Monday 18 January 2021

HPS in 20: Essay competition winners

In November 2020 we announced an essay competition, in which year 12 and 13 A-Level students were invited to send us 800-word essays telling us which of our 20 objects is the most important, and why.

We received a wonderful array of impressively scholarly essays on different topics, and I am now delighted to announce our winners!

In first place, Aarushi Malik, from King Edward VI Camp Hill School in Birmingham, sent us a stylishly written case for the Stethoscope. She showed an excellent grasp of the complex materials of the lecture while going beyond them to draw an optimistic and timely lesson about the progress of science and medicine. Aarushi nets £100.

Sara Hamdani, from Xaverian College in Manchester, and Ruby Cline, from Chiswick School in West London, are our two prize-winning runners-up, and will be awarded £50 each. Sara wrote an imaginative, well researched, and wonderfully written essay on how, from Plato to Freud, the horse-and-rider figurine has symbolized human attempts to use reason to understand the often irrational human mind. Ruby submitted a very thoughtful and well researched essay on the Biblical herbarium as a clue to major themes in the sociology of religion and of popular science in Victorian Britain.

You can read all three essays on the centre's blog!

Congratulations to all our winners, and many thanks to everyone who submitted an essay. We were delighted by the level of enthusiasm on display, and feel confident that HPS has a very rosy future and will be in good hands.

Thursday 14 January 2021

HPS Matters

 The Leeds Centre for History and Philosophy of Science has a sensational spring seminar schedule.

HPS Matters

Shining a spotlight on research that showcases how history and philosophy of science can illuminate issues of current and real-world importance in our everyday lives.

Wednesdays, 3.15-5 GMT

All talks will be live streamed over TEAMS. Email the centre director at e.clarke@leeds.ac.uk to get the link and join the debate!

 27 January 2021: Laura Franklin-Hall (NYU): Genders as Historical Explanatory Kinds

10 February 2021: Alexander Franklin (KCL): Social Construction, Physical Construction, and Emergence

24 February 2021: Edward Jones-Imhotep (UToronto): Birth of a Notation: Charting Human and Machine Failure at the Dawn of the Jazz Age

10 March 2021: Jill Kirby (Sussex): Stress – the plague of modern life?

24 March 2021: Liz Chatterjee (Chicago): Late Acceleration: Indian Electricity and Planetary History

28 April 2021: Steven Shapin (Harvard): Hard vs soft science: What is at stake?

12 May 2021: Michael Stuart (Geneva): NASA's Minipublics: How NASA Uses Imagination to Shape the American Space Imaginary.

19 May 2021: Haixin Dang (Leeds): Social Epistemology of Science