Author
Carrie Jenkins
Carrie Jenkins is a philosopher of love and epistemology. She has held posts in the UK and Canada and is Professor of Philosophy at the University of British Columbia. Jenkins is best known for arguing that romantic love has both biological and social dimensions, a position that challenges views which treat love as purely cultural or purely natural. She has also been a prominent academic voice in discussions of polyamory and relationship norms.
Her recent work brings philosophy together with memoir and poetry. In What Love Is: And What It Could Be, she combines analytic argument with personal experience to rethink the nature of romantic attachment, and she continues to write on love, self-knowledge, and the role of imagination in intimate life.
Carrie Jenkins is a philosopher of love and epistemology. She has held posts in the UK and Canada and is Professor of Philosophy at the University of British Columbia. Jenkins is best known for arguing that romantic love has both biological and social dimensions, a position that challenges views which treat love as purely cultural or purely natural. She has also been a prominent academic voice in discussions of polyamory and relationship norms.
Her recent work brings philosophy together with memoir and poetry. In What Love Is: And What It Could Be, she combines analytic argument with personal experience to rethink the nature of romantic attachment, and she continues to write on love, self-knowledge, and the role of imagination in intimate life.