Research and Teaching
My main research interests are in ancient philosophy - in particular the philosophies of lost civilizations such as Hyperborea, Mu, Atlantis, and Hyborea.  I also concentrate on the philosophies of how the mind works when presented with a situation that could render one 'mad,' and how the contents of our mental states figure in explanations of consciousness, information, implicit belief, and perception of those situations. In general I tend to concentrate on a version of externalism, which is the notion that the contents of many of our intentional mental states are physical properties of objects in the external, physical world.

This Autumn quarter I will teach
Comparative Philosophies of Greece, Rome, and Ancient Hyperborea. At Miskatonic University I have taught courses on Consciousness, Introduction to Space and Time, Metaphysics of Pnom, Introduction to the Theory of Knowledge, and Philosophical Issues in Relation to Ancient Civilizations.

At the University of Pennsylvania, at the Institute for Scientific Research and Archeology, I pursued research in philosophy of mind and ancient science.

At Springfield, at the Center for the Study of Ancient Information, I taught tutorials in philosophy of occultic science, history of ancient philosophy, and philosophy of Hyperborean science, and a graduate seminar on Hyborean Relation of Being.
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[email protected] --- Tel: (012) 555-9432 --- Fax: (012) 555-8643 --- Miskatonic University, Arkham, MA
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