Leo Groarke Explained

Leo Groarke
8th President and Vice-Chancellor of Trent University
Term Start:July 1, 2014
Term End:June 30, 2024
Chancellor:Don Tapscott
Stephen Stohn
Predecessor:Steven E. Franklin
Successor:Cathy Bruce
Birth Date:1953
Relatives:Louis Groarke (brother)
Known For:Argumentation theory, informal logic
Occupation:Professor, university administrator
Module:
Child:yes
Alma Mater:
Thesis Title:Scepticism: A defense
Thesis Url:https://www.proquest.com/docview/303265060/
Thesis Year:1982
Doctoral Advisor:Tom Lennon
Discipline:philosophy
Workplaces:

Leo Groarke (born 1953) is a Canadian philosopher, known for his contributions to argumentation theory and informal logic.

Groarke has authored and edited a number of books, articles, and anthologies.[1] Groarke has held numerous administrative positions at various Canadian universities, and served as the President of Trent University from 2014-2024.[2]

He is the brother of philosophers Louis Groarke and Paul Groarke. The three are identical triplets.[3]

Education and career

Groarke studied at the University of Calgary, Simon Fraser University, the University of Helsinki, and the University of Western Ontario. He earned his PhD in philosophy in 1982 and was a professor of philosophy at Wilfrid Laurier University, also holding several administrative positions. From 2010 to 2015 he served as the provost/vice-president academic at the University of Windsor. From 2014-2024, he was the president of Trent University.

Groarke's publications have concerned Ancient Greek philosophy, the history of ideas, and argumentation theory. He has published several papers on the possibility of arguments in non-linguistic modes, such as visual and musical arguments. With David Birdsell, he edited a special edition of Argumentation and Advocacy on Visual Argumentation in 2007. He is the author of the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy entry for Informal Logic, and also wrote the 2008 edition of the Stanford Encyclopedia entry for Ancient Skepticism.[4] [5]

Selected works

Notes and References

  1. Web site: UWindsor Philosophy Faculty.
  2. Web site: President of the University of Trent.
  3. Web site: Louis Groarke Homepage.
  4. Web site: Informal Logic in the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
  5. Web site: Ancient Skepticism in the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.