The
Allan Gotthelf Prize in Classical Studies
The Allan Gotthelf Prize currently
consists of $100 and recognition on a permanent wall
plaque in the Philosophy department office. It is
awarded annually to an outstanding graduating senior at
The College of New Jersey, who is chosen by the
Classical Studies Faculty. Students need not apply. All
students who have completed the requirements for a
classical studies self-designed major, interdisciplinary
concentration, or minor by the time of their graduation
are considered. The winner is announced at the
student’s major departmental graduation ceremony.
This prize is awarded in honor of
Professor Allan Gotthelf. Professor Gotthelf was the
inspiration and the driving force behind the
establishment of a Classical Studies Program at The
College of New Jersey.
He
dedicated himself passionately to its success, and he
worked tirelessly to ensure its ongoing place in the
curriculum. His commitment and respect for students will
continue to be acknowledged with the annual award of the
Gotthelf Prize.
The Classical Studies program is
working to finance the Gotthelf Prize in perpetuity and
to increase its monetary value through the solicitation
of donations for an endowed fund in Professor Gotthelf’s
name. If you are interested in contributing to the
fund, please go to
the College’s donation web page and choose
“Specialized Fund Drive.”
Allan Gotthelf received a B.S.
(Brooklyn College) and M.A. (Penn State) in Mathematics,
then an M.Phil. and Ph.D. in Philosophy from Columbia
University. He began his teaching career at Wesleyan
University (Conn.), coming to TCNJ in 1969. He has also
taught on a visiting basis at Swarthmore College and (at
the graduate level) at Georgetown University, Oxford
University, and Tokyo Metropolitan University. He has
edited several books and authored many articles on
various aspects of ancient philosophy, chiefly on the
way important aspects of Aristotle’s philosophical
thought are illuminated by a close study of Aristotle’s
biological works. He also specializes in the philosophy
of Ayn Rand, a 20th-century philosopher influenced by
Aristotle, and published a book, On Ayn Rand,
in the Wadsworth Philosophers Series in 2000. In Spring 2001 he
was a visiting member of the Institute for Advanced
Studies, in Princeton, and in Fall 2002, he was in a
visiting position at the University of Texas at Austin.
Since 2003, he has served as visiting professor of
history and philosophy of science at the University of
Pittsburgh. |