Anna-Teresa Tymieniecka-Zaremba
Philosopher, scholar
Born Marianowo, Poland; came to U.S., 1954; daughter of Wladyslaw Zaremba - Tymieniecki and Maria - Ludwika (de Lanval); married Hendrik Houthakker; children: Louis, Isabel, Jan.
Education: Jagiellonian University, Cracow (Poland), 1946; Master of Arts (M.A.), Sorbonne, Paris (France), 1951; Ph.D., University of Fribourg (Switzerland), 1952.
Career: teaching assistant, University of California, Berkeley, 1954-55; postdoctoral research fellow, Yale University, New Haven (CT), 1955-57; assistant prof., Penn State University (PA), 1957-58; lecturer, Bryn Mawr College (PA), 1958-59; associate scholar, Radcliffe Institute for Independent Studies, 1960-62; prof., Duquesne University, Pittsburgh (PA), University of Waterloo, St. John's University, New York City; founder and president, World Phenomenology Institute, Belmont (MA).
Author: 11 books and monographs; co-author, editor, 45 books; numerous articles in professional journals; founder, editor-in-chief, Analecta Husserliana (book series), Phenomenological Inquiry Review.
Member of: steering committee member, International Federation of Philosophy Societies; founder, program director, International Society of Phenomenology and Literature, since 1975, and International Society of Phenomenology and Human Sciences, since 1976; academic programs director, World Institute for Advanced Phenomenological Research and Learning, Belmont, since 1975; director, Boston Forum for the Interdisciplinary Phenomenology of Man and the Human Condition, since 1975.
Honors: secretary general, International Husserl and Phenomenological Research Society, since 1968; honorary member, Peruvian Philosophical Society, 1986; honorary prof., Universidad Femenina del Sagrado Corazon, Lima (Peru), 1986.
Affiliation: Roman Catholic.
Languages: Polish, English, French, German, Italian, Spanish.
Hobbies: art, gardening, socio-political affairs.
Home: 348 Payson Road, Belmont, MA 02178.
From: "Who's Who in Polish America" 1st Edition 1996-1997, Boleslaw Wierzbianski editor; Bicentennial Publishing Corporation, New York, NY, 1996.