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Associate Professor Patrick Deneen holds the Markos and Eleni Tsakopoulos-Kounalakis Chair in Hellenic Studies and teaches government at Georgetown University. He also directs Georgetown's Tocqueville Forum on the Roots of American Democracy. According to his faculty page, Deneen's academic interests include ancient and American political thought, democratic theory, and the relationship between religion, literature and politics. He has authored and co-authored a number of books, most recent of which is Democratic Faith (Princeton, 2005), as well as written articles for Political Theory, Social Research, Polity, Polis, First Things, The Weekly Standard, The Hedgehog Review, and Commonweal, among others. Before joining the faculty of Georgetown, he taught at Princeton University from 1997-2005 and there held the Laurence S. Rockefeller Preceptorship, and was the recipient of the 1995 A.P.S.A.'s Leo Strauss Award for Best Dissertation in Political Philosophy.
Liberalism and Limits On his blog, Patrick Deneen identifies himself as a political theorist. Not a political scientist or a political philosopher, but a theorist. This self-designation reflects Deneen's attention to political history and to the life of language. . . .
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Patrick Deneen, on how Wendell Berry’s thought demonstrates his identity as a "Kentucky Aristotelian" (MARS HILL AUDIO Journal, ) MHT-091.2.4
Patrick Deneen, on the differences between Aristotelian and modern political philosophy (MARS HILL AUDIO Journal, ) MHT-091.2.3
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