Alexander Pruss first lived in Poland, but emigrated to Canada. He earned a Ph.D. in mathematics at the
University of British Columbia with a dissertation on
Symmetrization, Green’s Functions, Harmonic Measures and Difference Equations, under John J. F. Fournier in 1996, and published several papers in
Proceedings of the American Mathematical Society and other mathematical journals. Afterwards, he began graduate work in philosophy at the
University of Pittsburgh. He completed his dissertation,
Possible Worlds: What They Are and What They Are Good For, under
Nicholas Rescher in 2001. Pruss began teaching philosophy at
Georgetown University in 2001, earning tenure in 2006. In 2007, he began to teach philosophy at
Baylor University. He is now the director of graduate studies for the Baylor Philosophy Department. He has taught various courses, including graduate seminars on the
philosophy of time,
metaphysics, the
cosmological and
ontological arguments for the
existence of God,
modality,
free will, and
history of philosophy. == Work ==