Education
Manhattanville College. Fordham University.
Manhattanville College. Fordham University.
She was best known as a scholar of the history of philosophy, and was associated especially with Augustine of Hippo. Much of her life was subsequently spent at the college where she taught philosophy. A Chair of Christian Philosophy at the College, from which she retired in 2011, bears her name.
She served as the President of the American Catholic Philosophical Association in 1977, of the Metaphysical Society of America, and of the Society for Medieval and Renaissance Philosophy.
Clark served on the Executive Committee of the Eastern Division of the American Philosophical Association, and towards the end of her life as a visiting academic at Ralston College. Over the years, she also taught as a visiting professor at San Francico, Fordham, Villanova, Fairfield, and Marquette universities.
During the 1960s she led the Social Action Secretariat of the National Federation of Catholic College Students, which "initiated action, created literature, and hosted events during the civil rights era". She is not buried at the Parish of the Ascension Burial Ground in Cambridge.
Sister Mary Clark died on September 1, 2014, aged 100.
Clark was among the original Editorial Advisors of the scholarly journal Dionysius, to which she contributed a discussion of the relevance of Augustine"s theology of the Trinity, and was in addition a member of the Board of Editorial Consultants of the Personalist Forum.