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American philosopher From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Julia Driver (born 1961) is professor of philosophy and holder of the Darrell K. Royal Chair in Ethics and American Society at the University of Texas, Austin.[1] She is a specialist in moral philosophy.
She received her Ph.D. in philosophy at Johns Hopkins University in 1990 under the supervision of Susan R. Wolf.[2] She received her BA from the University of Texas at Austin in 1983.
Before moving to Texas in 2019, she taught at Washington University in St. Louis, Dartmouth College, Virginia Tech, and Brooklyn College of the City University of New York.[3] She and her husband philosopher Roy Sorensen are also professorial fellows at University of St Andrews. She has received a Laurance S. Rockefeller Fellowship from Princeton University, NEH Fellowship, and an HLA Hart Fellowship at Oxford University. She is presently co-editor of the journal Ethics.
She is the author of Uneasy Virtue, Consequentialism, and Ethics: The Fundamentals,[4] as well as many articles in ethics and moral psychology. She is the leading proponent of a consequentialist approach to virtue theory.[5] According to Driver, the virtues are character traits that systematically produce good consequences. Her proposal differs from that of many other theories as she argues that virtue does not always require knowledge. Indeed, virtue can at times be impeded by knowledge.[6]
In 2015, her book Consequentialism was translated by Iranian philosopher Shirzad Peik Herfeh into Persian.
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