Katherine Hawley

Katherine Hawley is a British philosopher specialising in metaphysics, epistemology, ethics, and philosophy of physics. Hawley is a Professor of Philosophy at the University of St Andrews.[1] [2] She is the author of How Things Persist (OUP 2002),[3] and Trust: a Very Short Introduction (OUP 2012),[4] as well as numerous publications on testimony and knowledge-how.[5][6] She is the Fellow of Royal Society of Edinburgh[7] and the recipient of Philip Leverhulme Prize.[7].[8]

Life and career

Hawley was born in Stoke-on-Trent, England.[9] She did her undergraduate degree in physics and philosophy at Balliol College, Oxford and lived in France for a short while afterwards. She then went on to receive her M.Phil. and Ph.D. in the Department of History and Philosophy of Science at the University of Cambridge under the supervision of Peter Lipton.[9] Prior to becoming a senior lecturer at the University of St Andrews in 1999, Hawley had been Henry Sidgwick Research Fellow of Newnham College, Cambridge,[9] where she had taught a variety of subjects, inter alia, political philosophy, critical thinking, epistemology, formal logic, and metaphysics[2]. She currently lives in Anstruther in Fife. She served as an editorial chair of The Philosophical Quarterly (2005–2010), in addition to being a deputy (1999–2001) and an associate editor (2011–2012) of the British Journal for the Philosophy of Science.[2]

Work

In How Things Persist (2002), Hawley defends a stage-theory of persistence that combines the four-dimensionalism of perdurantists with the endurantist account of predication. Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews praised the book for offering a new formulation of endurance theory as “the claim that ordinary objects are such that (i) they exist at more than one time and (ii) statements about what parts they have must be made relative to some time or other” (Hawley, p. 30, cited in Dyke, 2013).[10] According to Dyke (2013),[10] this characterisation captures the fundamental notion that ordinary objects exist at more than one time without being temporally extended in addition to simplifying cross-comparisons with the perdurance theory, which accepts (i) but rejects (ii).

Recently, Hawley's research interests shifted from persistence, parthood and identity to (un)trustworthiness and competence in ethics and epistemology. She cites the metametaphysical turn in analytic philosophy coupled with her deflationary intuitions about the possibility of methodology of metaphysics as a reason for moving away from metaphysics to ethics and epistemology.[11]

Selected works

Authored books

  • Trust: A Very Short Introduction, Oxford: Oxford University Press (2012) (121 pp.)
  • How Things Persist, Oxford: Oxford University Press (2001) (xi + 221 pp.) Selections reprinted in Haslanger and Fay (eds.) Persistence, MIT Press (2004).

Co-edited books

  • The Admissible Contents of Perception, edited with Fiona MacPherson, Oxford: Wiley-Blackwell (2011). Re-issue of Philosophical Quarterly special issue 59.236, with a new introduction sole-authored by FM.
  • Philosophy of Science Today, edited with Peter Clark, Oxford: Oxford University Press (2003). Re-issue of British Journal of Philosophy of Science special anniversary issue.

Professional offices and service

  • Head of School of Philosophical, Anthropological and Film Studies, University of St Andrews 2009–2014.
  • Former committee member of the British Society for the Philosophy of Science, the Analysis committee, and the British Philosophical Association; committee member for the Mind Association (2013-current).

Grants and prizes

  • Leverhulme Major Research Fellowship, 2014–16 (£94,445).
  • Local PI for Marie Curie Initial Training Network 2009–2013 (value to St Andrews around £153K).
  • AHRB Research Leave award 2004 (£13,153).
  • Philip Leverhulme Prize 2003 (Research prize of £50,000)
  • British Academy Joint Activities grant (£4,500 to fund collaboration with philosophers at the University of Western Washington during 2003–2005).

References

  1. "Philosophy at St Andrews: Staff profiles". www.st-andrews.ac.uk. Retrieved 2016-11-28.
  2. "CV". Katherine Hawley. 2015-02-27. Retrieved 2016-11-28.
  3. Hawley, Katherine (2002). How Things Persist. USA: Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780199249138.
  4. Trust: A Very Short Introduction.
  5. Hawley, Katherine (28 November 2016). "Publications". Professor Katherine Hawley's website.
  6. "Katherine Jane Hawley - Research publications - University of St Andrews". risweb.st-andrews.ac.uk. Retrieved 2016-11-28.
  7. "Katherine Jane Hawley - Activities and awards - University of St Andrews". risweb.st-andrews.ac.uk. Retrieved 2016-11-28.
  8. "Hawley, Katherine Jane". worldcat.org. Retrieved December 2, 2016.
  9. "About". Katherine Hawley. 2015-02-27. Retrieved 2016-11-28.
  10. Dyke, Heather (2003-01-10). "Review of How Things Persist". ISSN 1538-1617. Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  11. Krishnamurthy, Meena (2015-06-26). "Featured Philosop-her: Katherine Hawley". Philosopher. Retrieved 2016-11-28.
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