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Nancy Cartwright is
Professor of Philosophy at the Department of Philosophy, Logic
and Scientific Method at the London School of Economics and
Political Science (LSE) and at the University of California, San
Diego (UCSD). She is currently the President of the Philosophy
of Science Association and was President of the American
Philosophical Association (Pacific Division) in 2008.
Her research interests include philosophy and history of science
(especially physics and economics), causal inference and
objectivity and evidence, especially on evidence-based policy.
She is currently involved in a number of interrelated research
projects at LSE: 'Evidence for Use' (funded by the British
Academy) and 'Choices of evidence: tacit philosophical
assumptions in debates on evidence-based practice in children's
welfare services', with Eleonora Montuschi and Eileen Munro
(funded by the AHRC), both at the
Centre for the
Philosophy of Natural and Social Science, and a project on
Modelling Mitigation, at the Grantham Research Institute on
Climate Change and the Environment.
Her other major research topic is 'God's Order, Man's Order and
the Order of Nature' , sponsored by the Templeton Foundation.
This is a joint project between UCSD and LSE, headed by Nancy
Cartwright, Eleonora Montuschi and Eric Watkins, and involves a
large team of researchers from both the UK and the USA.
Her publications include How the Laws of Physics Lie (1983),
Nature's Capacities and their Measurement (1989), Otto Neurath:
Philosophy between Science and Politics [co-author] (1995), The
Dappled World: A Study of the Boundaries of Science (1999), and
Hunting Causes and Using Them (2007). Scroll down for more
details.
Nancy Cartwright is a Fellow of the British Academy and a member
of the American Philosophical Society, the American Academy of
Arts and Sciences, the German Academy of Sciences (Leopoldina)
and a recipient of a MacArthur Fellowship.
She was married to Sir Stuart Hampshire, who died in June 2004.
In the latter part of his life Sir Stuart served as Warden of
Wadham College, Oxford and as Professor of Philosophy at
Stanford University. They have two daughters, Emily and Sophie,
and a granddaughter, Lucy.
Books by
and on Nancy Cartwright:
Nancy Cartwright's Philosophy
of Science
By
Stephan Hartmann,
Carl Hoefer and
Luc Bovens (eds)
Routledge Taylor & Francis Group
2008
For more info click
here
Causal Powers: What
Are They? Why Do We Need Them What Can Be Done With Them and
What Cannot?
Contingency and Dissent in
Science, Technical Report 04/07
Centre for Philosophy of Natural and Social Science, LSE, 2007
Click
here to have access to this book on line via the Centre for
the Philosophy of Natural and Social Science, LSE.
Hunting Causes and
Using Them: Approaches in Philosophy and Economics.
Cambridge University Press
2007
For a preview of this book click
here.
Click
here for a review of this book by
Judea Pearl, 2008.
Click
here for a reply to this review by Nancy
Cartwright, 2009.
Two reviews of this book, by
Francis Longworth and
Eric Weber, andNancy Cartwright's
reply to these are forthcoming in ANALYSIS REVIEWS edited
for Oxford University Press by Anthony Ellis.
Idealization XII:
Correcting the Model. Idealization and Abstraction in
the Sciences.
Edited by Nancy Cartwright and
Martin Jones.
Poznan Studies
in Philosophy of Science and the Humanities Vol 86.
Rodopi 2005
Measuring
Causes: Invariance, Modularity and the Causal Markov Condition.
Measurement in Physics and Economics Discussion Paper
Series.
Monograph DP MEAS 10/00. Centre for Philosophy
of Natural and Social Science, LSE, 2000
Click
here to have access to this book on line via the Centre for
the Philosophy of Natural and Social Science, LSE.
The
Dappled World: A Study of the Boundaries of Science.
Cambridge University Press, 1999; Represented
as a Fathom Internet Story.
Also translated to
Chinese by Shanghai Scientific & Technological
Education Publishing House.
For a preview of this book click
here
Click
here for access to several reviews of this book.
Otto
Neurath: Philosophy between Science and Politics,
with Jordi Cat, Lola Fleck and Thomas E Uebel,
Cambridge
University Press, Ideas in Context Series No. 38, 1996.
Click
here for a review of this book by
George A. Reisch 1997.
Nature' s
Capacities and their Measurement.
Oxford University
Press, 1989.
Click
here to have access to this book on line via
Oxford
Scholarship on Line.
Click
here for a review of this book by
Frederick M. Kronz, 1990.
How
the Laws of Physics Lie
Oxford University Press, 1983.
Also translated to Chinese by
Shanghai Scientific & Technological
Education Publishing House.
Click
here to have access to this book on line via
Oxford
Scholarship on Line.
Click
here for a review of this book by
Henry E. Kyburg, 1990.
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