Where do our governing ideas come from, what do they mean, what do they intend, and where will they lead us?
Travis Smith
- Associate Professor
- Department of Political Science
- political theory10
- early modernity21
- religion and politics7
- political philosophy8
- Thomas Hobbes
- popular culture33
- history of ideas3
- higher education10
- liberalism3
- Canadian politics
- American government4
- human nature4
- classical ethics
- Francis Bacon
- science and politics2
- science and faith3
- bioethics7
- history of philosophy5
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Jarrett Carty
Martin Luther, political theory, Reformation
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Ted McCormick
early modern Europe, history of policy, history of science
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Eric Buzzetti
political philosophy, philosophy and literature, history of philosophy
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Graham Dodds
American studies, American government, USA politics
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Matthew Barker
philosophy of biology, philosophy of science, categorization
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André Gagné
religion and politics, religion and violence, political violence
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Jonathan Martineau
social and political theory, critical theory, time studies
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Joshua Neves
global media, digital cultures, cultural theory
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Christine Jamieson
bioethics, Indigenous spiritualities, values
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Lorrie Blair
research methods in art education, teacher identity, teacher training
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Pablo Gilabert
political philosophy, normative ethics, human rights
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René Lemieux
translation studies, translation theory, intercultural communication
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Lorenzo DiTommaso
apocalypticism, cultural history, history of ideas
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Ira Robinson
Judaism, Hassidic Judaism, Kabbalah
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Meredith Evans
Renaissance literature, Shakespeare, Milton
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Mary Esteve
American literature, post-WWII, literary realism
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Gad Saad
evolutionary psychology, consumer behavior, Charles Darwin
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Kevin Pask
Renaissance literature, making publics, popular culture