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Associate Professor of Philosophy | Innovation Studies | schleemt@plu.edu | 253-535-7218 | Mike Schleeter began teaching as an Assistant Professor at PLU in 2011, having received a B.A.
Mike Schleeter Associate Professor of Philosophy Phone: 253-535-7218 Email: schleemt@plu.edu Office Location: Hauge Administration Building - 222-F Status:On Sabbatical Professional Biography Personal Education Ph.D., Philosophy, Penn State University, 2010 B.A., Philosophy, Comparative Literature, Biology, University of Minnesota, 1999 Areas of Emphasis or Expertise Political Philosophy Political Economy German Idealism Phenomenology Accolades Karen Hille Phillips Regency Advancement Award
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Associate Professor of Philosophy | Department of Philosophy | schleemt@plu.edu | 253-535-7218 | Mike Schleeter began teaching as an Assistant Professor at PLU in 2011, having received a B.A.
Mike Schleeter Associate Professor of Philosophy Phone: 253-535-7218 Email: schleemt@plu.edu Office Location: Hauge Administration Building - 222-F Status:On Sabbatical Professional Biography Personal Education Ph.D., Philosophy, Penn State University, 2010 B.A., Philosophy, Comparative Literature, Biology, University of Minnesota, 1999 Areas of Emphasis or Expertise Political Philosophy Political Economy German Idealism Phenomenology Accolades Karen Hille Phillips Regency Advancement Award
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Visiting Assistant Professor of English | Department of English | dks@plu.edu | 253-535-7808
Philosophy Psychoanalysis Phenomenology Feminist Philosophy Postcolonial Theory Critical Theory South Asian literature and Diaspora
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The Anthropology Department is thrilled to present our senior capstone presentations. Students will share their projects and will answer questions.
, Promote Your Own Resource Security!” 10:35 AM - Sean Purcell “Creating Agency and Autonomy: Uyghur Women in Diasporic and Dispossessed Conditions” 10:50 AM - Nicolaus Finerty “Archaeology of Airai Village and Palau’s Incomplete Chronology” 11:05 AM - Harper Bolz-Weber “Exploring New Worlds: Phenomenology and the Mystique of the Painted Caves” Thank you!
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Chair of Physics | Department of Physics | bret.underwood@plu.edu | 253-535-7267 | I am currently a Professor of Physics at Pacific Lutheran University.
n-dimensional Delta function potential” under the direction of Professor Robert Perry. In 2003 I began my graduate study at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, earning a Masters of Arts in Physics in 2005 and a Ph.D. in 2008 as a student of Gary Shiu. My Ph.D. thesis, entitled “Warped String Phenomenology: Topics in Cosmology and Particle Physics”, focused on the interesting phenomenological and cosmological implications of warped extra dimensions, which commonly appear in string theory models
Office HoursMon: 10:00 am - 11:00 amTue: 10:00 am - 12:00 pmWed: 10:30 am - 12:00 pmThu: 10:00 am - 12:00 pmMon - Fri: - -
Katrina is an associate professor in the physics department, where she enjoys teaching a range of courses.
Katrina Hay, PhDDivision of Natural Sciences, Department of PhysicsLightboard for Instructional Videos Dr. Katrina Hay (PLU Photo/Katie Martell) Katrina is an associate professor in the physics department, where she enjoys teaching a range of courses. Her research interests include fluid dynamics, observational astronomy and physics education research. At PLU, she has mentored undergraduate interns in fluid physics phenomenology and she is looking forward to working with students on
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“The kayak glides low in the water as you and your partner discover a mutual rhythm–right, left, repeat, your arms like firing pistons. The glistening head of a seal periscopes out of the water a hundred yards off your port as you pass farther into…
you set an alarm–Outdoor Recreation. Emerging from the cafeteria tray-drop, two days prior, you had scrawled your Hancock in the brackets of a sign-up sheet at the behest of the daily advertisers for Outdoor Rec. Kayaking, written in pink chalk on their board, had caught your eye: the concocted allure of the water, the Sound, the phenomenology of it all, swapped for the exhaustion and library-hours of your week? It had all sounded too appealing. So you joined. But now it’s Saturday, and nothing
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, “Critically Queer” Luce Irigaray, “This Sex Which Is Not One” Luna Dolezal, “The (In)visible Body: Feminism, Phenomenology, and the Case of Cosmetic Surgery” Michel Foucault, History of Sexuality, Vol. 1 Sophia Mahr, '18, Global Studies:My tutorial on International Refugee Studies counted for GLST 350, an upper-division elective in my Global Studies’ Development and Social Justice concentration. This tutorial was entitled “Stepping Back and Moving Onwards: History, Refugee Studies, and Forced Migration
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