Richard T. De George
University Distinguished Professor (Ph.D., Yale)
Curriculum Vitae |
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Richard T.
De George is University Distinguished Professor of Philosophy, of Russian
and East European Studies, and of Business Administration, and Co-Director
of the International Center for Ethics in Business at the University of
Kansas. He received his Ph.D. from Yale University and he has been a research
fellow at Yale University, Columbia University, Stanford University, and
the Hoover Institution. He was the Charles J. Dirksen Professor of Business
Ethics at Santa Clara University in 1986, and a Visiting Professor at
the Graduate School of Business at the University of St. Gallen, Switzerland
in 1985.
He has written widely in the fields of political and
social philosophy, ethics, and applied ethics, with an emphasis on business
ethics and most recently computer ethics. He is the author of over 200
articles and the author or editor of twenty books, including The Ethics
of Information Technology and Business (2003); Academic Freedom
and Tenure: Ethical Issues (1997); Business Ethics (2005),
now in its sixth edition and also available in Japanese, Chinese, Serbian,
and Russian; and Competing With Integrity in International Business
(Oxford, 1993), also translated into Chinese. He has been the President
of several academic organizations, including the American Philosophical
Association, the Metaphysical Society of America, the Society for Business
Ethics, and the International Society for Business, Economics, and Ethics.
He has given invited lectures on six continents at a great many universities
and keynote addresses to a variety of organizations both here and abroad,
including such places as Tokyo, Como, Barcelona, Rio de Janeiro, and Perth.
In November, 1996, he received an honorary doctorate
from Nijenrode University in the Netherlands together with Bill Gates
and Nelson Mandela.
Fall 2007 Courses
PHIL 375: Moral Issues on Computer Technology
GS 804: Interdisciplinary Seminar on Ethics in Science and Engineering
E-mail: Professor
Richard De George