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News Archive
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Academic Year 2007-2008:
May, 2008:
Der Spiegel Online published an essay by Sandy Mitchell on the ideas developed in her new book, Komplexitäten: Warum wir erst anfangen, die Welt zu verstehen. See announcement here.
March, 2008:
Sandy Mitchell's new book on understanding complexity will be published in March, 2008 by the German publisher Suhrkampf. The title is Komplexitäten: Warum wir erst anfangen, die Welt zu verstehen. More information here.
January, 2008:
John Earman and John Norton have been elected to the Académie Internationale de Philosophie des Sciences. Congratulations!
December, 2007:
The New York Times writes up Edouard Machery's contribution to experimental philosophy. See here.
September, 2007:
We welcome Professor Alan Chalmers (The Flinders University of South Australia, Philosophy) who will be visiting our department. Alan is currently writing a book called “The scientist’s atom and the philosopher’s stone: How science succeeded and philosophy failed to gain knowledge of atoms”.
Welcome to our incoming class: Aleta Quinn, Yoichi Ishida, and Elay Shech!
Congratulations to our graduate students Justin Sytsma, Jonathan Livengood, and Jason Byron: Justin has recently published “Neuroscience and theoretical psychology—What’s to worry about” with Peter Machamer in Theory & Psychology; Jonathan has just published "The folk probably don’t
think what you think they think: Experiments on causation by absence" with
Edouard Machery in the last volume of the Midwest Studies in Philosophy; and Jason has just published “Whence philosophy of biology?” in the last issue of the British Journal for the Philosophy of Science.
Academic Year 2006-2007:
May, 2007:
Job Placement 2007 - All four of our graduate students on the job market this year found a job! Congratulations to Zvi Biener (Western Michigan University), Brian Hepburn (University of British Columbia), Jackie Sullivan (Alabama), and Jim Tabery (Utah)!
March, 2007:
The 9th Carnegie Mellon University - University of Pittsburgh Annual
Graduate Philosophy Conference will take place at Carnegie Mellon University,
March 24, 2007. Michael Strevens (NYU) is the keynote speaker: CfP deadline: January 15. More information here.
February, 2007:
The Philosophy of Science Association has just elected four new members to the eight-member Governing Board. The four continuing members include Ken Schaffner (Pittsburgh, HPS) and Laura Ruetsche (Pittsburgh, Philosophy). The four newly elected members include John Norton (Pittsburgh, HPS), Sandra Mitchell (Pittsburgh, HPS) and Heather Douglas (HPS PhD). Congratulations.
September, 2006:
We welcome Laura Snyder (St John’s University, Philosophy)
who will be visiting our department for the whole year 2006-2007. Laura
has recently published Reforming Philosophy: A Victorian Debate on
Science and Society (University of Chicago Press).
September, 2006:
Welcome to our incoming class: Jason Byron, Peter Distelzweig, Michelle
Gibbons, Karen Hauck, William Lebing, Bryan Roberts, and Jonah Schupbach!
Academic Year 2005-2006:
June, 2006:
Paolo Palmieri's experimental history. To better understand
Galileo's work, Paolo replicates Galileo's pendulum experiments. Pics
here. More information
on Paolo's website.
June, 2006:
A pic from Julie Zahle, her husband, Jacob, and their beautiful
baby, August in Copenhagen. Pic here.
April, 2006:
The 8th Carnegie Mellon University - University of Pittsburgh
Annual Graduate Philosophy Conference will take place at the University
of Pittsburgh, April 15, 2006 (David Lawrence Hall, room 104). Allan
Gibbard (University of Michigan,
webpage) is the keynote speaker: More
information here.
Job Placement, 2006:
Ten for ten! Congratulations to our job candidates! This is
an amazing year. Ten graduate students from our program were looking
for a job and ten found a job!
Ingo Brigandt, hired by University of Alberta
AOS: Philosophy of Biology
Ari
Duwell, hired by Montana.
AOS: Phliosophy of physics
Francesca DiPoppa, hired by Texas Tech.
AOS: Early Modern
Abel Franco, hired by Cal State-Northridge.
AOS: Early Modern
Doreen Fraser, hired by Waterloo.
AOS: Philosophy of Physics
Greg Frost-Arnold, hired by Nevada-Las Vegas.
AOS: History of analytic
Francis Longworth, hired by Ohio University.
AOS: General philosophy of science (esp. causation)
David Miller (Pitt HPS), post-doc at Yale
AOS: Early Modern
Wendy
Parker, hired by Ohio University.
AOS: General philosophy of science (esp. modeling)
Christian Wüthrich, hired by UC-San Diego.
AOS: Philosophy of physics.
Like in previous years, our graduate students have done extremely
well! See our full placement record.
Moral: You want a job? Come to Pittsburgh!
January, 2006:
Welcome back, Ken!!
The philosopher of biology, medicine and psychiatry Kenneth F. Schaffner
(M.D., Ph.D), has now joined our department. See
pic.
December, 2005:
Justin M. Chalker, who majors in HPS and in Chemistry, has
been named one of 32 recipients across the United States of the prestigious
Rhodes Scholarship. Congratulations! More information here.
December, 2005:
Jim Tabery has won the 2004 Philosophy of Science Graduate
Student Essay prize for his paper “Synthesizing Activities and
Interactions in the Concept of a Mechanism,” published in Philosophy
of Science 2004 71(1): 1-15. Congratulations!
November, 2005:
HPS Faculty retreat: HPS faculty members go to the countryside,
walk a bit in the woods, eat a lot, drink with the appropriate, philosophical
temperance, and think hard! Pics here. More pics here.
September, 2005:
We keep our traditions. Another year, another occasion to have
a good time. Some pics. Note the transmission of power from our former
chair to our new chair.
September, 2005:
We honored Jim Lennox for his wonderful work as the Director
of the Center for Philosophy of Science. John Norton will be the next
Director, starting January 2006. See pics.
September, 2005:
Welcome to our new graduate students, Keith Bemer, Thomas Cunningham,
Eric Hatleback, Elizabeth Irvine, and Catherine Stinson.
September, 2005:
Another year, another wine-and-cheese welcome party for our
new graduate students. See pics.
August, 2005:
Megan Delehanty (director: Sandra Mitchell) has successfully defended
her PhD Thesis, entitled “Empiricism and the Epistemic Status
of Imaging Technologies.” Congratulations.
July, 2005:
Andrea Scarantino (co-directors: Peter Machamer and Paul Griffiths)
has successfully defended his PhD Thesis, entitled “Explicating
Emotions.” Congratulations.
July, 2005:
Welcome back, Ken!!
The philosopher of biology, medicine and psychiatry Kenneth F. Schaffner
(M.D., Ph.D), currently University Professor of Medical Humanities and
Professor of Philosophy at George
Washington University, has accepted the offer by our department.
He will be University Professor, effective January 2006. Ken is well-known
for his work on reductionism, on the nature of theories and explanation
in medicine and psychiatry, on the genetic determinants of behavior,
etc. He is currently completing a book on the genetic basis of behavior
for Oxford University Press and is the leading researcher in a National
Science Foundation funded project entitled “Conceptual and Social
History of Behavioral Genetics: 1960-2000 (and beyond).” We are
all thrilled!
June, 2005:
Erik Angner (adviser: Peter Machamer) and Alan C. Love (adviser: Jim
Lennox) have successfully defended their dissertation, entitled respectively
"Subjective Measures of Well-Being: A Philosophical Examination"
and "Explaining Evolutionary Innovation and Novelty: A Historical
and Philosophical Study of Biological Concepts". Congratulations.
May, 2005:
Uljana Feest is the winner of the ESHHS/JHBS Early Career award. Uljana
is now at Max Planck Institute for the History of Science in Berlin,
where she has been since taking her PhD from the department of History
and Philosophy of science in 2003. Congratulations.
April, 2005:
Barry
M. Goldwater Scholaship Received
The Department wishes to congratulate two of its undergraduate majors:
Mr. Justin Chalker and Ms. Anna Quider, both of whom won Barry M. Goldwater
Scholarships. Mr Chalker is double major, HPS jointly with Chemistry,
and Ms. Quider doubles her HPS with Physics and Astronomy.
Feb, 2005:
Job
Placement, 2005
Congratulations to our job candidates! Like in previous years, they
did extremely well! See our full
placement record.
Erik Angner (AOS: philosophy of economics & social sciences)
has been hired by the University of Alabama at Birmingham (Philosophy,
Economics, tenure-track).
Megan Delehanty (AOS: philosophy of biology) has been hired by the
University of Calgary (Philosophy, tenure-track).
Alan Love (AOS: philosophy of biology) has been hired by UC Santa
Cruz (Philosophy, tenure-track).
Wendy Parker (AOS: general philosophy of science) has been hired by
UC-San Diego (Science Studies program, post-doc).
Gualtiero Piccinini (AOS: Philosophy of mind & psychology) has
been hired by the University of Missouri - St. Louis (Philosophy,
tenure-track)
Andrea Scarantino (AOS: philosophy of mind) has been hired by Georgia
State University (Philosophy, Brains & Behavior program, tenure-track).
February 11-12, 2005:
Einstein
1905: A Centennial Celebration!
We celebrate the centenary of of Einstein's annus mirabilis,
1905. In that year, he established the size and reality of atoms;
enunciated the special theory of relativity and E=mc2; and
proposed the light quantum. See
program. See Pictures.
Academic Year 2004-2005:
Academic Year 2003-2004:
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| This collection of essays by a leading philosopher of science
defends integrative pluralism as the best description for today's
complexity of scientific inquiry. The tendency of some scientists
to reduce all theories to a few fundamental laws of the most basic
particles that populate our universe is not appropriate for the
biological sciences, which study multi-component, multi-level,
evolved complex systems. This book will be of interest to students
and professionals in the philosophy of science. |
Assistant Professor. Paolo has an eclectic background. For some time
he worked as an engineer trying to make Ferrari Formula One cars run
faster. Since he was not terribly successful he thought that the history
and philosophy of science would be the next logical step in his career.
Engineers have recourse to funny logics sometimes. Thus he explored
the possibility of explaining Galileo's theory of tides according to
a model he had developed to investigate the dynamics of fuel sloshing
within Formula One tanks. This time he was terribly successful. Finally,
he managed to earn a PhD and convince the Pitt folks to hire him.
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