Bob Sandmeyer  
Dossier Curriculum Vitae

DOSSIER: Research Materials (10% distribution of effort) © 2023
https://www.uky.edu/~rsand1/dossier/research

Statement of Promotion and Tenure Expectations: STS Appointments1
       As the DOE of STS faculty will not normally emphasize research but rather teaching or service, the department does not expect that faculty member will have a publication record like that of a Regular-Title Series colleague going up for promotion. The expectations will be commensurate with the effort represented by the DOE over the course of the probationary period. The department does expect, however, that the Special-Title Series faculty member will be able to show a commitment to philosophical or pedagogical research in the form of conference and workshop presentations and publications in journals as well as books. This achievement will be primarily demonstrated by (1) external letters of assessment solicited by the unit from leading authorities in the relevant field(s) and (2) the quality, quantity and regularity of the candidate's presentations and publications (already appeared or accepted for publication).
       Faculty must demonstrate that they have established an independent research agenda and show evidence of a sustainable long-term commitment to scholarly research and publication. The department also expects successful candidates to have moved beyond the specific research they conducted in their Ph.D. dissertations (as evidenced by the contents of publications and presentations).

  1. RESEARCH STATEMENT
  2. BOOK
    1. Sandmeyer, Bob. Husserl's Constitutive Phenomenology: Its Problem and Promise. New York: Routledge, 2009.
  3. ARTICLES
    1. Sandmeyer, Bob. "The Idea of an Existential Ecology." In Place and Phenomenology, edited by Janet Donohoe, 39-55. London: Rowman & Littlefield, 2017.
    2. Sandmeyer, Robert. "Life and Spirit in Max Scheler's Philosophy." Philosophy Compass 7, no. 1 (January 2012): 23-32.
  4. REVIEWS
    1. Sandmeyer, Bob. Review of Ecological Investigations: A Phenomenology of Habitats, by Adam Konopka. Husserl Studies 37. (2021): 193-99.
    2. Sandmeyer, Bob. Review of Husserl's Transcendental Phenomenology: Nature, Spirit, and Life, by Andrea Staiti. Journal of the History of Philosophy 54, no. 2. (April 2016): 345-46.
    3. Sandmeyer, Bob. Review of Aldo Leopold. A Sand County Almanac and Other Writings on Ecology and Conservation, edited by Curt Meine. Environmental Philosophy 11, no. 1. (2014): 138-40
    4. Sandmeyer, Bob. Review of Edmund Husserl's Freiburg Years, 1916–1938, by J. N. Mohanty. Husserl Studies 30. (2014): 71-76.
  5. PRESENTATIONS
    1. Sandmeyer, Bob. "A Contemporaneous Criticism of Husserl's 1928 Time Lectures." Society for Phenomenology and Existential Philosophy (October 2021)
    2. Sandmeyer, Bob. "Oskar Kraus' Criticism of Husserl's Vorlesungen zur Phänomenologie des inneren Zeitbewußtseins." North American Society for Early Phenomenology (May 2019)
    3. Sandmeyer, Bob. "The Animal in the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals." Living with Animals (March 2019)
    4. Sandmeyer, Bob. "Philosophy in an Interdisciplinary Key." Kentucky Philosophical Association (March 2019)
    5. Sandmeyer, Bob and Turner, Helen. "The University of Kentucky Sustain – able Pedagogies Faculty Workshop: An Overview." Association for the Advancement of Sustainability in Higher Education (October 2018)
    6. Sandmeyer, Bob. "Sustainability & Philosophy." Invited Speaker, Symposium on Emerging Technologies and Sustainability: Interactions Between Science and Society. University of Kentucky (Dec 2017)
    7. Sandmeyer, Bob. "An Ecological Understanding of Transcendental Subjectivity." International Association for Environmental Philosophy (October 2017)
  6. COMMENTARIES
    1. Sandmeyer, Bob. "Commentary on James Hart's 'Some Moments of Wonder Emergent Within Transcendental Phenomenological Analyses.'" Husserl Circle (May/June 2022)
    2. Sandmeyer, Bob. "Commentary on Simon Gurofsky's 'Kant's Principle of Significance.'" Kentucky Philosophical Association (April 2018)

© Bob Sandmeyer