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Pages in category "University of Pennsylvania faculty" The following 200 pages are in this category, out of approximately 1,208 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
Loren Eiseley (1907–1977) University of Pennsylvania School of Arts and Sciences class of 1937, MA and Ph.D.: Benjamin Franklin Professor of Anthropology and History and Sociology of Science at the University of Pennsylvania, anthropologist, philosopher, and natural science writer (such that Publishers Weekly referred to him as "the modern ...
Jill Fisch - Professor at the University of Pennsylvania Law School; Stewart D. Friedman - Professor emeritus and founding director of the Wharton Leadership Program [21] Adam Grant - Professor of Psychology [22] Herbert Hovenkamp - Professor of Law and Professor of Legal Studies & Business Ethics [23] Donald B. Keim - Professor of Finance [24]
A c. 1815 illustration of the Ninth Street campus of the University of Pennsylvania, including the medical department (on left) and the college building (on right). In 1802, the university moved to the unused Presidential Mansion at Ninth and Market Streets, a building that both George Washington and John Adams had declined to occupy while Philadelphia was the nation's capital.
Before coming to the University of Pennsylvania Rosenfeld taught at the University of Virginia and Yale University. [3] In 2014–15, Rosenfeld was a Member at the Institute for Advanced Study , where she researched how the maximization of choice gradually developed across the Atlantic world into a proxy for freedom in human rights struggles ...
The University of Pennsylvania (Penn [note 3] or UPenn [note 4]) is a private Ivy League research university in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States.It is one of nine colonial colleges and was chartered prior to the U.S. Declaration of Independence when Benjamin Franklin, the university's founder and first president, advocated for an educational institution that trained leaders in ...
The Graduate Group in the Art and Archaeology of the Mediterranean World (AAMW) is an interdisciplinary program for research and teaching of archaeology, [1] particularly archaeology and art of the ancient Mediterranean (Greece and Rome), Egypt, Anatolia, and the Near East, based in the Penn Museum of the University of Pennsylvania.
The Graduate Division's origins date back to 1882 when Penn first appointed faculty to form a philosophy department. Penn first began offering courses for teachers in 1892, paving way for the eventual founding of the LPS school, which was originally called the College of General Studies.