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May
4, 2004
Nancy Cartwright, UCSD Professor
Of Philosophy,
Elected To Membership In American Philosophical Society
By Barry Jagoda
One of the world’s
leading philosophers of science, University of California, San
Diego Professor of Philosophy Nancy D. Cartwright, has been
named to membership in the American Philosophical Society (APS),
the nation’s oldest learned society, and one of its most
prestigious. The APS, founded by Benjamin Franklin in 1743,
annually selects a small number of scholars and public leaders
for inclusion in its ranks and Cartwright has been chosen in
the Humanities category along with a very few other philosophers,
historians and literary figures.
Cartwright, whose
work questions the literal truth for real world situations of
many fundamental laws of science because, she says, they describe
only ideal conditions, such as in a laboratory, is a highly
influential scholar in the philosophy of science. She is the
recipient of a MacArthur Foundation “genius” award,
a Fellow of the British Academy and a member of the American
Academy of Arts and Sciences. In her five major books and more
than one hundred articles, she has developed a provocative philosophy
arguing for a realist metaphysics: science can give us accurate
pictures of the world (or as accurate as we could expect), but
the fundamental laws themselves are not accurate; it takes the
cooperation of a great variety of branches of science, engineering
and local technical knowledge to get a true picture.
Her work became widely
known with the publication in 1983 of How the Laws of Physics
Lie, in which Cartwright challenges the idea that the "laws"
of science describe the nature of reality. She argues that they
are simplifications--idealizations--that describe an ideal world
different than the one with which physicists actually work.
To create scientific laws that accurately describe real world
situations, she suggests, one has to add various adjustments
and approximations that do not follow from the fundamental laws.
This gives an equal role in the production of literal truth
about the world to the engineer and the applied scientist as
to the fundamental scientist.
Her work covers both
the most general issues in philosophy of science and quite specific
issues in particular sciences - most extensively in physics
and economics. Her 1999 book, The Dappled World: A Study
of the Boundaries of Science, deepens the argument that
most of the world does not behave the way it might seem in a
laboratory. In her view, most of the world is irregular, disordered,
and cannot be described by simple laws.
“When you pull
together her world view you see that there is no simple way
to reduce the complexities of sciences like economics or even
biology to the laws of physics and chemistry, because the world
we live in, as she says, is not controlled by continuity, but
rather, is like a Seurat painting, ‘dappled’,"
says Naomi Oreskes, UCSD historian of science and director of
the Science Studies Program.
Oreskes adds, “Nancy
has also written extensively on the history of positivism and
logico-empiricist philosophy, on philosophy of economics, on
evidence and causation in science, and more recently on the
use of social scientific information in informing causal interpretations
of real-life problems. She a very active scholar in the UCSD
science studies program.”
Cartwright received
a bachelor’s degree in mathematics at the University of
Pittsburgh and a doctorate in philosophy at the University of
Illinois at Chicago, with a thesis on “Philosophical Analysis
of the Concept of Mixture in Quantum Mechanics.” She has
taught at the University of Maryland and Stanford University,
and has had many visiting appointments. In addition to her professorship
at UCSD Cartwright has been a professor in the Department of
Philosophy, Logic and Scientific Method at the London School
of Economics since 1991 and director of the London School of
Economics Center for Philosophy of Natural and Social Science
since 1993.
Her other books include
Otto Neurath: Philosophy between Science and Politics
(1995), Nature's Capacities and Their Measurement (1989)
and Measuring Causes: Invariance, Modularity and the Causal
Markov Condition (2002).
Membership in the APS
reflects extraordinary accomplishments in all fields of intellectual
endeavor. Members are nominated and elected by their peers in
the Society. As of the current elections the APS has 912 members.
There are 766 resident members (citizens or residents of the
United States) and 146 foreign members representing more than
two dozen countries.
Ten other members
of the UCSD Faculty have previously been elected to membership
in the APS: Robert McC. Adams, Theodore H. Bullock, E. Margaret
Burbidge, Russell F. Doolittle, Edward A. Frieman, Marvin L.
Goldberger, Charles F. Kennel, Walter H. Munk, John A. Orcutt
and Larry R. Squire.
Media Contact, Barry
Jagoda (858) 534-8567
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