John Alden Clark Memorial Prize
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The John Alden Clark Memorial Prize is annually awarded to the Colby student whose contest essay excels in philosophical substance, creativity, and originality. 2005 - Chris Suprenant, Kant's Postulate of the Immortality of the Soul 2004 - Phil Scuderi, Aeschylus, Marx, & Ancient Greece: 2003 - Pete Osborn, Time In, Time Out, or Both: God Settles into a Relationship with Time 2002 - Briana Wright, The Balancing Act: A Response to Frankfurt 2001 - Milan Babik, Political Economy and the Genre of the Novel: 2000 - Corie Washow, A Heideggerian Approach to the End of Life 1999 - Markus Johnson, Being Choosy 1998 - Brad Reichek, The Wanderer's Prayer 1997 - Katie Quackenbush, The Missing Dialogue: Finding the Philosopher 1996 - Nima Karamouz, God's Complex 1995 - John Costenbader, Uroboric Depth in Sextus Empiricus's Practical Criterion 1994 - Sarah Pohl, The Metaphysics of Peanuts 1993 - Joseph Terry, Nonsense is Useful (Or is that Nonsense?) 1992 - Caleb Mason, The Man Who Mistook His God For A (Very Large) Hat 1991 - Andrew Williams, Biosphere II: Contemporary Scientific Consciousness and 1990 - Alan Yuodsnukis, Diverse Encounters 1989 - Richard Main, Kripke on Rigid Designation 1988 - Stephen Nason, In Which Po Meets Master Pooh & They Discuss the Nature of Man 1987 - David Fearon, A Kingdom of Ends: A Tragedy in Kantian Morality 1986 - Hans Fajerson, On Imagination as a Higher Faculty 1985 - Jennifer Armstrong, On a Definition of Violence 1984 - David Larkin, Letter from Prison 1983 - Brad Livermore, The Platonic Dialectic: An Unscientific Analysis 1982 - Eugene Bernet, The Evolution of Conditioned Genesis 1981 - Diana Fuss, A Re-evaluation of the Gospels as Literature: 1980 - Jim Lowe, The Theory of the Soul in Plato's Phaedrus 1979 - Nicholas Mencher, Social Interaction and Epictetus' Apatheia 1978 - David M. Rice, Causation and Freedom of the Will 1977 - Thomas Hearne, Self-Defense in Theory and Practice 1976 - Leon Bradbury, Quine and the Indeterminacy of Translation 1975 - Daniel H. Cohen, A Mathematical Look at Socrates' Level of Cognition |














