Peter K. Machamer (October 20, 1942 – May 31, 2023)[1] was an American philosopher and historian of science. Machamer was Professor of History and Philosophy of Science at the University of Pittsburgh.[2] His work has been influential in philosophy of science in developing an account of mechanistic explanation which rejects standard deductive models of explanation, such as the deductive-nomological model by understanding scientific practice as the search for mechanisms. His research has also focused on 17th-century history of philosophy and science, on Galileo Galilei and René Descartes in particular, and on values and science. He was also a wine columnist for the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette for fifteen years,[3] and he has reflected on wine and beer in philosophical writing.[4] Machamer was also the "Philosopher in Residence" for the Pittsburgh dance company Attack Theatre.[5]

Biography

edit

Machamer earned his BA from Columbia University in 1964,[6] his BA (1966) and MA (1971) from Trinity College, Cambridge University, and his PhD in philosophy from the University of Chicago in 1972. His dissertation, Points about Observation in Science, was supervised by Manley Thompson and Dudley Shapere. Machamer taught in the Department of Philosophy at Ohio State University from 1969 to 1976, receiving tenure, and then moved to the Department of History & Philosophy of Science at the University of Pittsburgh as associate professor in 1976, becoming professor in 1978. At the University of Pittsburgh, Machamer has served as chair (1978–1993) of History & Philosophy of Science, associate director of the Center for the Philosophy of Science (1999–20??), and as a member of the Center for Neural Basis of Cognition (CNBC). He has also been affiliated with the Cultural Studies Program at the University of Pittsburgh since its inception. He has been a Fulbright fellow at the University of Athens and the National Technical University of Athens (1996) and visiting professor at Universita' degli Studi di Udine (1994), the National Technical University of Athens (1998), Boğaziçi University (1998), and the University of Konstanz (2007). He has also received grants from the NEH, the NSF, the Heinz Foundation, the Mellon Foundation, and the U.S. Department of Education.[7]

Mechanisms and explanation

edit

Machamer's work has been influential in developing an account of scientific explanation understood as the search for and filling in of mechanisms. His co-authored 2000 article (with Lindley Darden and Carl Craver) “Thinking about Mechanisms”, published in Philosophy of Science, has been cited over 3,000 times.[8] His current work explores further consequences of this view in "Activities and Causation: The Metaphysics and Epistemology of Mechanisms," International Studies in the Philosophy of Science 187.1 (2004): 27–39, and in work in progress "Explaining Mechanisms"[9] and "Models as Models of Mechanisms."[10]

History of philosophy and history and philosophy of science

edit

Machamer's research in history of philosophy and history and philosophy of science has focused on Descartes[11] and Galileo,[12] but he has also worked on Hobbes[13] and Aristotle.[14] Much of his focus has been upon using natural philosophy by these figures as a way of understanding their metaphysics and epistemology.

Student Supervision

edit

Machamer supervised many PhD students working across a wide variety of different areas of history and philosophy of science during his time at Pitt. Many of these students have gone on to have very successful careers in the field including Carl F. Craver (Washington University in St. Louis), Heather Douglas (Michigan State University), and Gualtiero Piccinini (University of Missouri–St. Louis). Many of his former students contributed to an edited volume in his honour: Eppur Si Muove: Doing History and Philosophy of Science With Peter Machamer (Springer 2017).

Selected works

edit

Monographs

edit
  • Descartes' Changing Mind (Princeton University Press, 2009), with J.E. McGuire.

Selected edited books

edit
  • Perception, Realism, and Reference (Cambridge University Press, 2012), edited with A. Raftopoulos.
  • Blackwell Guide to Philosophy of Science (Blackwell, 2002), edited with Michael Silberstein.
  • Theory and Method in the Neurosciences (University of Pittsburgh Press, 2001), edited with P. McLaughlin and R. Grush.
  • Scientific Controversies (Oxford, 2000), edited with A. Baltas and M. Pera.
  • Cambridge Companion to Galileo (Cambridge University Press, 1998), editor.
  • Mindscapes: Philosophy, Science and the Mind (UVK.Universitatsverlag Konstanz/University of Pittsburgh Press, 1997), edited with Martin Carrier.
  • Perception: Historical and Philosophical Studies (Ohio State University Press, 1978), edited with Robert Turnbull.
  • Motion and Time, Space, and Matter (Ohio State University Press, 1976), edited with Robert Turnbull.

Selected journal articles and other works

edit

References

edit
  1. ^ "Peter K. Machamer". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. June 4, 2023.
  2. ^ Peter Machamer Curriculum Vitae. "CV" Archived 2014-05-12 at the Wayback Machine
  3. ^ Newman, Andy. "A Conversation with Peter Machamer." Pittsburgh City Paper 21 October 2004. [1]
  4. ^ Machamer, Peter. "Good Beer, or How Properly Dispute Taste" in Steven Hales, ed., Beer and Philosophy (Blackwell, 2007). [2]
  5. ^ Byrne, Terry. "Dance troupe is game for some heavy lifting." 22 February 2008 The Boston Globe Theater/Arts section [3] Article also available at the Attack Theatre website [4] Archived 2011-10-19 at the Wayback Machine
  6. ^ "BOOKSHELF". Columbia College Today. November 2001. Retrieved August 14, 2020.
  7. ^ Peter Machamer Curriculum Vitae. "CV" Archived 2014-05-12 at the Wayback Machine
  8. ^ Google Scholar Citation Data
  9. ^ Machamer, Peter. "Explaining Mechanisms," draft available on PhilSci Archive [5]
  10. ^ "Peter Machamer Homepage". Archived from the original on 2014-05-12. Retrieved 2014-05-09.
  11. ^ with J.E. McGuire, and Justin Sytsma, "Knowing Causes: Descartes on the World of Matter" Philosophica 76 (2005): 11-44; with J.E. McGuire "Descartes' Changing Mind" Studies in History and Philosophy of Science 37 (2006) 398-418; "Descartes' Dispositions," in Gregor Damschen, Robert Schnepf, and Katsten Stüber, eds., Debating Dispositions: Issues in Metaphysics, Epistemology and Philosophy of Mind (DeGruyter, 2009), pp. 71-78; with J.E. McGuire, Descartes’ Changing Mind (Princeton University Press, 2009).
  12. ^ Machamer, Peter. "Feyerabend and Galileo: The Interaction of Theories and the Reinterpretation of Experience," Studies in the History of Philosophy of Science 4 (1973) 1-46; Peter Machamer, Editor, Cambridge Companion to Galileo (Cambridge University Press, 1998); Peter Machamer, "Galileo and the Rhetoric of Relativity," Science and Education 8:2 (1999) 111-120; with Brian Hepburn, "Galileo and the Pendulum; Latching onto Time," Science and Education (2004); "Galileo Galilei," The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, revised 2013.
  13. ^ "Hobbes, Language, and the Kingdom of Darkness" in M. Mamiani, ed., Scienza e Sacra nel XVII secolo, Istituto Italiano per gli Studio Filosofici (Napoli, Vivarium, 2000), 157-173; special editor of an issue of Hobbes Studies on Hobbes and Science.
  14. ^ "Aristotle on Natural Place and Natural Motion," Isis 69 (1978): 377-387; "Memory Experience and Action In Aristotle" Aristotle Today, International Conference Proceedings (Noussa, 2002), 361-386 (English, and Greek Translation by Renia Gasparatou.
  15. ^ Most Cited Philosophy of Science articles in the past three years