Naomi Fisher, PhD
Associate Professor
Bio
Naomi Fisher is Associate Professor of Philosophy. She earned her Ph.D in philosophy from the University of Notre Dame in 2016, and prior to that earned her M.S. in physics from UC Davis.
Her research focuses on Kant and German Idealism and Romanticism, specifically the relationship between nature, freedom, and rationality in Kant and Schelling. Currently, she is working on projects related to the impact of Plato and Neoplatonism on Schelling’s philosophy. She also has interests in the broader history of philosophy, philosophy of science, and philosophy of religion.
Education
PhD, University of Notre Dame
MA, University of Notre Dame
MS, University of California - Davis
BS, Biola University
Research Interests
Kant and German Idealism
Publications/Research Listings
Schelling's Mystical Platonism: 1792-1802, Oxford University Press, 2024
“Life, Lawfulness, and Contingency: Kant and Schelling on Organic Nature” in Archiv für Geschichte der Philosophie (2021)
“Kant and Schelling on Blumenbach’s Formative Drive” in Intellectual History Review 31:3, 391–409 (2021).
“Unity in Schelling’s World Soul” in The Review of Metaphysics 74:4, pp. 527–552 (2021).
“Kant’s Organic Religion: God, Teleology, and Progress in the Third Critique” in Kant and the Possibility of Progress, ed. S. Stoner and P. Wilford, University of Pennsylvania Press (2021).
“Freedom as Productivity in Schelling’s Philosophy of Nature” in Schelling's Philosophy: Freedom, Nature and Systematicity, ed. G. Anthony Bruno. Oxford University Press (2020).
“Organisms and the Form of Freedom in Kant’s Third Critique” in European Journal of Philosophy 27, pp. 55–74 (2019).
“The Epistemology of Schelling’s Philosophy of Nature” in History of Philosophy Quarterly 34:3 pp. 271–290 (2017).
“Kant On Animal Minds” in Ergo 4:15, pp. 441–462 (2017).