Rupert D. V. Glasgow (born 1964 in Sheffield, England) is an institutionally independent translator, philosopher and writer.
Glasgow studied French and German at St. John's College, Oxford, UK.
Glasgow's writings concern the history of ideas, including comedy,[3][4] laughter, the mind, as well as the concepts of water and of self.
Glasgow taught philosophy courses on 'The Phylogeny of the Self' to biologists at the Leibniz Institute for Neurobiology, Magdeburg,[5] and the University of Würzburg, Germany, and received a PhD for a thesis on this topic from the Graduate School of Humanities at the Julius-Maximilians University of Würzburg, Germany, under the supervision of Roland Borgards, Karl Mertens, and Martin Heisenberg.
[6] Upon invitation, Glasgow presented his work to the German Science Foundation Research Training Group Emotions at the Julius-Maximilians Universität Würzburg, Germany (2008),[7] at the Centre for Genomic Regulation, Barcelona, Spain (2012),[8] as well as at the Minibrains conference of the European Science Foundation/ European Molecular Biology Organization (2014).