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=== Griesemer/Millstein Philosophy of Biology Lab ===
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<strong>UC Davis Griesemer/Millstein Philosophy of Biology Lab</strong>
  
UC Davis is home to the [http://philbiolab.net Griesemer/Millstein Philosophy of Biology Lab], which was founded by Jim Griesemer and earned its moniker when Roberta Millstein joined the [http://philosophy.ucdavis.edu UCD Philosophy Department] in Fall 2006.
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[[File:Cropped-Lab-Fall-2014-799.jpg||700px|border|Front row, from left: Jun Otsuka, Sarah Roe (on screen), Michael Hunter. Back row, from left: Roberta L. Millstein, Rick Morris, I-Sen Chen, Tyrus Fisher, Josef Kay, Shawn A. Miller, James R. Griesemer]]
  
The Lab is a community of faculty, graduate students, and visitors interested in philosophy of biology and related subjects. We meet once a week during the regular school year to read and discuss our works-in-progress, share ideas for new projects, make presentations and provide feedback on them, read topics of common interest, and engage with visiting scholars. One of the main goals of the Lab is to support graduate students in the various stages of their careers; to that end, topics related to presenting at conferences, publishing in journals, etc., are frequently discussed.
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<small>'''page url''': http://goo.gl/TfDDqK + [http://goo.gl/TfDDqK.info visitor statistics]</small>
 
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=== Science & Technology Studies ===
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The philosophy Ph.D. program offers a Designated Emphasis in [http://sts.ucdavis.edu/ Science & Technology Studies], where the faculty include historian of science [http://innovation.ucdavis.edu/people/biagioli Mario Biagioli] and cultural anthropologist [http://dumit.net/ Joseph Dumit], author of [http://dumit.net/drugs-for-life/ <em>Drugs for Life (2012 Duke University Press)</em>]. Both Prof. Millstein and Prof. Griesemer are affiliated faculty with the STS program. As it happens, Prof. Griesemer's 1989 “[http://sss.sagepub.com/content/19/3/387.short boundary objects]” paper with Leigh Star is the most cited paper in <em>Social Studies of Science</em>. As of November 2014, the paper has been cited 5,142 times overall.
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=== Faculty ===
 
=== Faculty ===
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** Specialties: History and philosophy of evolutionary biology and ecology, causation, chance, environmental ethics
 
** Specialties: History and philosophy of evolutionary biology and ecology, causation, chance, environmental ethics
 
** Willing to work with new students? Yes
 
** Willing to work with new students? Yes
 +
 +
=== Philosophy of Biology Lab ===
 +
 +
UC Davis is home to the [http://philbiolab.net Griesemer/Millstein Philosophy of Biology Lab], which was founded by Jim Griesemer and earned its moniker when Roberta Millstein joined the [http://philosophy.ucdavis.edu UCD Philosophy Department] in Fall 2006.
 +
 +
The Lab is a community of faculty, graduate students, and visitors interested in philosophy of biology and related subjects. We meet once a week during the regular school year to read and discuss our works-in-progress, share ideas for new projects, make presentations and provide feedback on them, read topics of common interest, and engage with visiting scholars. One of the main goals of the Lab is to support graduate students in the various stages of their careers; to that end, topics related to presenting at conferences, publishing in journals, etc., are frequently discussed.
 +
 +
=== Science & Technology Studies ===
 +
 +
The philosophy Ph.D. program offers a Designated Emphasis in [http://sts.ucdavis.edu/ Science & Technology Studies], where the faculty include historian of science [http://innovation.ucdavis.edu/people/biagioli Mario Biagioli] and cultural anthropologist [http://dumit.net/ Joseph Dumit], author of [http://dumit.net/drugs-for-life/ <em>Drugs for Life (2012 Duke University Press)</em>]. Both Prof. Millstein and Prof. Griesemer are affiliated faculty with the STS program. And, as it happens, Prof. Griesemer's 1989 “[http://sss.sagepub.com/content/19/3/387.short boundary objects]” paper with Leigh Star is the most cited paper in <em>Social Studies of Science</em>, a leading STS journal. As of November 2014, the paper has been cited 5,142 times overall.
  
 
=== Current Philosophy of Biology Graduate Students ===
 
=== Current Philosophy of Biology Graduate Students ===
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* <strong>Rick Morris</strong>
 
* <strong>Rick Morris</strong>
  
=== Current Philosophy of Biology Postdocs ===
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=== Recent Philosophy of Biology Postdocs ===
  
 
* <strong>Jun Otsuka</strong> // [http://junotk.wordpress.com/ website], [http://philpapers.org/profile/60688 PhilPapers]
 
* <strong>Jun Otsuka</strong> // [http://junotk.wordpress.com/ website], [http://philpapers.org/profile/60688 PhilPapers]
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* <strong>Sarah Roe, 2014</strong> (tenure-track position at Southern Connecticut State University) // [http://www.sarahmroe.com/ website], [http://www.sarahmroe.com/cv.html CV]
 
* <strong>Sarah Roe, 2014</strong> (tenure-track position at Southern Connecticut State University) // [http://www.sarahmroe.com/ website], [http://www.sarahmroe.com/cv.html CV]
  
<references/>
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=== Select Recent Publications ===
 +
==== Griesemer ====
 +
 
 +
* Griesemer, J., 2015. “What Salamander Biologists Have Taught Us About Evo-Devo,” in Alan C. Love (ed), Conceptual Change in Biology: Scientific and Philosophical Perspectives on Evolution and Development (Boston Studies in the Philosophy and History of Science, vol. 307). Springer Verlag, Dordrecht, pp 271-301.
 +
 
 +
* Griesemer, J., 2014. “Reproduction and Scaffolded Developmental Processes: An Integrated Evolutionary Perspective,” Ch. 12 in Alessandro Minelli and Thomas Pradeu (eds), Towards a Theory of Development, Oxford University Press, pp. 183-202.
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 +
* Caporael, L., J. Griesemer and W. Wimsatt (eds), 2014. Developing Scaffolds in Evolution, Culture, and Cognition, MIT Press.
 +
 
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* Griesemer, J. 2014. “Reproduction and the Scaffolded Development of Hybrids,” in Caporael et al. (eds), Developing Scaffolds in Evolution, Culture, and Cognition, MIT Press, pp. 23-55.
 +
 
 +
* Griesemer, J. 2013. “Integration of Approaches in David Wake’s Model-Taxon Research Platform for Evolutionary Morphology,” Studies in History and Philosophy of the Biological and Biomedical Sciences 44: 525–536. Special Issue edited by I. Brigandt. Available online 12 April 2013 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.shpsc.2013.03.021
 +
 
 +
* Griesemer, J. 2013. “Formalization and the Meaning of “Theory” in the Inexact Biological Sciences,” Biological Theory 7: 298-310.  OnlineFirst
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 +
==== Millstein ====
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* Chao, Hsiang-Ke, Chen, Szu-Ting, and Millstein, Roberta L. (Eds.), Mechanism and Causality in Biology and Economics, History, Philosophy and Theory of the Life Sciences, Vol. 3, Springer, 2013.
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* Millstein, Roberta L. (forthcoming), “[http://philsci-archive.pitt.edu/10901/ Probability in Biology: The Case of Fitness]” in A. Hájek and C. R. Hitchcock (eds.), The Oxford Handbook of Probability and Philosophy, Oxford: Oxford University Press. (commissioned)
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* Millstein, Roberta L. (2014), “[http://philsci-archive.pitt.edu/10244/ How the Concept of 'Population' Resolves Concepts of 'Environment,']” Philosophy of Science 81: 741-755.
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* Millstein, Roberta L. (2013), “[http://philsci-archive.pitt.edu/9611/ Natural Selection and Causal Productivity]” in H. Chao, S. Chen, and R. L. Millstein (eds.), Mechanism and Causality in Biology and Economics, Springer, 147-163.
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* Chao, Hsiang-Ke, Chen, Szu-Ting, and Millstein, Roberta L. (2013), “[http://link.springer.com/chapter/10.1007/978-94-007-2454-9_1 Towards the Methodological Turn in the Philosophy of Science]” in H. Chao, S. Chen, and R. L. Millstein (eds.), Mechanism and Causality in Biology and Economics, Springer, 1-16.
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* Millstein, Roberta L. (2013), “[http://philsci-archive.pitt.edu/9547/ Environmental Ethics”] in K. Kampourakis (ed.), [http://link.springer.com/book/10.1007/978-94-007-6537-5/page/1 The Philosophy of Biology: A Companion for Educators] in the series History, Philosophy and Theory of the Life Sciences 1, Springer, 723-743. (commissioned)
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* Millstein, Roberta L. (2013), “[http://philsci-archive.pitt.edu/9226/ Exploring the Status of Population Genetics: The Role of Ecology],” Biological Theory: Integrating Development, Evolution and Cognition (special thematic issue on “The Meaning of ‘Theory’ in Biology”) 7: 346-357.
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==== Otsuka ====
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* Otsuka, J. (forthcoming). Causal Foundations of Evolutionary Genetics, The British Journal for the Philosophy of Science. ([http://bjps.oxfordjournals.org/content/early/2014/12/04/bjps.axu039.short?rss=1 Link])
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* Otsuka, J. (2014). Using Causal Models to Integrate Proximate and Ultimate Causation, Biology and Philosophy. ([http://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s10539-014-9448-9?sa_campaign=email/event/articleAuthor/onlineFirst Link])
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[[Category:2 Faculty Members]]
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[[Category:California]]
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[[Category:United States]]

Latest revision as of 01:00, 28 September 2015

UC Davis Griesemer/Millstein Philosophy of Biology Lab

Front row, from left: Jun Otsuka, Sarah Roe (on screen), Michael Hunter. Back row, from left: Roberta L. Millstein, Rick Morris, I-Sen Chen, Tyrus Fisher, Josef Kay, Shawn A. Miller, James R. Griesemer

page url: http://goo.gl/TfDDqK + visitor statistics

Faculty[edit]

  • James R. Griesemer // website 1, 2, 3, CV, PhilPapers
    • Specialties: Evolutionary biology, genetics, developmental biology, ecology, and systematics
    • Willing to work with new students? Yes
  • Roberta L. Millstein // website 1, 2, 3, CV, PhilPapers
    • Specialties: History and philosophy of evolutionary biology and ecology, causation, chance, environmental ethics
    • Willing to work with new students? Yes

Philosophy of Biology Lab[edit]

UC Davis is home to the Griesemer/Millstein Philosophy of Biology Lab, which was founded by Jim Griesemer and earned its moniker when Roberta Millstein joined the UCD Philosophy Department in Fall 2006.

The Lab is a community of faculty, graduate students, and visitors interested in philosophy of biology and related subjects. We meet once a week during the regular school year to read and discuss our works-in-progress, share ideas for new projects, make presentations and provide feedback on them, read topics of common interest, and engage with visiting scholars. One of the main goals of the Lab is to support graduate students in the various stages of their careers; to that end, topics related to presenting at conferences, publishing in journals, etc., are frequently discussed.

Science & Technology Studies[edit]

The philosophy Ph.D. program offers a Designated Emphasis in Science & Technology Studies, where the faculty include historian of science Mario Biagioli and cultural anthropologist Joseph Dumit, author of Drugs for Life (2012 Duke University Press). Both Prof. Millstein and Prof. Griesemer are affiliated faculty with the STS program. And, as it happens, Prof. Griesemer's 1989 “boundary objects” paper with Leigh Star is the most cited paper in Social Studies of Science, a leading STS journal. As of November 2014, the paper has been cited 5,142 times overall.

Current Philosophy of Biology Graduate Students[edit]

  • M. A. Hunter
  • Shawn A. Miller // website 1, 2, 3, CV
  • Rick Morris

Recent Philosophy of Biology Postdocs[edit]

Recent Philosophy of Biology Graduates[edit]

  • Bert Baumgaertner, 2013 (tenure-track position at University of Idaho) // website 1, 2, CV
  • Sarah Roe, 2014 (tenure-track position at Southern Connecticut State University) // website, CV

Select Recent Publications[edit]

Griesemer[edit]

  • Griesemer, J., 2015. “What Salamander Biologists Have Taught Us About Evo-Devo,” in Alan C. Love (ed), Conceptual Change in Biology: Scientific and Philosophical Perspectives on Evolution and Development (Boston Studies in the Philosophy and History of Science, vol. 307). Springer Verlag, Dordrecht, pp 271-301.
  • Griesemer, J., 2014. “Reproduction and Scaffolded Developmental Processes: An Integrated Evolutionary Perspective,” Ch. 12 in Alessandro Minelli and Thomas Pradeu (eds), Towards a Theory of Development, Oxford University Press, pp. 183-202.
  • Caporael, L., J. Griesemer and W. Wimsatt (eds), 2014. Developing Scaffolds in Evolution, Culture, and Cognition, MIT Press.
  • Griesemer, J. 2014. “Reproduction and the Scaffolded Development of Hybrids,” in Caporael et al. (eds), Developing Scaffolds in Evolution, Culture, and Cognition, MIT Press, pp. 23-55.
  • Griesemer, J. 2013. “Integration of Approaches in David Wake’s Model-Taxon Research Platform for Evolutionary Morphology,” Studies in History and Philosophy of the Biological and Biomedical Sciences 44: 525–536. Special Issue edited by I. Brigandt. Available online 12 April 2013 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.shpsc.2013.03.021
  • Griesemer, J. 2013. “Formalization and the Meaning of “Theory” in the Inexact Biological Sciences,” Biological Theory 7: 298-310. OnlineFirst

Millstein[edit]

Otsuka[edit]

  • Otsuka, J. (forthcoming). Causal Foundations of Evolutionary Genetics, The British Journal for the Philosophy of Science. (Link)
  • Otsuka, J. (2014). Using Causal Models to Integrate Proximate and Ultimate Causation, Biology and Philosophy. (Link)