NEW YORK, NY.- Philosopher Kwame Anthony Appiah is this years winner of the John W. Kluge Prize for Achievement in the Study of Humanity, a $500,000 prize awarded by the Library of Congress recognizing work in disciplines not covered by the Nobel Prizes.
Appiah, a professor of philosophy and law at New York University, is an author of more than a dozen books and is known for scholarly contributions to philosophy relating to ethics, language, nationality and race. His books include In My Fathers House: Africa in the Philosophy of Culture (1992) and The Honor Code: How Moral Revolutions Happen (2010).
He is also, as The Ethicist, the columnist for The New York Times Magazine who responds to reader-submitted moral dilemmas and interpersonal arguments with ethical frameworks. Recent columns have responded to a reader who wrote a novel inspired by an adulterous friend and another who wanted straight women to stop calling their friends girlfriends.
In a statement, Carla Hayden, the librarian of Congress, called Appiahs philosophical work elegant, groundbreaking and highly respected. Timothy Frye, a Columbia University professor and a member of the Librarys Scholars Council, praised Appiahs moving effortlessly between academic and public discourse on subjects including privilege and power.
His academic work is rooted in philosophy, but the range of topics that he has addressed in his research and public writing is astonishing, Frye said.
Appiah, 70, said in an interview that the variety was thanks to figures like his longtime friend and scholar Henry Louis Gates Jr. as well as British philosopher Dorothy Emmet, who encouraged him to apply his analytic philosophy to whatever interested him.
Being trained in philosophy has helped me to answer these questions, but theyre not philosophers questions, he said. Theyre questions anybody might have thinking about their lives.
The Kluge Prize has recently gone to political theorist Danielle Allen and historians George Chauncey and Drew Gilpin Faust. It is given to those whose scholarship has impact inside and outside of academia.
In addition to the monetary award, the library will develop programming on the theme of Thinking Together to display Appiahs work for the public.
This article originally appeared in
The New York Times.