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Dr. Stephanie Theodorou teaches in the Philosophy Department at Immaculata University. She received her undergraduate degree from Georgetown University and her doctoral degree from Temple University. Her areas of specialty include 19th and 20th Century Continental philosophy, Asian philosophy, and of late, philosophy of mind. She has published articles and presented papers at a number of conferences on topics including Hegelian philosophy, philosophical hermeneutics, and cross-disciplinary studies on the nature of mind and language. She is presently working on a larger project which studies mental plasticity and its role in the production of symbols and theories of interpretation.
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Stephanie Theodorou teaches in the Philosophy Department at Immaculata University. She received her undergraduate degree from Georgetown University and her doctoral degree from Temple University. Her areas of specialty include 19th and 20th century Continental philosophy, Asian philosophy, and, of late, philosophy of mind. She has published articles and presented papers at a number of conferences on topics including Hegelian philosophy, philosophical hermeneutics, and cross-disciplinary studies on the nature of mind and language. She is presently working on a larger project which studies mental plasticity and its role in the production of symbols and theories of interpretation.

Latest revision as of 16:45, 10 June 2014

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Stephanie Theodorou teaches in the Philosophy Department at Immaculata University. She received her undergraduate degree from Georgetown University and her doctoral degree from Temple University. Her areas of specialty include 19th and 20th century Continental philosophy, Asian philosophy, and, of late, philosophy of mind. She has published articles and presented papers at a number of conferences on topics including Hegelian philosophy, philosophical hermeneutics, and cross-disciplinary studies on the nature of mind and language. She is presently working on a larger project which studies mental plasticity and its role in the production of symbols and theories of interpretation.