Professor Hoy, who was emeritus at the University of California at Santa Cruz, was a leading expert on 20th-century Continental philosophy, including hermeneutics, critical theory, and post-structuralism. He started his career teaching at Princeton University in the 1970s. Comments are open for remembrances from those who knew Professor Hoy or for those who would like to comment on the significance of his work.
Philosopher Paul Roth at UCSC kindly shared this obituary, prepared in consultation with the family:
David Hoy, Distinguished Professor, Emeritus in the Department of Philosophy at UC-Santa Cruz passed away in Phoenix on January 13, 2026, after a long illness. He is survived by his wife and former colleague of over 55 years, Jocelyn Hoy and their daughter, Meredith Hoy.
Born in 1944 in Lockhaven, PA, David graduated from Yale in 1965. He continued on in graduate studies at Yale, receiving his PhD in Philosophy there in 1972. David began his academic career at Princeton prior to joining the UCSC Philosophy Department in 1981. Illness forced him into premature retirement in 2008.
David enjoyed a stellar academic career. He had a world-renowned reputation as a scholar in Continental philosophy and critical theory. The UCSC campus acknowledged his scholarly productivity and international stature by according him its highest scholarly rank—Distinguished Professor. David also was awarded a prestigious UC Presidential Chair (2000-2003). The description of the Presidential Chair states that they “are intended to encourage new or interdisciplinary program development or to enhance quality in existing academic programs of the University.” This nicely pinpoints who David was as a thinker and a person—someone who gave unstintingly of his time to bring a range of scholars together.
Apropos of that, certainly one of David’s most remarkable and enduring legacies consists in the nine NEH Summer Institutes that he directed or co-directed (often with the late Burt Dreyfus) between 1983 and 2002. While programs such as these have largely become relics of the past, they represented extraordinary opportunities for those fortunate enough to have been among the participants. That David gave of his time to organize and host what surely must be an NEH record number of these Institutes provides eloquent testimony to David’s commitment to the field both as an academic and an individual. From a scholarly standpoint, David was extra-ordinarily open and inquisitive. One of the memorable Summer Institutes that he and Dreyfus organized explored intersections in the thought of Heidegger and Davidson! Though more common now, it was then a major innovation to make a study of major philosophers from two profoundly different philosophical traditions. David helped pioneer efforts to bridge the imagined divide between Continental and Analytic philosophy. From a collegial perspective, his willingness to repeatedly invest the considerable time and energy demanded in order to orchestrate these gatherings was indicative of his love of the profession.
His prodigious publication output of books and articles notwithstanding, David somehow also found the wherewithal to serve for over nine years as Chair of the Philosophy Department. His contributions however to the campus community did not stop there. David also compiled an extraordinary record of service to UCSC above the departmental level, including serving as Associate Dean of the Humanities, Acting Dean of the Humanities, as well as an unbroken record of 20+ years of participation (many of them as chair) on numerous committees of the Academic Senate, including key committees such as Academic Personnel and Budget and Planning. Finally, beginning with the creation of the department’s PhD program in 2002, he advised a great majority of the graduate students for the first few years of that program. Indeed, David was the primary reason students came to the graduate program for the first several years of its existence. Along the way, he managed to garner as well an award for excellence in undergraduate teaching.
David was never “too busy” to help, regardless of whether the assistance was needed at the academic, institutional, collegial, or personal level. He personified a truly unique and rare generosity of spirit and intellectual openness. His many friends from around the US and across the world mourn his passing.




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