Frederick Neuhouser
Frederick Wayne Neuhouser is the Viola Manderfeld professor of German and a professor of Philosophy at Barnard College, Columbia University. He is a specialist in European philosophy of the 18th and 19th centuries, especially of Rousseau, Fichte, and Hegel.
Education and career
Neuhouser graduated summa cum laude in 1979 from Wabash College, in Crawfordsville, Indiana, and received his Ph.D. from Columbia University. He taught at Harvard University, University of California, San Diego, Cornell University, and Johann Wolfgang Goethe University Frankfurt am Main before returning to the Barnard/Columbia faculty.He was elected a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts & Sciences in 2021.
Philosophical work
Neuhouser's focus is on German Idealism and continental social theory. He has published Fichte's Theory of Subjectivity ; Foundations of Hegel's Social Theory: Actualizing Freedom, which argues for the centrality of "social freedom" in Hegel's political thought; Rousseau's Theodicy of Self-Love: Evil, Rationality, and the Drive for Recognition ; and Rousseau's Critique of Inequality: Reconstructing the Second Discourse.His latest work, Diagnosing Social Pathology: Rousseau, Hegel, Marx and Durkheim, centers on notions of "social pathology" in 18th, 19th, and 20th-century philosophy.