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CARRIE E. SWANSON Assistant Professor Department of Philosophy University of Iowa Room 256 English-Philosophy Building Iowa City, IA 52240 Email: carrie-e-swanson@uiowa.edu Phone: (319)-335-0203 (work) (609) 865-8012 (home) Curriculum Vitae Education: Reed College (B.A. Philosophy). Senior Thesis: Plato s Philebus. Supervisor: C.D.C. Reeve. Rutgers University, New Brunswick (M.A. Philosophy, 2008; Ph.D. Philosophy, May 2011). Dissertation: Socratic Dialectic and the Resolution of Fallacy in Plato s Euthydemus. Committee: Alan Code, Robert Bolton, Jeff King, Benjamin Morison (Princeton). Professional History: 2013 to present: Assistant Professor, Department of Philosophy, University of Iowa. 2011-2013: Ruth Norman Halls Postdoctoral Fellow in the History of Philosophy, Department of Philosophy, Indiana University. Area of specialization: Ancient Philosophy. Special interests: Ancient theories of refutation, syllogistic reasoning, and dialectic, especially in Plato and Aristotle; Aristotle s philosophy of science and metaphysics; Ancient theories of perception; the moral psychology and virtue ethics of Plato and Aristotle; Hellenistic medicine and skepticism. Areas of competence: Medieval metaphysics and logic, virtue ethics, informal logic, epistemology, metaphysics, philosophy of language. Special interests: Medieval theories of universals, argumentation, and insolubilia; philosophy of language (especially the pragmatics of conversation and questions); epistemology (especially virtue epistemology and problems of testimony and disagreement); and metaphysics (especially essentialism, universals, and hylomorphism). 1

Teaching University of Iowa: Term and Year Course Number and Title Course Content Fall 2013 Phil 111: Ancient Philosophy Thales to Aristotle. Intensive Fall 2013 Phil 227: Seminar Ancient Graduate seminar. Aristotle on Philosophy Refutation and Dialectic. Spring 2014 Phil 111: Ancient Philosophy Thales to Aristotle. Intensive Spring 2014 Phil 152: Plato Plato s Theaetetus. Intensive Teaching Indiana University: Term and Year Course Number and Title Course Content Fall 2011 P201: Ancient Greek Philosophy Thales to Aristotle. Intensive Spring 2012 P710: Seminar in the History of Graduate seminar. Aristotle on Philosophy. fallacious reasoning. Fall 2012 Plato and Aristotle on Perception P401: Special Topics in the and Knowledge. Intensive History of Philosophy Spring 2013 Readings in Ancient Philosophy: Greek Texts. Graduate level reading group on Aristotle s Metaphysics Zeta. Teaching Rutgers University: [all courses autonomously designed and taught]: Term and Year Course Number and Title Course Content Spring 2004 PHI 103: Introduction to Argumentation, metaphysics, Philosophy epistemology, ethics. Fall 2004 PHI 301: Socrates and Plato Plato s Apology, Euthyphro, Protagoras, Euthydemus, Gorgias. Intensive writing Spring 2005. Pre-Socratics, Plato and Aristotle on the nature of the soul: Republic, Phaedo, Timaeus, De Anima (selections). Intensive Summer 2005 Plato and Aristotle on Moral Knowledge: Protagoras Republic, Nicomachean Ethics Fall 2005 Plato and Aristotle on Moral Knowledge: Protagoras Republic, Nicomachean Ethics Spring 2006 Pre-Socratics, Plato and Aristotle on the nature of the soul: Republic, Phaedo, Timaeus, De Anima (selections). Intensive 2

Summer 2006 Natural World: Pre-Socratics, Timaeus, Physics Books I-IV. Intensive Fall 2006 Spring 2007 Summer 2007 PHI 301: Socrates and Plato Natural World: Pre-Socratics, Timaeus, Physics Books I-IV. Intensive Natural World Protagorean Relativism: Protagoras and Theaetetus Fall 2007 Ancient Theories of Perception: Pre-Socratics, Timaeus (selections), Theaetetus (selections), De Anima. Intensive Spring 2008 PHI 301: Socrates and Plato Protagorean Relativism: Protagoras and Theaetetus Summer 2009 Fall 2009 Spring 2010 Fall 2010 Spring 2011 PHI 208: Philosophy of the Greeks ENG 101: Freshman Writing Seminar (two sections). PHI 303: The Practice of Philosophy: Modes of Philosophical Argument. Ancient Theories of Perception: Pre-Socratics, Timaeus (selections), Theaetetus (selections), De Anima. Intensive Survey course in ancient philosophy: pre-socratics through Aristotle. Intensive Natural World Freshman expository writing History and development of modes of argument in Ancient Greek epic, tragedy, and philosophy. Intensive writing 3

Scholarship: Articles Peer-reviewed: Aristotle on Criticisms of an Argument in Itself vs. As Asked in Topics 8.11, History and Philosophy of Logic (in preparation). Aristotle s Expansion of the Taxonomy of Fallacy in Sophistici Elenchi 8, Philosophiegeschichte und logische Analyse, Vol. 15 2012. Articles Invited: Plato's Treatment of the Fallacy of Accident in Plato's Euthydemus. To appear in a collection of essays, Ancient Fallacies, ed. Luca Castagnoli and Valentina DiLascio for Oxford University Press. (Other contributors include: Susanne Bobzien (Oxford), Luca Castagnoli (Durham), Walter Cavini (Bologna), Paolo Crivelli (Geneva), Nicholas Denyer (Cambridge), E. Valentina Di Lascio (Durham), Louis-Andre' Dorion (Montreal), Sten Ebbesen (Copenhagen), Paolo Fait (Oxford), Jean-Baptiste Gourinat, (CNRS/ Centre Léon Robin), Pieter Sjoerd Hasper (LMU München), MM McCabe (King s College London), Christoph Rapp (LMU München), Annamaria Schiaparelli (Geneva)). Work in Progress: Book project: Socratic Dialectic and the Resolution of Fallacy in Plato s Euthydemus. (Under review). Abstract: It is a familiar claim that the Euthydemus champions Socratic argumentation over sophistical or eristic reasoning. No consensus however exists regarding either the nature or philosophical significance of Socrates treatment of the fallacies he confronts. I argue that a careful reading of the dialogue reveals that the Socratic response to fallacious reasoning is conducted at two different levels of philosophical sophistication. Socrates relies upon the resources of Socratic dialectic in responding to sophisms due to ignorance of refutation. Insofar as Socratic dialectic is grounded in a grasp of the nature of genuine refutation, the objections it raises to false refutation are fully explanatory. On the other hand, Socrates employs various selfrefutation arguments against theses which depend on false assumptions regarding the nature of predication-- -for example, the thesis that false speaking is impossible. It is however characteristic of Socratic dialectic that this method of examination cannot explain why the sophists theses are false. The Socratic response to fallacy in these cases is non-explanatory in this sense. On the other hand, these limitations on Socratic expertise are overcome in other passages in the dialogue which are replete with clues to the reader that point to a genuine explanation and resolution of the sophists arguments for their various theses. In particular, the reader is invited at every turn to modify, clarify, or reject various assumptions made by the brothers regarding the nature of predication. Here Plato implicitly relies on the results of what I call higher dialectic. This theory, which receives explicit formulation in the Sophist, is conceptually rich enough to expose and dispose of the various false assumptions upon which the sophists theses rest. I conclude that the Euthydemus is concerned to identify Socratic dialectic as only a part of philosophy, and to locate and strictly delimit its epistemological status as lying above eristic and the rhetorical arts, but below that of dialectic as that is conceived in the Republic and even later dialogues---thus anticipating the Sophist s conception of Socrates as the practitioner of a noble sophistry, (gennai&a sofistikh&, 231b3-8) and the elenchus as a propaedeutic to philosophy, which purges the soul of false beliefs. 4

Articles in Progress: Aristotle on Ignorance of the Definition of Refutation. Predicating One Thing of One Thing in De Interpretatione 11. Threading the Labyrinth in Plato s Euthydemus. Aristotle on Opacity and Paradox in Topics H. Aristotle on the Resolution of Disagreement in the Diagnosis of Fallacy. The Rotational Model of Mind in Plato s Timaeus. John Doris Excellence Adventure. Scholarship Presentations: Aristotle on Predicating One Thing of One Thing in De Interpretatione 11, for the conference Workshop on Aristotle s Logic and Metaphysics, University of Chicago, May 2014. Aristotle on Criticisms of an Argument In Itself vs. As Asked (Topics VIII 161b19-33), University of Iowa, Department of Philosophy, Philosophy Colloquium, May 2014. Keynote speaker: Aristotle on Criticisms of an Argument In Itself vs. As Asked (Topics VIII 161b19-33) ; for the Roots of Deduction Project conference Dialectic and Aristotelian Logic. Gröningen University, September 2013. Aristotle s Solution to the Masker Paradox, University of Iowa, Department of Philosophy, February 2013. Aristotle s Solutions to the Masker Paradox, UCLA, Department of Philosophy, March 2013. Aristotle on the Resolution of Disagreement in the Diagnosis of Fallacy ; for the conference Aristotelian Logic and Metaphysics Indiana University October 2012. The Rotational Model of Mind in Plato s Timaeus ; for the conference Plato s Moral Psychology, organized by the International Plato Society University of Michigan, Ann Arbor Michigan October 2012. Plato's Treatment of the Fallacy of Accident in Plato's Euthydemus ; for the conference Ancient Fallacies, Durham University April 2012. Aristotle on Ignorance of the Definition of Refutation ; for the conference Truth, Falsehood and Deception in Ancient Philosophy, Faculty of Classics, Cambridge University April 2012. The Material Basis of Imagination in Plato s Timaeus ; for the Indiana University Department of Classics Ancient Lecture Series, April 2012. Gareth Matthews on Kooky Objects and the Masker Paradox ; Halls Postdoctoral Fellowship Lecture, November 2011. 5

Threading the Labyrinth in Plato s Euthydemus ; for the 29 th Annual Joint Meeting of the Society for Ancient Greek Philosophy (SAGP) with the Society for the Study of Islamic Philosophy (SSIPS), Fordham University, October 2011. Aristotle on the Fallacy of Ignoratio Elenchi ; for the 28 th Annual Joint Meeting of the Society for Ancient Greek Philosophy (SAGP) with the Society for the Study of Islamic Philosophy (SSIPS), Fordham University, October 2010. The Argument of Sophistici Elenchi 8 ; for the symposium Lost in Logical Space devoted to Aristotle s Sophistici Elenchi, Humboldt Universität zu Berlin, July 2009. Self-refutation in Plato s Euthydemus ; for the Annual West Coast Plato Conference, University of California at Berkeley, May 2009. Commentator on Matthew Meyer, Non-contradiction as an ontological principle: an interpretation of Aristotle s Metaphysics IV 3-4 ; April 12 2008, Princeton-Rutgers Ancient Philosophy Graduate Conference. Honors and Awards: Rutgers Graduate School-New Brunswick Dissertation Teaching Award 2009-2010. Rutgers University Sellon Dissertation Fellowship 2008-2009. Service: University of Iowa: Department of Philosophy, Undergraduate Studies Committee Faculty Assembly Indiana University: Panel Speaker, Navigating the Job Market: Advice from a Post-Doctoral Fellow, at the 17 th Annual Preparing Future Faculty Conference, February 24 th 2012 Indiana University. Principle organizer and weekly contributor: Reading group on Aristotle s Metaphysics Zeta, Department of Philosophy, Indiana University 2011-2012. Principle organizer, Aristotelian Logic and Metaphysics, A Ruth Norman Halls Colloquium, Indiana University Oct 20-21 2012. Speakers included: Laura Castelli (Munich LMU), Alan Code (Stanford), Neil Lewis (Georgetown), Marko Malink (Chicago), Benjamin Morison (Princeton), Calvin Normore (UCLA/McGill), Jacob Rosen (Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin), and Carrie Swanson (Indiana). 6

Rutgers University: Graduate fellow organizer, Rutgers-Humboldt Universität zu Berlin-Oxford Conference Aristotle on Predication ; Rutgers University (New Brunswick) October 2008. Speakers included: Paolo Crivelli, Annamaria Schiaparelli, Walter Cavini, David Charles, Marko Malink, Kei Chiba, Robert Bolton, and Alan Code. Principal originator and organizer, Princeton-Rutgers Ancient Philosophy Graduate Conference, Spring 2008. Academic and Professional Memberships: Current: American Philosophical Association International Plato Society Society for Ancient Greek Philosophy Chicago Area Consortium in Ancient Philosophy 2001 to 2010: Reading Group in Ancient Philosophy, Princeton University (meets weekly during academic year). Presented multiple times on the following Greek texts: Aristotle: Metaphysics Beta; Nicomachean Ethics 7; De Anima 1-2; De Motu Animalium. Plato: Theaetetus; Republic 6-7; Sophist; Timaeus. Sextus: Outlines III (on the good, bad, and indifferent, and the art of living); Epicurus: Letter to Herodotus. Regular faculty participants: John Cooper, Christian Wildberg, Hendrik Lorenz, Ben Morison, Alexander Nehamas. Past visiting participants: Michael Frede, Myles Burnyeat, Stephen Menn, Thomas Johansen, Raphael Woolf, Ursula Coope, Jonathan Beere). Languages: Reading knowledge of Greek, Latin, French, and German. 7