Biography:Lorraine Daston

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Short description: American historian of science
Lorraine Daston
Lorraine Daston (4614499123).jpg
Born (1951-06-09) June 9, 1951 (age 73)
East Lansing, Michigan, U.S.
EducationPh.D., History of Science, Harvard University


Lorraine Daston (born June 9, 1951)[1] is an American historian of science. Director emerita of the Max Planck Institute for the History of Science (MPIWG) in Berlin, and visiting professor in the Committee on Social Thought at the University of Chicago, she is an authority on Early Modern European scientific and intellectual history. In 1993, she was named a fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. She is a permanent fellow at the Berlin Institute for Advanced Study.[2]

Education

  • Study of history and science at Harvard University (BA 1973 summa cum laude)
  • diploma in history and philosophy of science Univ. of Cambridge (1974)
  • PhD in the history of science Harvard Univ. (1979),[3] supervised by I. Bernard Cohen[4]

Scholarly activities

Daston divides her year between a nine-month period in Berlin, and a three-month period in Chicago, where she usually teaches a seminar and assists doctoral students.[citation needed]

Daston was appointed the inaugural Humanitas Professor in the History of Ideas at University of Oxford for 2013. She has also held Oxford's Isaiah Berlin Visiting Professorship in Intellectual History. In 2002, she delivered two Tanner Lectures at Harvard University, in which she traced theoretical conceptions of nature in several literary and philosophical works.[2] In 2006 she gave the British Academy's Master-Mind Lecture.[5]

She is on the editorial board of Critical Inquiry.[6]

Daston was awarded the Order of Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany in 2010. She was elected to the American Philosophical Society in 2017.[7] In 2018 she received the Dan David Prize.[8] She is married to the German psychologist and social scientist Gerd Gigerenzer.[citation needed]

Bibliography

  • Classical Probability in the Enlightenment (1988)
  • "The Ideal and Reality of the Republic of Letters in the Enlightenment" (1993)
  • Wonders and the Order of Nature, 1150–1750 (with Katharine Park, 1998)[9]
  • "Objectivity and the Escape from Perspective" (1999)
  • Biographies of Scientific Objects (co-editor, 2000)
  • Eine kurze Geschichte der wissenschaftlichen Aufmerksamkeit (2001)
  • Wunder, Beweise und Tatsachen: zur Geschichte der Rationalität (2001)
  • "The Morality of Natural Orders: The Power of Medea" and "Nature's Customs versus Nature's Laws" (Tanner Lectures at Harvard University, 2002)
  • The Moral Authority of Nature (co-editor, 2003)
  • "The Disciplines of Attention," in David E. Wellbery, ed., A New History of German Literature (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press Reference Library, 2005)
  • "Condorcet and the Meaning of Enlightenment" (Lecture at McGill University, 2006)
  • Objectivity (with Peter Galison, Boston: Zone Books, 2007)
  • Natural Law and Laws of Nature in Early Modern Europe (co-editor, Aldershot: Ashgate, 2008)
  • "Rules Rule: How Enlightenment Reason Became Cold War Rationality" (Video of Lecture at Wissenschaftskolleg zu Berlin, 2010)
  • Histories of scientific observation (with Elizabeth Lunbeck, Chicago; London: University of Chicago Press, 2011)
  • Before the Two Cultures: Big Science and Big Humanities in the Nineteenth Century (Proceedings of the Israel Academy of Sciences and Humanities, Volume IX, No. 1. 2015)
  • Against Nature (2019)
  • Stefaner, Moritz; Lorraine Daston; Jen Christiansen (September 2020). "The language of science". Scientific American 323 (3): 24–31. https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/the-language-of-science/. 
  • Rules: A Short History of What We Live By (Princeton University Press, 2022)

References

External links