Sophia Vasalou
Sophia Vasalou studied Arabic and Islamic Studies at the School of Oriental and African Studies, London, and then completed her PhD at St John's College, Cambridge. Her thesis, which is on medieval Islamic theology, is titled 'Moral Agents and their Deserts: the Character of Mu'tazilite Ethics' (2006). After having been a Junior Research Fellow at Gonville and Caius College, where her recent work centred on a project on Schopenhauer's philosophy and a related interdisciplinary project on the idea of wonder, Sophia joined ECLA in January 2009.
Classes taught at ECLA:
AY/BA core courses:
Character
The Republic and its Interlocutors
Electives:
After Virtue
Ethics in Islam: Islamic law
Engaging Schopenhauer
Virtue Ethics
PY Reading Groups:
Nietzsche's Genealogy of Morality
Publications:
(Edited, with Claude-Olivier Doron) Practices of Wonder: Cross-disciplinary Perspectives (Eugene, OR: Pickwick, forthcoming)
Moral Agents and their Deserts: The Character of Mu‛tazilite Ethics (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2008), winner of the 2009 Albert Hourani Book Award
'"Their intention was shown in their bodily movements": the Basran Mu‛tazilites on the institution of language', Journal of the History of Philosophy, 47 (2009)
'"The mind as an object of God's knowledge": another Cartesian temptation?', Philosophical Investigations, 32 (2009)
'Personal identity as a task', Inquiry, 51 (2008)
'Subject and body in Basran Mu‛tazilism, or: Mu‛tazilite kalâm and the fear of triviality', Arabic Sciences and Philosophy, 17 (2007)
'The expression of wonderment', Philosophical Investigations, 30 (2007)
'I‛jâz', in K. Versteegh et al., ed., Encyclopedia of Arabic Language and Linguistics (Leiden: Brill, 2006), vol. 2.
'Equal before the Law: the evilness of human and divine lies; 'Abd al-Jabbâr's rational ethics', Arabic Sciences and Philosophy, 13 (2003)
'The miraculous eloquence of the Qur'ân: general trajectories and individual approaches', Journal of Qur'anic Studies, 4 (2002)
Translations
"The Unfaithful Translator", excerpt from Fawwaz Haddad's Al-Mutarjim al-khâ'in, Banipal (2010, forthcoming).