Summer Seminar
"If you love philosophy, the Colorado Summer Seminar is the best place to spend your summer." -- Carrie Ciecierski (2023 seminar)
2025 Colorado Summer Seminar in Philosophy
Topic: To Be Determined
June 8th through 27th, 2025: ºù«ÍÞÊÓƵ, Colorado
Participants in the 2023 Summer Seminar
"If you love philosophy, the Colorado Summer Seminar is the best place to spend your summer. Whether you’re entirely decided or entirely undecided about your grad school plans, you will learn valuable things about philosophy as a profession and a discipline. Our weekdays included a three-hour class session each morning and a presentation or Q&A session most afternoons. The class sessions are on a variety of topics (like population ethics, value pluralism, and belief formation, to name a few from 2023) and are given by incredibly brilliant and kind professors at CU. The schedule is very manageable, especially if you complete the readings before arriving, so you really get to immerse yourself in the content instead of worrying about assessments or deadlines. Another thing this freedom affords is time to explore Colorado! For example: on the weekends, we went on group hikes (often led by Dr. Boonin), played Mario Kart, explored downtown by bike, went bowling, and a few of us even took a day trip to Rocky Mountain National Park! Perhaps best of all, you’ll make friends who will challenge and inspire you."
Carrie Ciecierski (2023 seminar)
Undergraduate at the University of Michigan
For additional feedback from 2023 seminar participants, click here
Mountain hike with 2022 participants
“This summer seminar was a wonderful experience. I gained invaluable insight into the application process for graduate school and what it is like being a graduate student and being a philosophy professor. Along with that, coming from a smaller institution, it was a unique opportunity to gain exposure into some philosophical areas that I would not usually have access to. The speakers were engaging and promoted fascinating discussion that extended outside of the classroom. The teaching aside, ºù«ÍÞÊÓƵ is a beautiful place, with breathtaking views of the mountains everywhere you look. It was great to be able to explore all that the city had to offer. Lastly, my favourite part of the seminar was the friends I made there. I learned a lot from them and had a great time joking around and getting to know everyone. They are awesome individuals, and I am eternally grateful that I was given the opportunity to meet each and every one of them. David Boonin was amazing and helpful with everything. You couldn’t ask for a better Director. If you are passionate about philosophy, I would highly recommend applying to partake in this life-changing experience!â€
Luke Umar-Khitab (2022 seminar)
Undergraduate at University of New Brunswick
Students getting a bit punchy on the last day of the 2021 Colorado Summer Seminar in Philosophy while talking about Plato with Professors Mitzi Lee and Summer Seminar Director David Boonin.
“As my time to apply to graduate school gets closer, the more I realize how meaningful and useful the 2021 summer seminar was. I learned a lot about doing philosophy, being a philosopher, and topics that interest me. All while making friends along the way. The seminar was extremely helpful for my professional development and my ongoing philosophical projects. Getting to hear both students and faculty from other institutions share their perspectives on philosophy and graduate school has allowed me to make more informed decisions about the profession. But above all, I think the attention we received from both the Colorado faculty and the guest speakers was what made this experience unlike any other. Everyone engaged with us and our interests so profoundly that they made me feel extremely welcome at ºù«ÍÞÊÓƵ even though I never set a foot on campus.â€
Jaime Fernandez (2021 seminar)
Undergraduate at NYU Abu Dhabi
For additional feedback from 2021 seminar participants, click here
Peter Singer discussing animal ethics, effective altruism, utilitarianism, and more with Summer Seminar Director David Boonin and the participants in the 2020 Summer Seminar.
“I absolutely loved being a part of this seminar. Despite being online due to COVID-19, our lectures and discussions were engaging. I got to meet and converse with several philosophers that I never expected to be able to engage with. This was a major silver lining to the online format. I keep in touch with my fellow seminarians and we share syllabi and book recommendations! I would highly recommend this program!!â€
Cyd Funk (2020 seminar)
Undergraduate at Westminster College
For additional feedback from 2020 seminar participants, click here
View from the front of the seminar table during the 2019 Summer Seminar
For feedback from 2019 seminar participants and participants from earlier years, click here.
The Colorado Summer Seminar in Philosophy
The Colorado Summer Seminar in Philosophy is intended for outstanding advanced undergraduates who are considering graduate school in philosophy. The aim is to introduce students to the atmosphere of a graduate-level seminar, giving them a chance to explore their philosophical abilities and interests before they commit to a graduate program. The seminar is team taught by ten or more faculty members and class sessions are supplemented by a variety of extracurricular events, including talks on additional subjects and workshops on such topics as women in philosophy and how to apply to graduate school.
The seminar will take place on the campus of the ºù«ÍÞÊÓƵ. Located at the eastern edge of the Rocky Mountains, 25 miles northwest of Denver, ºù«ÍÞÊÓƵ is one of the most attractive college settings in the country. Participants will be encouraged to explore the city of ºù«ÍÞÊÓƵ and the nearby mountains. A number of hikes and weekend outings will also be organized.
In addition to offering the experience of a graduate seminar, we hope participants will benefit from meeting other students with similar interests and from interacting with prominent faculty in the field. Seminars in previous summers have attracted students from all over the country and abroad. All kinds of institutions have been represented, from various regional schools to prestigious liberal arts colleges to major research universities. We especially encourage applications from students who do not have the opportunity to take high-level philosophy courses at their own institution, students coming from institutions where philosophy has a relatively modest presence, and students who are members of groups that have traditionally been underrepresented in philosophy.
Enrollment will be limited to 20 students. The course will be highly intensive, meeting five times a week for three weeks, for three hours a day. The readings will be philosophically sophisticated, and students will be expected to participate extensively. Applicants should have done substantial work in philosophy, including exposure to contemporary analytic methods. Priority will be given to students who have not yet applied to graduate programs.
View from the front of the seminar table during the 2017 Summer Seminar
Hiking in the foothills near the CU campus with the 2016 summer seminar participants
Past Seminars
Some topics and syllabi from seminars past:
- 2023: Norms and Values
- 2022: Parts and Wholes
- 2021: Ethics Meets Epistemology
- 2020: Agreement, Disagreement, and Uncertainty
- 2019: Freedom
- 2018: Paradoxes and Puzzles
- 2017:
- 2016:
- 2015:
- 2013: Justice
- 2012: The Limits of Knowledge
- 2011: Will and Desire
- 2010: Applied Philosophy
- 2009: Identity
- 2008: Big Ideas from the History of Philosophy
- 2007: Science
- 2006: Value
- 2005: God
- 2004: Reasons and Persons
- 2003: From Perception to Conception
- 2002: Moral Psychology
- 2001: Mind over Matter: Dualism and Nonreductive Materialism
- 2000: Universals
Registration, Housing, and Meal Plan
Registration: $850
Housing: approximately $750 (shared double) to $900 (single)
Meal Plan: $340 (covers 40 meals)
If the seminar takes place remotely, the only charge will be for registration and it will remain at $850. Students should consult their own institutions about the possibility of financial support; many students in past years have found their own departments willing to contribute to the costs of the program.
Participants in the 2016 Colorado Summer Seminar in Philosophy
Applications
There is no application form.
Applicants should provide the following:
- A cover letter including your name, mailing address, email address, and an account of who you are and why you are interested in the program.
- A letter of recommendation from someone who has taught you philosophy. The letter should address the quality of your contributions to class discussion and your ability to interact respectfully and productively with other students as well as the quality of your written work for the class.
- A copy of your college transcript. (An unofficial copy is fine.)
- A writing sample that demonstrates your philosophical abilities. (Ordinarily, it should a paper written for a philosophy class.)
Applicants should send the cover letter, transcript and essay in pdf or Word format to the Director of the Seminar, David Boonin, at david.boonin@colorado.edu and should have the person writing their letter of recommendation send their letter directly to this address. It is the applicant’s responsibility to confirm that the letter writer has submitted their letter.
Review of applications will begin on March 1, 2024 and continue until all available positions are filled.
For more information, direct queries to david.boonin@colorado.edu.
To learn more about Philosophy at CU ºù«ÍÞÊÓƵ, go to our .
Picnic at the ºù«ÍÞÊÓƵ Farmer’s Market, a short walk from the CU campus, with the 2016 summer seminar participants
Feedback from Former Participants
Bowling on the CU campus with the 2016 summer seminar participants.