Mario D’Amato completed his Ph.D. at the University of Chicago (2000), where he studied the philosophy of religion, with a special emphasis on Buddhist philosophy. His primary research has been focused on the translation and interpretation of Sanskrit Buddhist doctrinal texts from the Yogācāra school, a school notable for having developed a Buddhist conception of the “unconscious.” D’Amato published a study and annotated translation of the fourth century CE Buddhist treatise, Distinguishing the Middle from the Extremes (Columbia, 2012), the co-edited volume Pointing at the Moon: Buddhism, Logic, Analytic Philosophy (Oxford, 2009), as well as a number of articles on Buddhist thought in various journals and edited volumes. D’Amato’s continuing research aims to engage Buddhist thought in relation to Hegel, semiotics, and especially psychoanalysis.

Education

Doctoral

2000 – Present

Philosophy of Religion

University of Chicago, Divinity School

Experience

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2020 – Present

Courses taught

Independent Study in Psychoanalysis

Independent Study in Psychoanalysis

75h

Figures in Psychoanalysis

Figures in Psychoanalysis

Topics in Psychoanalysis

Topics in Psychoanalysis

75h

The Jungian Tradition: Symbols and Synchronicity

The Jungian Tradition: Symbols and Synchronicity

75h

Psychoanalysis and Eastern Philosophies

Psychoanalysis and Eastern Philosophies

75h

Psychoanalysis and Religion

Psychoanalysis and Religion

75h

Desire and Its Interpretations

Desire and Its Interpretations

75h

Introduction to Psychoanalysis

Introduction to Psychoanalysis

75h