Religion professor named Fulbright recipient


Jack Hill, professor of Religion in AddRan College of Liberal Arts, has been granted a 2013-2014 Fulbright-Scotland Visiting Professorship (Distinguished Chair) at Aberdeen University, Aberdeen, Scotland. In addition to researching and writing a book on the relevance of Adam Ferguson’s moral philosophy for teaching ethics today, he will be presenting guest lectures on ethics and his research at the University of Aberdeen and other universities in the U.K.

 

The Fulbright Program is the flagship international educational exchange program sponsored by the U.S. Dept. of State’s Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs. It is designed to increase mutual understanding between the people of the United States and the people of other countries.

 

Fulbright alumni have become heads of state, judges, ambassadors, cabinet ministers, CEOs, university presidents, journalists, artists, professors and teachers. They have been awarded 43 Nobel Prizes. Since its inception more than 60 years ago, approximately 300,000 Fulbrighters have participated in the Program.

 

Hill teaches a range of courses in social ethics, including Christian Ethics, Religion and Environmental Ethics, Constructive Global Ethics, and Faith and Ethical Leadership. He has also team-taught the department’s Senior Seminar in Religion, as well as Ethics, Spirituality and the Scottish Heritage in TCU’s International Studies program. His core introductory course surveys aspects of religious traditions in Africa, Oceania, Asia and the Middle East.

 

Hill has an M.T.S. from Harvard University, and an M.A. and Ph.D. in Religion from Vanderbilt University, with a concentration in Philosophical and Theological Ethics, and a collateral discipline in Sociology of Religion. Before arriving at TCU, he taught ethics and phenomenology of religion at the Pacific Theological College in Fiji and was Visiting Professor of Ethics at the University of Durban-Westville in South Africa.

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