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A list of all pages that have property "Brief" with value "a key figure in British higher education research". Since there have been only a few results, also nearby values are displayed.

Showing below up to 26 results starting with #1.

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List of results

  • Eszter Nádasi  + (a Hungarian philosopher of science and technology)
  • Mihály Héder  + (a Hungarian philosopher of science and technology)
  • Imre Lakatos  + (a Hungarian-born philosopher of science who greatly contributed to the problem of demarcation and theory choice in science)
  • Jaegwon Kim  + (a Korean-American philosopher best known for his work on mental causation, the mind-body problem, and the metaphysics of supervenience and events)
  • Hasok Chang  + (a Korean-born American historian and philosopher of science notable for his work on integrating HPS)
  • Andrzej Wiśniewski  + (a Polish philosopher notable for his work on logic and philosophical logic)
  • Alfred Tarski  + (a Polish-American logician and mathematician who is widely considered as one of the greatest logicians of all time)
  • Ludwik Fleck  + (a Polish-Jewish microbiologist, whose writings made an important early contribution to the historical philosophy and sociology of science)
  • Jaime Wisniak  + (a Professor of Chemical Engineering at Ben-Gurion University of the Negev)
  • Kirk Ludwig  + (a Professor of Philosophy and Cognitive Science at Indiana University, Bloomington.)
  • Evan Thompson  + (a Professor of Philosophy at the University of British Columbia in Vancouver and an Associate Member of the Department of Asian Studies and the Department of Psychology (Cognitive Science Group). He is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada.)
  • John R. R. Christie  + (a Scottish philosopher of science and historian of Scottish science.)
  • David Hume  + (a Scottish philosopher, historian, and essayist; he is widely considered the most important philosopher to write in the English language)
  • John Law  + (a Sociologist of Science, and one of the key players in the development of Actor-Network Theory alongside [[Bruno Latour]] and [[Michel Callon]])
  • Francisco Ayala  + (a Spanish-American evolutionary biologist a Spanish-American evolutionary biologist and philosopher at the University of California, Irvine.[2] He is a former Dominican priest,[3][4] ordained in 1960,[5] but left the priesthood that same year. After graduating from the University of Salamanca, he moved to the United States in 1961 to study for a PhD at Columbia University. There, he studied for his doctorate under Theodosius Dobzhansky, graduating in 1964.[6] He became a US citizen in 1971.n 1964.[6] He became a US citizen in 1971.)
  • Tore Frangsmyr  + (a Swedish historian of science notable for his contributions to the history of Swedish science)
  • David Leary  + (a University Professor Emeritus. he was a a University Professor Emeritus. he was a University Professor at the University of Richmond from 2002 to 2016. For the previous 13 years, he was Dean of Arts and Sciences at Richmond. Before that he spent 12 years at the University of New Hampshire, where served as Professor of Psychology, History, and the Humanities, chairperson of the Department of Psychology, and co-director of the History and Theory of Psychology Program. In May 2016 he retired from teaching and was given emeritus status.om teaching and was given emeritus status.)
  • Karine Megerdoomian  + (a computational linguist at the MITRE Corporation and an Adjunct Professor at Georgetown University)
  • Gem Stapleton  + (a computer scientist notable for her work on theoretical understanding of diagrams and their effectiveness for human cognition)
  • Sven Linker  + (a computer scientist notable for his work on the Science of Sensor Systems Software project)
  • Petrucio Viana  + (a computer scientist who works on logical aspects of graph theory, foundations of combinatorics, mathematical logic, modal logic, reasoning with diagrams, relational semantics and formal relational systems)
  • Marina DiMarco  + (a historian and philosopher of molecular biology and medicine)
  • Bruce L. Kinzer  + (a historian at Kenyon College and an editor of two volumes of the Collected Works of John Stuart Mill, in 33 vols. (1963-1991))
  • Mary Terrall  + (a historian of science notable for her work on Maupertuis and enlightenment sciences)
  • Marvin P. Bolt  + (a historian of science specializing in astronomy, the telescope, and the Herschel family)
  • Tony Becher  + (a key figure in British higher education research)
  • Moritz Schlick  + (a key figure in logical positivism)
  • David Lindberg  + (a leading American historian of medieval and early modern science, prominent for his work on the history of physical sciences and the interrelation between science and religion)
  • Markus Schlosser  + (a lecturer in the School of Philosophy at University College Dublin, Ireland)
  • Andreas Spath  + (a linguist who is the editor of Interfaces and Interface Conditions, a book about the interface between linguistic and conceptual knowledge)
  • History of Science Society  + (a major professional organization for the history of science)
  • Robert Goldstone  + (a modern distinguished professor of psychological and brain sciences at Indiana University.)
  • Colin Allen  + (a modern distinguished professor of the history and philosophy of science at the University of Pittsburgh.)
  • Jack Nelson  + (a modern philosopher at Temple University, Philadelphia)
  • Deborah Tollefsen  + (a modern professor of philosophy at the University of Memphis.)
  • Aaron D. Cobb  + (a philosopher and author specializing in ethics, epistemology, philosophy of religion and the history and philosophy of science. He has written about Faraday's electromagnetism, as well as Herschel, Mill, and Whewell's philosophies of science)
  • Lynn Hankinson Nelson  + (a philosopher at Rowan College, Glassboro)
  • Antonella Corradini  + (a philosopher at the Catholic University of Milan)
  • Catherine Legg  + (a philosopher notable for her work on diagrammatic reasoning)
  • Justin Donhauser  + (a philosopher notable for his work on socially relevant applied philosophy of science, including the role of environmental sciences in public policy and resource management decision-making)
  • Karen Yan  + (a philosopher of cognitive neuroscience in practice notable for her work on causal understanding, technique-enabled reasoning, conceptualization of cognition, and infrastructure of transdisciplinary research)
  • Curt John Ducasse  + (a philosopher of mind and aesthetics who primarily wrote on art, religion and reincarnation)
  • Hong Yu Wong  + (a philosopher of mind and cognitive scientist)
  • Karim Bschir  + (a philosopher of science)
  • Edward H. Madden  + (a philosopher of science and religion)
  • Carole J. Lee  + (a philosopher of science notable for her work on the social structure of science - including its production, communication, and evaluation - with a focus on peer review)
  • Anjan Chakravartty  + (a philosopher of science notable for his work on the topics in metaphysics and epistemology of science)
  • Andrea Roselli  + (a philosopher of science notable for his work on embedded cognition and verisimilitude)
  • David Stump  + (a philosopher of science notable for his work on the disunity of science, Poincaré, Duhem, the history and philosophy of mathematics, and naturalized philosophy of science)
  • Robert Butts  + (a philosopher of science whose research interests included the work of Leibniz, Newton, Galileo, Whewell, and Kant)
  • Patrick Fraser  + (a philosopher who participated in the development of scientonomy during his undergraduate studies. He is no longer an active member of the scientonomy community)