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The Lakatos Award is given annually for a contribution to the philosophy of science which is widely interpreted as outstanding. The contribution must be in the form of a book published in English during the previous six years.
The Award is in memory of Imre Lakatos and has been endowed by the Latsis Foundation . It is administered by the following committee:
The Committee makes the Award on the advice of an independent and anonymous panel of selectors. The value of the Award is £10,000.
To take up an Award a successful candidate must visit the LSE and deliver a public lecture .
Winners
The Award has so far been won by:
1986 - Bas Van Fraassen
for The Scientific Image (1980)
and Hartry Field
for Science Without Numbers (1980)
1987 - Michael Friedman
for Foundations of Space-Time Theories
and Philip Kitcher
for Vaulting Ambition: Sociobiology and the Quest for Human Nature
1988 - Michael Redhead
for Incompleteness, Nonlocality and Realism
1989 - John Earman
for A Primer on Determinism
1991 - Elliott Sober
for Reconstructing the Past: Parsimony, Evolution, and Interference
1993 - Peter Achinstein
for Particles and Waves: Historical Essays in the Philosophy of Science (1991)
and Alexander Rosenberg
for Economics--Mathematical Politics or Science of Diminishing Returns? (1992)
1994 - Michael Dummett
1995 - Lawrence Sklar
for Physics and Chance: Philosophical Issues in the Foundations of Statistical Mechanics
1996 - Abner Shimony
for The Search for a Naturalistic World View (1993)
1998 - Jeffrey Bub
for Interpreting the Quantum World
and Deborah Mayo
for Error and the Growth of Experimental Knowledge
1999 - Brian Skyrms
for Evolution of the Social Contract (1996) on modelling 'fair', non self-interested human actions using (cultural) evolutionary dynamics ([1] )
2001 - Judea Pearl
for Causality: Models, Reasoning and Inference (2000) on causal models and causal reasoning ([2] )
2002 - Penelope Maddy
for Naturalism in Mathematics (1997) on the issue of how the axioms of set theory are justified ([3] )
2003 - Patrick Suppes
for Representation and Invariance of Scientific Structures (2002) on axiomatising a wide range of scientific theories in terms of set theory ([4] )
2004 - Kim Sterelny
for Thought in a Hostile World: The Evolution of Human Cognition (2003) on the idea that thought is a response to threat ([5] )
2005 - James Woodward
for Making Things Happen (2003) on causality and explanation
2006 - Harvey Brown
for Physical Relativity: Space-time Structure from a Dynamical Perspective (2005)
and Hasok Chang
for Inventing Temperature: Measurement and Scientific Progress (2004)
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