This site exists to preserve the teachings of Dr. Rick Roderick. The lectures are transcribed, annotated and accompanied by embedded youtube videos and download links. Feel free to report any errors in the comments; no registrations, signups or robot checks are required.
Rick Roderick was born in Abilene, Texas on June 16, 1949, and received his bachelor’s degree at University of Texas, Austin, Texas. He did post-graduate work at Baylor University, and earned his Ph. D. at University of Texas, Austin, Texas. From 1977 to 1978, he was the editor of the Baylor Philosophy Journal, and from 1977 to 1979 he was a member of the Phi Sigma Tau National Honor Society of Philosophy. He was the recipient of the Oldright Fellowship at the University of Texas and served as associate editor to The Pawn Review, and Current Perspectives in Social Theory. He was the undergraduate director of the Duke Marxism and Society Program. He is the author of the book Habermas and the Foundation of Critical Theory (1986), as well as numerous articles in professional journals. He has presented over 24 papers, and published 13 reviews and literary criticisms. From 1977 to 1993, he taught Philosophy, first at Baylor, then University of Texas and then at Duke University.
His areas of specialization were Marx and Marxism, Social and Political philosophy, Critical Theory (Habermas and the Frankfurt School), 19th Century Philosophy, and Contemporary Continental Philosophy. He also taught Ethics, Logic, History of Modern Philosophy, Aesthetics and Existentialism.
He was a four-time nominee for the Alumni Undergraduate Distinguished Professor Teaching Award and has been recognized by the Smithsonian Institute as the best teacher in his field. His “The Philosophy of Human Values” lecture series has been the best selling videotape in the history of academia. He has been published in five countries. His “Habermas and the Foundations of Critical Theory” is an internationally recognized standard in the field. His work has been studied and reviewed worldwide–India, China, Denmark, Germany, etc.
Rick was controversially denied tenure at Duke University in 1993. Very little is known about the circumstances or what happened next. He died on January 18, 2002 of congestive heart failure.
I hope you enjoy these lectures as much as I do… I have listened to them countless times. As the years go by they only become more poignant and eerily prophetic. Bear in mind that the internet and smart phones did not exist when these lectures were recorded.
Rick Roderick Interviewed by Anne Buttimer (1987)
Guidebook: Philosophy and Human Values (1990)
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Lecture One: Socrates and the Life of Inquiry
Lecture Two: Epicureans, Stoics, Skeptics
Lecture Three: Kant and the Path to Enlightenment
Lecture Four: Mill on Liberty
Lecture Five: Hegel and Modern Life
Lecture Six: Nietzsche: Knowledge and Belief
Lecture Seven: Kierkegaard and the Contemporary Spirit
Lecture Eight: Philosophy and Postmodern Culture
Guidebook: Nietzsche and the Postmodern Condition (1991)
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Lecture One: Nietzsche as Myth and Mythmaker
Lecture Two: Nietzsche on Truth and Lie
Lecture Three: Nietzsche as Master of Suspicion and Immoralist
Lecture Four: The Death of God
Lecture Five: The Eternal Recurrence
Lecture Six: The Will to Power
Lecture Seven: Nietzsche as Artist
Lecture Eight: Nietzsche’s Progeny
Guidebook: The Self Under Siege – Philosophy in the 20th Century (1993)
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Lecture One: The Masters of Suspicion
Lecture Two: Heidegger and the Rejection of Humanism
Lecture Three: Sartre and the Roads to Freedom
Lecture Four: Marcuse and One-Dimensional Man
Lecture Five: Habermas and the Fragile Dignity of Humanity
Lecture Six: Foucault and the Disappearance of the Human
Lecture Seven: Derrida and the Ends of Man
Lecture Eight: Fatal Strategies
my contribution!
http://popdepression.bandcamp.com/track/ilija-ludvig-another-day-full-of-dread
thanx
il
nice, i like it… there’s a few other rick roderick music projects around the place. check out “dub roderick” on youtube, thats pretty good too http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BFeNkM5i20A
well, could use some editing, not just to put two tracks…
Hopefully one day melodysheep will get his hands on rick!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zSgiXGELjbc
anyway
thanks
and
adios
il
Mr. Roderick,
My son studies Sociology at Occidental College in Los Angeles, CA. When he takes time off he comes back to us, his parents, in San Diego, CA. We spend time watching your lectures in You Tube. Do you give lectures in Southern California? We would love to attend if you do so.
Congratulations.
The Alba family
To the writer; you do realize Mr Roderick died in 2002?
He was an interesting and complex fellow!
I was just mesmerized by these lectures. I just stumbled into them on you tube. I was born in 1949. His death was a real loss. Thank God he recorded his lectures for future generations. Wonder how he died?
He died of congestive heart failure.
Hello, I was wondering if anyone could direct me towads Roderick’s PhD dissertation. Where can we read this==??
Rick’s interpretation of Nietzsche’s Eternal Recurrence is sublime. Many thanks. J
Enter your comments here…hello to the Roderick clan i found this web page by default
I am on a spirtual path and feel there is a reason why I come here
I will look at ricks work and see what it’s all about and why I stumbled across it
God bless all of you
One of Rodericks quotes I love the most,
“The death of God is about a drying up of a horizon of meaning…”
It´s up to us to create what gives meaning to life.
Rest in peace brother. You are greatly missed 🙁 🙁
Wow… talk about immortality. I just discovered a great man today and I wanted to tell him, one Texan to another, that his lectures are amazing, his humor sublime. Alas, I am 12 years too late… but, it is almost fitting, after his last remarks on Heidegger (lecture 2 in Self Under Siege) he says, “…but for now that’s all except be sure and fear death. I mean, that’s important to being human. Fear death and realise that even if you don’t smoke, and even if you jog, you are still going to die, and that should come as a great relief to all of you.”
About Dr. Roderick: From following his lectures the following: I like his style. I like the fact that he puts humor into what he says and I like the fact that he says what he wants to say without ambiguity.
I really wish I could have met him and studied him a bit more (through latter works, had he lived longer)It is a pity that he died at such a young age, but alas, I agree with Frank, no one knows the time or date, but that death comes for us all is sure. And here I also admire his honesty, few philosophers acknowledge the terrible specter of death.
Omar Fourie
Rick Roderick needs a twitter page with quotes from his lectures. It’s a way to keep his memory and words alive every single day.
sounds good can you do it
@thenonperson on twitter posts Roderick quotes and related material.
The YouTube videos of Rick’s lectures are fantastic, and sadly I’m just discovering them. I’m going to a country that blocks youtube.com, however, and thus I’m going to lose access to Rick’s wonderful video lecture series, as it is blocked in that country). I wonder if anyone knows of a hidden place where I can find the videos (other than youtube)? I couldn’t even find a dvd for sale on amazon (audio casettes only, and who has an audio player these days?).
Thanks,
Hi Mark,
There are download links for the videos at the top of each page. They are preceded by the word “Download:”, so just search for that on any of the lecture pages if you can’t see it.
Chris
I found photos of Rick in the 1989 and 1993 Duke University yearbooks. If you want to post them here please give me an email address and I will send them to you.
I am late to this party but very enthused!
Sounds great Patrick – send them through to ctrlshift at gmail dot com
I have only ever seen the same two photos floating around, might be good to mix it up.
I might be starting a B.A. Honours degree in Philosophy in 2015. I’ll take a look through the website also, but are there any possible subjects with Dr. Roderick in mind that I can explore for a mini-dissertation? Perhaps something biographical (about his life), or thematic (some of the subject matter he intended to be expounded on). Thanks! Omar Fourie.
Hi Omar,
His favourite topic was Habermas, I think some fun could be had analysing how close social media (especially twitter) gets us to “undistorted communication”. I wonder occasionally what Rick would have thought about it.
Chris
A brilliant series of lectures. I loved the detailed presentation of the works of Nietzsche. Hardly anyone appreciates his works with a positive, non-nihilistic approach that also offers in a way, a critique of postmodernism. i’m so glad that such lecture series are put up online.
As a conservtive Catholic I love to hear and intellient articulate compelling challenge to my belief system. Guys like Rick stop us from becoming smug and lazy.
Great series of lectures!!
Lecture One: The Masters of Suspicion directs me back here.
I was introduced to Dr. Rocderick in a Contemporary Sociological Theory Course. This guy is fantastic! I wish I had known him, studied under him. Thanks to whomever has put this sight together and keep his lecutures available. I was searching for more helpful lectures on Mill and Utilitarianism. I am glad to find Dr. R again. I will be back.
Thank you,
Student at present at Columbia College of Missouri.
one more comment, having read Dr. R’s academic background, he may have been at UT while I was a meandering philosophy major at Texas A&M. Or he may have already graduated……..the point is , he was in Texas when I was, and somehow that connects me more to his spirit. Sappy? No, I am just very sentimental about where I have been and where I am now. Because of being exposed to his works and to another’s, and my current professors, I chose to take my major studies in sociology (theory and practical application) and history.
Some more info on Rick can be found at tinyurl.com/jzcv562.
I have only 4 more of the lectures to view (for the first, but not last, time). What a gift! Thank you, Rick, and, ctrlshift.
Hi, I am trying to contact Rick’s son Marshall. I just finished a massive poster project in philosophy and probably could not have pulled it off without Rick. He was truly a modern Socratic figure committed to truth and humility. My question is simple and straightforward. As someone who knew him intimately; how do I deal with a world like this? Can you offer any advice? On a regular basis now I wake in the morning convinced I am Alice with big black hair and a big red dress; I’ve fallen down the rabbit hole; and it’s the mad hatter over there and the smiling cat over there and talking furniture over there …. you get the point. All our political candidates are characters out of a South Park cartoon. How does one find some kind of engagement yet also some kind of detached concern? I am experimenting with imagery work and mythologies just to sort of get through the day … but it occurred to me to ask you. He really was extraordinary.