![]() ![]() Du Bois and the Invention of Identity (Harvard 2014). ![]() His recent publications include The Ethics of Identity (Princeton University Press, 2005), Cosmopolitanism: Ethics in a World of Strangers (Norton, 2006), Experiments in Ethics (Harvard University Press, 2009), The Honor Code: How Moral Revolutions Happen (Norton, 2010), and Lines of Descent: W. In 1992, he published the prize-winning In My Father’s House: Africa in the Philosophy of Culture. Professor Appiah is the editor, with Henry Louis Gates Jr., of the five-volume Africana: The Encyclopedia of the African and African-American Experience (Oxford University Press, 2005). His current research focuses on questions about the connection between theory and practice in moral life. He has written widely in philosophy of mind and language, ethics and political philosophy, and the philosophy of art, of culture and of the social sciences as well as in literary studies, where his focus has been on African and African-American literature. He grew up in Ghana and was educated at Cambridge University, where he took undergraduate and doctoral degrees in philosophy. Kwame Anthony Appiah teaches philosophy at NYU in the Faculty of Arts and Science (FAS) and the Law School he has taught previously at Princeton, Harvard, Duke, Cornell, Yale, Cambridge and the University of Ghana. ![]()
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