reed, lecturer in philosophy in arts, languages, and philosophy, has published an article titled “Existential Philosophical Counseling: Clinical Observations, Part I: Circumscribed Self-Disclosure, Moral Discourse, and Moral Presence” in Philosophical Practice.
Read More »Dr. Ross Channing Reed, lecturer of philosophy, published an article titled “The good life requires two things, self-knowledge and friends – you can’t have one without the other” in The Conversation on April 9.
Read More »Dr. Ross Channing Reed, lecturer in philosophy, published an essay in Pittsburgh Review of Books titled “The overweening pride of the masters of the universe.”
Read More »Dr. Ross Channing Reed, lecturer in philosophy, presented his paper, titled “Existential Anxiety, Structural Anxiety and Pathological Anxiety (‘Anxiety Disorders’): A Clinical and Philosophical Analysis),” at the 8th International Conference on Philosophical Counseling and Practice, held virtually Feb. 20-22.
Read More »Dr. Ross Channing Reed, a lecturer in philosophy, has published Precarity, Trauma, Addiction, and Love in Philosophical Counseling through Bloomsbury Publishing. The book explores how language surrounding trauma, anxiety and burnout has become pervasive in modern society.
Read More »Dr. Ross Channing Reed, lecturer in arts, languages and philosophy, published an article in The Philosophical Salon titled “Technofeudalism and the Psychological Foreclosure of the Future.”
Read More »Dr. Ross Channing Reed, lecturer in philosophy, published an article titled “Anxiety” in The Pittsburgh Review of Books.
Read More »Dr. Ross Channing Reed, lecturer of philosophy, published “Why Leisure Matters for a Good life, According to Aristotle” in The Conversation on Tuesday, Aug. 5.
Read More »Dr. Ross Channing Reed, lecturer in philosophy, published an article titled “Why Leisure Matters for a Good Life, According to Aristotle” in The Conversation on Tuesday, Aug. 5.
Read More »Ross Channing Reed, lecturer in philosophy, presented a paper titled “Existential Philosophical Counseling: Clinical Observations, Part I: Circumscribed Self-Disclosure, Moral Discourse and Moral Presence” at the 26th International Meeting of the American Philosophical Practitioners Association, held virtually on Saturday, June 28.
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