Dr Sarah Wieten
Elinor is a PhD student working on issues of trust in science. She has an MA in Philosophy of Science from Leibniz Universität Hannover and has published papers on trust in collectives and AI discovery and creation.
Sam is currently studying an interdisciplinary PhD in Sociology with Philosophy. His research uses the scientific response to COVID-19 in the UK as a site for understanding how the production of scientific knowledge is politically mediated, with a particular focus on the ways and extent to which politics became embedded in the knowledge claims made by the UK scientific advisory community during the pandemic. Prior to studying for a PhD, Sam worked as a parliamentary assistant to a Labour MP and spent three years at the University of Liverpool in an impact role.
Alexandre holds a BA in Law from the Franciscan University (Brazil), as well as a BA and a MA in Philosophy from the Federal University of Santa Maria (Brazil). He published papers on Philosophy of Law and Philosophy of Science. His general research interests are in the fields of Legal Theory, Philosophy of Science, Philosophy of the Social Sciences and Philosophy of Economics. Currently, his doctoral research focuses on the relationship between micro and macro patterns in Economics and Social Sciences.
Cat is a PhD student within the EURiCA project (Exploring Uncertainty and Risk in Contemporary Astrobiology). She has an MA in Logic and Philosophy of Science from the MCMP, Munich and is currently researching uncertainties inherent in biosignatures in the face of their abiotic mimics.
Liyuan is a PhD student in philosophy. She holds a BA in financial management from the Southwestern University of Finance and Economics, China, and a MA in logic from the Nanjing University, China. Currently, her research focuses on causal models for causal inference.
Uzma is currently a DDTF Student and works under Nancy Cartwright as her primary supervisor. Her general topic of interest is scientific models in the philosophy of science. In particular she looks at a class of models called 'Minimal Models' . They are a set of explanatory models that use idealisation as a central and ineliminable part of their explanation. First introduced to the literature by Robert Batterman, Minimal Models have been only used successfully in physics. Uzma aims to use Batterman’s Minimal Models as a springboard for her own theory, Local Unification that has broader applicability.
Research Fellow at the Research on Research Institute at University College London. A metascientist and philosopher of science interested in scientific method and the method of policymaking as well as research ethics
Professor in the Department of English Studies
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Associate Professor in the Department of Sociology
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Lecturer (Twentieth-Century British History) in the Department of History, Durham University
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Professor of Philosophy of Science in the Department of Philosophy, University of Venice Ca' Foscari and Coordinator/PI, Inclusive science and European democracies (ISEED -960366) https://iseedeurope.eu
AHRC sponsored PhD student in Philosophy, Durham University
Project Team Member of the Society for the Philosophy of Time (SPoT)
Fanidh Senanta Sanogo