Eliana Luxemburg-Peck (formerly Peck) is a doctoral candidate in Philosophy at the Graduate Center, CUNY. Her research areas include ethics, feminist philosophy and social epistemology, and critical philosophy of race; she is especially interested in responses to complex forms of wrongdoing, such as collectively-perpetrated wrongs, structural injustices, and wrongs perpetrated in ignorance. Eliana is currently writing a dissertation on complicity, supervised by Dr. Miranda Fricker. Her work has been published in Metaphilosophy (2017; with Ellen K. Feder) and Critical Philosophy of Race (2021). Eliana has engaged in substantial departmental se…
Eliana Luxemburg-Peck (formerly Peck) is a doctoral candidate in Philosophy at the Graduate Center, CUNY. Her research areas include ethics, feminist philosophy and social epistemology, and critical philosophy of race; she is especially interested in responses to complex forms of wrongdoing, such as collectively-perpetrated wrongs, structural injustices, and wrongs perpetrated in ignorance. Eliana is currently writing a dissertation on complicity, supervised by Dr. Miranda Fricker. Her work has been published in Metaphilosophy (2017; with Ellen K. Feder) and Critical Philosophy of Race (2021). Eliana has engaged in substantial departmental service, having served on the Student Steering Committee, the Admissions Committee, and with Minorities and Philosophy (MAP). She is passionate about inclusive undergraduate teaching and will soon be teaching her ninth independent course at Baruch College; she also serves as a Writing Across the Curriculum Fellow at Lehman College, where she collaborates with faculty to develop practices of justice-oriented pedagogy. Eliana holds a B.A. in Philosophy from American University (university honors, summa cum laude, Phi Beta Kappa) and an M.A. in Philosophy from Vanderbilt University.