"[5] There she lived alongside fellow house members Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak, Clare Selgin Wolfowitz, and Paul Wolfowitz, as well as in-house faculty members that included the 4th United States Secretary of Labor Frances Perkins and the British philosopher Paul Grice.
[6] She has since taught Telluride Association Summer Program (TASP) seminars at Deep Springs College and the Cornell branch.
And on this occasion she was addressing the whole faculty of the Harvard philosophy department about why the graduate students wanted to form a union.
[4] In a review of The Practice of Moral Judgment, Kant scholar Paul Guyer writes of Herman's work: Herman succeeds in presenting an interpretation of Kant's ethics that shows it to be a powerful alternative to the empiricist utilitarian, neo-Aristotelian virtue ethics, and the post-modernist individualist or existentialist ethical theories which have enjoyed such prominence in recent years ... What [Herman] has given us is a deeply compelling picture of both the structure and power of Kant's regulative ideal of moral deliberation, and that is much to be grateful for indeed.
[10]And on her collection of essays entitled Moral Literacy, philosopher Stephen Darwall writes: Rawls pointed out that it was one of Hegel's aims to overcome the many dualisms that he thought disfigured Kant's transcendental idealism.
[11]To which legal theorist Lawrence Solum adds on his blog: In my opinion, Herman's recent work represents the very best of contemporary moral philosophy in the tradition of Kant--only a handful of scholars combine her deep appreciation of Kant, philosophical rigor, and genuine intellectual flexibility.
"[12]In 2014 Herman delivered the Dewey Lectureship in Jurisprudence at the University of Chicago Law School entitled "The Moral Side of Non-Negligence.