Roberta Millstein

Roberta L. Millstein
Alma mater University of Minnesota
Occupation Professor
Known for Philosophy of science, history and philosophy of biology, environmental ethics

Roberta L. Millstein is Professor of Philosophy at the University of California, Davis,[1][2][3] with affiliations in the Science and Technology Studies Program[4] and the John Muir Institute for the Environment.[5] She is the Senior Co-Chair of the Philosophy of Science Association’s Women's Caucus and an Editor of the peer-reviewed online open-access journal Philosophy & Theory in Biology.[6] Millstein’s primary research is in the history and philosophy of biology and environmental ethics.[3] Millstein’s work on the concepts of natural selection and random genetic drift is widely cited.[7]

Education and Career

Millstein earned her A.B. in Philosophy and Computer Science from Dartmouth College in 1988 and her M.A. and Ph.D. in Philosophy (with a minor in the History of Science and Technology) from the University of Minnesota, Twin Cities in 1997.[8] Millstein taught in the Philosophy Department at California State University, East Bay from 1997-2006, serving as Interim Chair in 2005-6, and she was a Visiting Associate Professor in the Department of History and Philosophy of Science at the University of Pittsburgh in 2005.[8] Now Millstein teaches at the University of California, Davis, where she has been since 2006.[1]

While in graduate school, Millstein studied under John Beatty and C. Kenneth Waters.[8] She has co-authored with Michael R. Dietrich and Robert A. Skipper, Jr.[8]

Research Areas

Millstein is best known for her claim that within evolutionary theory, natural selection can be distinguished from random genetic drift if both are properly understood as causal processes rather than outcomes.[9][10][11][12] She is also known for the claim that natural selection is a population-level causal process [9][13][14] but (in a paper co-authored with Robert A. Skipper, Jr.) that current philosophical accounts of mechanisms do not capture it well.[15][16][17] Her work on the concepts of population and metapopulation has been described as exemplifying an approach where biology and philosophy work as equal disciplinary contributors.[18] Her recent co-edited volume ‘’Mechanism and Causality in Biology and Economics’’ (with Hsiang-Ke Chao and Szu-Ting Chen) has been called a “collection of excellent essays” with “novel subject matter”; her own essay in the book is described as a “model of clarity.”[19]

Selected publications

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 6/9/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.