
John Riker
Professor
John Riker has taught philosophy at Colorado College since 1968. He chaired the department for 15 years and has been named the Judson Bemis Professor of the Humanities. He was also the Kohut Professor at the University of Chicago (fall, 2003). He has been named teacher of the year three times, advisor of the year once, and was the initial recipient of the Victor Nelson-Cisneros Award for the person most involved with aiding diversity on campus. His areas of interest in philosophy are ethics, history of philosophy, Greek philosophy, psychoanalysis, American philosophy, and metaphysics. His research interests center on the intersection of a psychoanalytic understanding of human nature with ethics.
Publications
Books:
Why It Is Good to Be Good: Ethics, Kohut's Self Psychology, and Modern Society (Jason Aronson, 2010)
Ethics and the Discovery of the Unconscious (SUNY Press, 1997)
Human Excellence and an Ecological Conception of the Psyche (SUNY Press, 1991)
The Art of Ethical Thinking (University Press of America, 1968)
Recent Papers and Addresses:
"Self Psychology and the Problem of the Other," International Conference on the Psychology of the Self, Antalya, Turkey
"Actualizing the Self in the Age of Desire," Chicago Institute for Psychoanalysis, June 2010
Regular Classes
PH 101 Greek Philosophy
PH 116 Greek History and Philosophy: Origins of Western Culture
PH 140 Ethics
PH 201 History of Modern Philosophy
PH 260 Existential Philosophy
PH 321 Metaphysics
PH 340 Ethics and Contemporary Life
PH 360 Philosophy and Psychoanalysis
Education
BA: Middlebury College, High Honors in Philosophy, Valedictorian, 1965
M.A., Vanderbilt University, 1967
PhD. Vanderbilt University, 1968
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