[PhilPhys] Winners Announced 2021 Du Châtelet Prize in Philosophy of Physics

Katherine Brading katherine.brading at duke.edu
Fri Oct 1 19:15:11 CEST 2021


The winners of the 2021 Du Châtelet Prize in Philosophy of Physics are:

  *   Jamee Elder, for her paper “On the ‘direct detection’ of gravitational waves"

and


  *   Miguel Ohnesorge, for his paper “Pluralising measurement”
Jamee Elder completed her PhD at the University of Notre Dame and is currently a Postdoctoral Fellow at the Black Hole Initiative, Harvard University. Miguel Ohnesorge is a PhD student at the University of Cambridge. Congratulations to them, and many thanks to everyone who submitted their wonderful papers for this year’s prize.
The topic for this year’s prize was "Measurement practices in the physical sciences: correlation, calibration and stabilization"

The winners each receive $1000, an invitation to participate in a workshop to be held at Duke University (provisionally scheduled for April 7-9 2022), and an invitation to have their paper considered for publication in Studies in History and Philosophy of Science.

The members of this year’s prize committee were: Alisa Bokulich, Hasok Chang, Daniel Mitchell and Wendy Parker. Grateful thanks to them for all their hard work.

The Du Châtelet Prize in Philosophy of Physics is supported by Duke University in collaboration with Studies in History and Philosophy of Science.


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More information about the prize
The Du Châtelet Prize in Philosophy of Physics celebrates excellence in philosophy of physics and promotes breadth across the field both historically and philosophically. Each year, a prize committee of senior scholars in the field invites submissions on a particular topic. The prize winner receives feedback and support from the committee, and the paper is considered for publication in Studies. The goals of the prize are to support young scholars working in philosophy of physics, to strengthen the historical and philosophical breadth of the field, and to promote some of the very best work being done by students and junior scholars.

2020 Winner: Joshua Eisenthal “Hertz’s Mechanics and a unitary notion of force”
Topic: Mathematics as a tool of conceptual innovation in physical theory and/or experiment, 1780-1890.
Committee: Katherine Brading, Janet Folina, Doreen Fraser, Lydia Patton and Sheldon Smith

2019 Winner: Adwait Parker “Newton on Active and Passive Quantities of Matter”, Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 84 1-11. 2020.
Topic: “How the parts of matter act on one another, as that issue stood at any time in the period 1680-1780”
Committee: Katherine Brading, Mary Domski, Andrew Janiak, Chris Smeenk, George Smith









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