Faculty Directory
David Shatz

David
Shatz

Ronald P. Stanton University Professor of Philosophy, Ethics, and Religious Thought; Chair, SCW Department of Philosophy

shatz@yu.edu

646-592-4856

Beren campus - 215 Lexington Ave

Room#226

Professor David Shatz is the Ronald P. Stanton University Professor of Philosophy, Ethics, and Religious Thought, editor of The Torah u-Madda Journal, and editor of the MeOtzar HoRav series, devoted to publishing manuscripts of Rabbi Joseph B. Soloveitchik. After graduating as valedictorian of Yeshiva College, Professor Shatz was ordained at the Rabbi Isaac Elchanan Theological Seminary and earned his PhD with distinction in general philosophy from Columbia University. He has edited, co-edited, or authored 16 books and over 100 articles and reviews on general and Jewish philosophy. His work in general philosophy focuses on the theory of knowledge, free will, ethics, and the philosophy of religion, while his work in Jewish philosophy focuses on Jewish ethics, Maimonides, Judaism and science, and twentieth century rabbinic figures. A collection of his essays, JEWISH THOUGHT IN DIALOGUE, was published in 2009. Professor Shatz has been chosen numerous times as outstanding professor by the senior class at Stern, and was a winner in the John Templeton Foundation Course Competition in Science and Religion. He is a member of the editorial board of Tradition. In recognition of his achievements as a scholar and teacher, he was awarded the Presidential Medallion at Yeshiva University (2009), the first member of the various university faculties to receive this honor. He was part of an international team of psychologists, philosophers, and religious thinkers in the project "Virtue, Happiness, and the Meaning of Life" at the University of Chicago, supported by a grant from The John Templeton Foundation." In addition, a book concerning his life and thought appears in The Library of Contemporary Jewish Philosophers, a series that the publisher, Brill, states “showcases outstanding Jewish thinkers who have made lasting contributions to constructive Jewish philosophy in the second half of the twentieth century.”

philosophy of religion, free will, theory of knowledge, ethics, philosophy of law, religion and science, Jewish philosophy: especially medieval and modern rabbinic figures

shatz@yu.edu

646-592-4856

Beren campus - 215 Lexington Ave

Room#226

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Ancient Medieval Philosophy

PHIL 2170

 

Honors Prog Senior Project I

JUDS 4910H

 

Jewish Ethics

JPHI 1204

 

Science and Religion

PHIL 2740

 

Topics: Political Theory

POLI 2492

 

Ethics

PHIL 1600

 

Jewish Ethics

JPHI 1204

 

Religion And Philosophy

PHIL 1710

 

Honors Prog Senior Project II

PHIL 4920H

 

Modern Philosophy

PHIL 2420

 

Philosophy of Maimonides

JPHI 1654

 

Science and Religion

PHIL 2740