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THOMAS A. STAPLEFORD Curriculum Vitae January 2021

Program of Liberal Studies 219 O’Shaughnessy Hall University of Notre Dame Notre Dame, IN 46556 574.631.7172

EDUCATION Ph.D., History of Science, Harvard University, 2003 M.Sc. (with distinction), Artificial Intelligence, University of Edinburgh, 1998 B.M.E. (summa cum laude), Mechanical Engineering, University of Delaware, 1997 B.A. (summa cum laude), Liberal Arts, University of Delaware, 1997

PROFESSIONAL POSITIONS Chair, Program of Liberal Studies, University of Notre Dame, 2016- Associate Professor, Program of Liberal Studies, University of Notre Dame, 2010- Assistant Professor, Program of Liberal Studies, University of Notre Dame, 2003-2010 Undergraduate Advisor, , Brain and Behavior Program, Harvard University, 2001-2002 Teaching Fellow and Tutor, Department of the History of Science, Harvard University, 1999- 2001

MAJOR HONORS, GRANTS, & AWARDS “Developing Virtues in the Practice of Science.” Co-PI’s: Celia Deane-Drummond & Darcia Narvaez. Grant for $3,114,507 from the Templeton Religion Trust. 2015 - 2019. “Economic Statistics and the Challenge of Democratic Control.” Grant for $104,530 from the National Science Foundation, Science & Technology Studies Program, 2014 – 2016. Visiting Scholar, American Academy of Arts & Sciences, 2008-2009 “Bounded Conflict: The Consumer Price Index and American Political Economy, 1880-1985.” Grant for $49,992 from the National Science Foundation, Science and Technology Studies Program, 2005-2006 Joseph Dorfman Best Dissertation Award, History of Society, 2004 National Science Foundation Graduate Fellowship, 1997-2000

OTHER HONORS, GRANTS, & AWARDS Research in the History of Economic and Methodology, Warren Samuels Prize, 2016 Rev. Edmund P. Joyce, C.S.C., Award for Excellence in Undergraduate Teaching, 2014 Labor History, Best Article on a U.S. Topic, 2008

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Harvard Center for American Political Studies, Dissertation Fellowship, 2002-2003 Packard Dissertation Writing Fellowship, 2002-2003 Harvard Graduate Merit Fellowship, 2001-2002 Co-winner (with Matthew Stanley) in the Science and Religion Course Program, sponsored by the Templeton Foundation, 2001 Certificate of Distinction in Teaching. Harvard University, 2001 Joseph R. Levenson Memorial Teaching Prize Nominee. Harvard University, 2001

MONOGRAPHS The Cost of Living in America: A Political History of Economic Statistics, 1880–2000. (420 pp.; Cambridge University Press, 2009) Reviewed in , American Historical Review, Journal of American History, Labor: Studies in Working-Class History of the Americas, Journal of Interdisciplinary History, Business History, Journal of the History of Economic Thought, History of Political Economy, Journal of the History of the Behavioral Sciences, Choice, Politique et sociétiés [review essay]

EDITED VOLUMES Emanuele Ratti & Thomas A. Stapleford, eds., Science, Technology, and Virtues: Contemporary Perspectives (forthcoming from Oxford University Press). Robert Van Horn, Philip Mirowski, and Thomas Stapleford, eds., Building Chicago Economics: New Perspectives on the History of America’s Most Powerful Economics Program (399 pp.; Cambridge University Press, 2011)

REFEREED JOURNAL ARTICLES “Revisiting the Past? Big Data, Interwar Statistical Economics, and the Long History of Statistical Inference in the United States.” Forthcoming in History of Political Economy. “Engineering the ‘Statistical Control of Business’: Malcolm Rorty, Telephone Engineering, and American Economics, 1900 – 1930,” History of Political Economy 52, annual supplement (December 2020): 59-84. “Making and the Virtues: The of Scientific Research,” , Theology, and the Sciences 5, no. 1 (December 2018): 28-50. Timothy S. Reilly and Thomas A. Stapleford, “Science, Virtue, and Moral Formation,” Journal of Moral Education 47, no. 3 (July 2018): 267-271. [Introduction to special issue of JME] “Business and the Making of American Econometrics, 1910 – 1940,” History of Political Economy 49, no. 2 (June 2017): 233-265. “Historical Epistemology and the History of Economics: A View through the Lens of Practice,” Research in the History of Economic Thought & Methodology 35A (2017): 113-145. Winner of the Warren Samuels Prize for best submitted article, 2016.

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Daniel J Hicks and Thomas A. Stapleford, “The Virtues of Scientific Practice: MacIntyre, Virtue Ethics, and the Historiography of Science,” Isis: Journal of the History of Science Society 107, no. 3 (September 2016): 449-472. “Navigating the Shoals of Self-Reporting: Data Collection in US Expenditure Surveys since 1920.” In Observing the Economy: Historical Perspectives, Maas and Morgan, eds. Annual supplement to History of Political Economy, vol. 44 (Duke University Press, 2012): 160- 182. “Re-conceiving Quality: Political Economy and the Rise of Hedonic Price Indexes.” In Histories on Econometrics, Boumans, DuPont, & Qin, eds. Annual supplement to History of Political Economy, vol. 43 (Duke University Press, 2011): 309-328. “Aftershocks from a Revolution: Ordinal Utility and Cost-of-Living Indexes.” Journal of the History of Economic Thought 33, no. 2 (June 2011): 187-222. “Shaping Knowledge about American Labor: External Advising at the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics in the Twentieth Century.” Science in Context 23, no. 2 (June 2010): 187-220. “Defining a ‘Living Wage’ in America: Transformations in Union Wage Theories, 1870-1930.” Labor History 49, no. 1 (February 2008): 1-22. Selected as Best Article on a U.S. Topic by the editorial board of Labor History, 2008. “Market Visions: Expenditure Surveys, Market Research, and Economic Planning in the New Deal.” Journal of American History 94, no. 2 (September 2007): 418-444. “‘Housewife vs. Economist’: Gender, Class, and Domestic Economic Knowledge in Twentieth-Century America.” Labor: Studies in Working Class History in the Americas 1, no. 2 (2004): 89-112.

REFEREED BOOK CHAPTERS Thomas A. Stapleford and Daniel J. Hicks, “Seeing Science as a Communal Practice: MacIntyre, Virtue Ethics, and the Study of Science.” Forthcoming in Ratti and Stapleford, eds., Science, Technology, and the Virtues: Contemporary Perspectives (Oxford University Press).

“Econometrics.” In Modernism and the Social Sciences in the U.S. and Britain, Mark Bevir, ed. (Cambridge University Press, 2017): 39-76.

“Positive Economics for Democratic Policy: Friedman, Institutionalism, and the Science of History.” In Building Chicago Economics: New Perspectives on the History of America’s Most Powerful Economics Program, Van Horn, Mirowski, & Stapleford, eds. (Cambridge University Press, 2011): 3-35.

BOOK REVIEWS Review of Glickman, Free Enterprise: An American History (Yale University Press, 2019), forthcoming in American Historical Review.

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Review of Cook, The Pricing of Progress: Economic Indicators and the Capitalization of American Life (Harvard University Press, 2017), in Business History Review 92, no. 2 (2018): 365-368. Review of Postell, Bureaucracy in America: The Administrative State’s Challenge to Constitutional Government (University of Missouri Press, 2017), in Review of Politics 80, no. 3 (2018): 544-547. Review of Düppe and Weintraub, Finding Equilibrium: Arrow, Debreu, McKenzie and the Problem of Scientific Credit (Princeton, 2014), in Isis: Journal of the History of Science Society 106, no. 4 (December 2015): 988-989. Review of Bouk, How Our Days Became Numbered: Risk and the Rise of the Statistical Individual (University of Chicago, 2015), in Journal of Economic Literature 53 (December 2015): 1024-1026. Review of Goldstein, Creating Consumers: Home-Economists in Twentieth-Century America (University of North Carolina Press, 2012), in Enterprise & Society, 16 (2015): 985-988. Review of Rohde, Armed with Expertise: The Militarization of American Social Research during the Cold War (Cornell, 2013), in Journal of American History 101, no. 2 (2014): 655-656. Review of Allen, The Institutional Revolution: Measurement and the Emergence of the Modern World (University of Chicago, 2012), in Business History Review 87, no. 3 (Autumn 2013): 596-599. Review of Yarrow, Measuring America: How Economic Growth Came to Define American Greatness in the Late Twentieth Century (University of Massachusetts, 2010), in American Historical Review 117, no. 3 (June 2012): 899-900. Review of Maarseveen, Klep, and Stamhuis, eds., The Statistical Mind in Modern Society: The Netherlands, 1850 – 1940, 2 volumes (Amsterdam: Aksant Academic Publishers, 2008), in Isis 102, no. 1 (March 2011): 195-197. “Stabile’s The Living Wage: The Living Wage and the History of Economics.” Review essay for Research in the History of Economic Thought and Methodology 28-A (2010): 329-338.

UNREFEREED PUBLICATIONS “Aryness Joy Wickens,” in Susan Ware, ed., Notable American Women: A Biographical Dictionary, Completing the Twentieth Century (Belknap Press, 2004).

PROFESSIONAL MEMBERSHIPS & SERVICE Executive Committee, History of Economics Society (2019- ) Associate Editor, Studies in the History & , Part A (2015-2018) Editorial Board, Isis (2012-2014), History of Political Economy (2020- ), Oeconomia (2020- ) Referee for European Journal of the History of Economic Thought; History of Political Economy; Historical Studies in the Natural Sciences; Isis; Journal of Academic Ethics; Journal of American History; Journal of the History of Economic Thought; Journal of the 4-TAS

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History of the Behavioral Sciences; Labor History; Science in Context; Science, Technology, and Values; Studies in the History & Philosophy of Science; Oxford University Press, Cambridge University Press, MIT Press. Research evaluation for King’s College, Cambridge, Junior Research Fellowship in Economics (2014). Member: History of Science Society, History of Economics Society, Organization of American Historians, Forum for the History of Human Science Committee Member: Best Article Prize, 2011, Forum for the History of Human Science; Burnham Early Career Award, 2020

CONFERENCES & WORKSHOPS ORGANIZED Co-Organizer (with Celia Deane-Drummond and Darcia Narvaez), “Practicing Science: Virtues, Values, and the Good Life.” University of Notre Dame London Gateway, August 9-12, 2018. Colloquium for Templeton Religion Trust project, “Developing Virtues in the Practice of Science.”

Co-Organizer (with Emanuele Ratti), “Science, Technology, and the Good Life.” University of Notre Dame, April 5-7, 2018.

Co-Organizer (with Celia Deane-Drummond and Darcia Narvaez), “Virtues in the Practice of Science.” Durham University, September 7-9, 2017. Colloquium for Templeton Religion Trust project, “Developing Virtues in the Practice of Science.”

Co-Organizer (with Maria Bach), “Economists in Action: Policy & Practice in the History of Economics”. Joint workshop between Notre Dame and the London School of Economics. University of Notre Dame London Gateway, May 26, 2017.

Co-Organizer (with Celia Deane-Drummond and Darcia Narvaez), “Developing Virtues in the Practice of Science.” University of Notre Dame, September 1-3, 2016. Colloquium for Templeton Religion Trust project.

INVITED PAPERS “After Surveys? Economic Reasoning and the History of Economics amidst the Data Revolution.” History of Statistical Inference. Duke University (virtual workshop), April 2020. “Engineering, Management Science, and American Economics, 1900 – 1940.” Economics and Engineering: Institutes, Practices, and Culture. Duke University. April 2019. Invited discussant, “Science and Common Sense.” Peoria Project Workshop, Los Angeles, CA, December 2018. “The Virtuous Statistician: How to Help Government Statistics Serve Democratic Life.” Drakenburg Workshop on Macroeconomic Indicators, University of Amsterdam, October 2016.

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“Government by Numbers: Federal Statistics & American Politics, 1787 – 2000.” Economic History Workshop, Northwestern University, April 2016. “Businesspersons and the Making of American Econometrics, 1910 – 1940.” The Contributions of Businesspersons to Economics, Duke University, November 2015. “Blending Scholarship & Core Texts at a Research University: The Program of Liberal Studies after 65 Years.” Plenary lecture. Liberal Arts & Sciences and Core Texts in the European Context, Amsterdam University College, The Netherlands, September 2015. “Historical Epistemology & the History of Economics.” Montréal Summer School in the History of Science and Economics, Université du Québec à Montréal, July 2015. “The Hard Work of Making Economic Knowledge.” Trinity College, Dublin, March 2015. “Modernism Contested: Economic Planning and the Rise of Econometrics.” Modernism and the Social Sciences. University of California, Berkeley, May 2013. “The Child Toileth Not But the Statistician Does: The Labor History of U.S. Labor Statistics, 1880–1930.” University of Michigan, February 2012. “The Evolution of Data Collection in U.S. Expenditure Surveys since 1920.” Observation in Economics, Duke University, April 2011. “Advocates No More: American Economists and the U.S. Consumer Movement, 1920-1970.” 2011 Symposium, Adolph A. Berle, Jr., Center on Corporations, & Society, Seattle University School of Law, January 2011. “Positive Economics for Democratic Policy: Milton Friedman, Institutionalism, and the Science of History.” History of Economics as History of Science. École normale supérieure de Cachan, France, June 2010 “Re-Conceiving Quality: Political Economy and the Rise of Hedonic Price Indexes” The History of Econometrics, Duke University, April 2010. “Expertise & Discipline: The Labor History of U.S. Labor Statistics, 1880–1930.” Gallatin School of Individualized Study, New York University, 27 April 2009. “The Child Toileth Not But the Statistician Does: The Labor History of U.S. Labor Statistics, 1880–1910.” Observation in Economics. University of Amsterdam, Netherlands, March 2009. “The Political Ideology of Economic Statistics in the New Deal.” State Knowledge During the New Deal. University of Chicago, 25 July 2008. “Marketing Statistics: Commodifying Information on Family Purchases and Incomes in the United States.” Making Small Facts Travel: Labels, Packages, and Vehicles. London School of Economics, March 2008.

CONFERENCE PAPERS (Abstracts refereed) “The Politics of Statistical Calculation.” Contested Data: What Happens When the Givens Aren’t Taken? Data & Society Research Institute, New York, NY, March 6, 2020. Discussant: “Welfare Economics.” History of Economics Society, June 2019. New York, NY.

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“Engineering, Management Science, and American Economics.” Allied Social Science Association, January 2019. Atlanta, GA. “Engineering, Management Science, and American Economics.” History of Economics Society, June 2018. Chicago, IL. Discussant: “The Value of Time in the Sciences of Money.” History of Science Society, November 2016. Atlanta GA. “Dialogue on the Aims of Liberal Education.” Association for Core Texts and Courses, April 2016. Atlanta, GA. (Organizer for session on “Liberal Education and Religious Tradition”.) “The Divergent Paths of Early Econometrics in Britain and the United States.” History of Economics Society, June 2015, Michigan State University. “The Historiography of Practice.” History of Science Society, 2014. Chicago, IL. “Ordinal Utility and the Conceptual Basis of Cost-of-Living Indexes: How History Can Inform Contemporary Debates.” 2013 meeting of the Ottawa Group (International Working Group on Price Indices). Copenhagen, Denmark. Respondent for book session on Building Chicago Economics (eds., Mirowski, Van Horn, and Stapleford). Social Science History Association, 2012. Vancouver, BC. “Rethinking Expertise and Democratic Control in U.S. Economic Statistics.” Social Science History Association, 2012. Vancouver, BC. “Positive Economics for Democratic Policy: Milton Friedman and the Rationalization of Political Life.” Allied Social Science Association, 2012. Chicago, IL. Discussant: “Contesting Objectivity from within Mid-Twentieth Century America.” History of Science Society, 2011. Cleveland, OH. “Constraints of Knowledge: The Demise of Structural Economic Planning in the New Deal.” History of Economics Society, 2011. Notre Dame, IN. Discussant: “Government by Numbers: Statistics and Statecraft in Comparative Perspective.” Social Science History Association, 2010. Chicago, IL. “The U.S. Consumer Movement and American Economists, 1920-1970.” History of Science Society, 2010. Montreal, Canada. “Numbers, Rules, and Liberalism: Economic Statistics and American Industrial Relations.” History of Science Society, 2007. Arlington, VA. “Between Washington & Wall Street: Chicago and the Study of Consumer Demand, 1920- 1960.” Rethinking the Chicago School. University of Notre Dame, September 2007. “Collective bargaining and statistical methodology: Unions, business, and the Bureau of Labor Statistics in postwar America.” History of Economics Society, 2007. Washington, D.C. “To index or not? Cost-of-living statistics and wages in early twentieth-century America.” History of Economics Society, 2006. Grinnell, IA. “The federal government as an institutional site for American social science.” Organization of American Historians, 2006. Washington, D.C.

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“Workers, housewives, and economists: Defining the American Standard of Living, 1910- 1940.” History of Science Society, 2005. Minneapolis, MN. “The Consumer Price Index and American political economy: Stabilizing an economic fact.” History of Economics Society, 2004. Toronto, Canada. “Last of the ‘practical statisticians’: Professionalizing the Bureau of Labor Statistics during the New Deal.” History of Science Society, 2003. Cambridge, MA. “The ‘dark lanthorn of the spirit’: Empiricism and Anglo-American debates over cost-of-living indexes.” Social Science History Association, 2003. Baltimore, MD. “‘Workers and their families do not eat statistics’: Labor and the Cost-of-Living Index.” American Historical Association, 2003. Chicago, IL. Organizer of session titled “Creating the ‘Cost of Living’: Consumption and American Political Economy.” “Debating the ‘cost of living:’ Gender and economic knowledge in World War II.” Organization of American Historians, 2002. Washington, D.C. “‘Workers and their families do not eat statistics’: Econometrics from the ‘bottom up’ during World War II.” History of Science Society, 2001. Denver, CO. “Emergence of the ‘electronic brain’: Popular discourse and computing technology in postwar America.” Society for the Social Studies of Science, 2001. Cambridge, MA. “Bodies and bombers: The breakdown of the cybernetic vision.” Society for the History of Technology, 2001. San Jose, CA.

OTHER TALKS & PAPERS (select) “Liberal Education in a Time of Crises.” Opening Charge, Program of Liberal Studies, University of Notre Dame. September 2020. “The Role of Experts in a Democracy.” Presentation and discussion for “Experts Discuss…” series in professional development for science and engineering graduate students at the University of Notre Dame. April 2017. “Cultivating Faith in a Scientific Age.” Workshop on Science, Religion, and Homiletics, University of Notre Dame Institute for Church Life. September 2016. “Thomas Aquinas vs. Isaac Newton: Two Alternatives for Thinking about Science, Design, and Natural Theology. “ Catholic Schools Mission Day, Diocese of Ft. Wayne / South Bend. October 2015. “On Reading Great Books in a Postmodern Age.” Opening Charge, Program of Liberal Studies, University of Notre Dame. September 2011.

GRANTS & SPONSORED PROGRAMS (See also MAJOR HONORS & AWARDS) University of Notre Dame, ISLA Travel Grant, $1883.90, 2013 University of Notre Dame, Faculty Research Program Grant, $10,000, 2004 Charles Warren Center for American History, Summer Research Grant, $3,000, 2002

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SERVICE TO THE PROGRAM OF LIBERAL STUDIES Department Chair, 2016- Director of Undergraduate Studies, 2011-2013 Committee on Appointments and Promotions, 2010-2012, 2013-2014. Web Liaison, 2005-2008, 2009-2010 Publicity & Recruitment Committee, 2005-2008, 2009-2010 Ad hoc Committee on Teaching Evaluation, 2007-2008 Editor, Programma, alumni newsletter for Program of Liberal Studies, 2004-2005 Social Committee, 2003-2004

SERVICE TO THE GRADUATE PROGRAM IN THE HISTORY & PHILOSOPHY OF SCIENCE Interim Co-Director of the HPS Graduate Program, 2013-2014, 2016-2017 HPS Steering Committee, 2004-2005, 2006-2008, 2009-2011, 2014-2015, 2017-2018, 2021- Planning committee, HPS Summer Program for Secondary-School Science & Math Teachers, 2004-2005 Co-chair of HPS Lecture Series, 2003-2004

SERVICE TO NOTRE DAME’S REILLY CENTER FOR SCIENCE, TECHNOLOGY, AND VALUES Interviewer for Reilly Scholarship Program, 2007 Reilly Center Faculty Fellow, 2005- Planning and advisory committee, Reilly Center Reports, 2005-2006 Planning committee, “The Commerce & Politics of Science: An International Conference” (held at Notre Dame in fall 2006), 2004-2006

SERVICE TO UNIVERSITY OF NOTRE DAME University Research Vision Initiative, 2019- University Core Curriculum, Integration Subcommittee, 2018- University Core Curriculum, Science & Technology Subcommittee, 2017-2018 College Council, 2014-2015 Member, Notre Dame LEAD (leadership training seminar), 2013-2014 Co-organizer and co-leader of university-wide, faculty seminar on “The Two Cultures at Fifty: Reconsidering the Roles of Science, Engineering, and the Humanities in a Liberal Education.” Met bi-weekly during fall semester, 2009. University Committee on First Year of Studies, 2009-2010

SENIOR THESES SUPERVISED 2020: Elizabeth Reyda, Carter Hult 2019: Maeve Barker, William Jones, Natale Manusco 2018: Evelyn Heck, Pamela Udoye 2017: John Paul Gschwind, Madison Purrenhage, Anthony Rogari, Sarah Tomas Morgan 2016: David Flournoy, Max Gruber, Makayla Manta 2015: Matthew Caponigro, Matthew Doherty, Elise Fernandez, and Joseph Leonard 2014: Nicholas Blashill, Sarah Lovejoy, Jonathan Schommer 2013: Cristina Couri, Christopher Hunt, Caitlyn Kalscheur 9-TAS

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2012: Brian Bettonville, Jack Bolton, Dina Montemarano, Ann Marie Schweihs 2011: Kathryn Colby, Andrew Spica 2010: Michael Wrapp, Clark DuMontier 2008: Benjamin Gunty, GeeWon Cha 2007: Jack Calcutt, Jacob Leibowitz 2005: David Heinritz, David Jones, Joseph Swiderski 2004: Olivia Laible, Cristin McAuley, Amanda Mouton, Michael Sanchez

THESIS COMMITTEES & ADVISING Christopher Temple, Ph.D., History, 2020 Jude Galbraith, Ph.D., History and Philosophy of Science, 2020 Michelle Marvin, Ph.D., History and Philosophy of Science, 2020 Xiaoxing Jin, Ph.D. (co-adviser), History & Philosophy of Science, 2019 Yvonne Gaspar, Ph.D., History & Philosophy of Science, 2012 Melinda Grimsley-Smith, Ph.D, History, 2011 Lee Mayo, Ph.D., History & Philosophy of Science, 2011 Erik Peterson, Ph.D., History & Philosophy of Science, 2010 Teasel Muir-Harmony, M.A., History and Philosophy of Science, 2009 (director) Jessica Weaver, Ph.D. dissertation proposal, History & Philosophy of Science, 2007 Robert Van Horn, Ph.D., Economics, 2005-2007 Thomas Scheiding, Ph.D., Economics, 2005 Patrick Slaney, M.A., History and Philosophy of Science, 2005

DOCTORAL COMPREHENSIVE EXAM COMMITTEES Samuel Hall, History & Philosophy of Science, 2020 Jessica Brockmole, History, 2019 Char Brecevic, History & Philosophy of Science, 2019 Jude Galbraith, History & Philosophy of Science, 2018 Michelle Marvin, History & Philosophy of Science (minor reader), 2017 John Slattery, History & Philosophy of Science (minor reader), 2015 Moiz Hasan, History & Philosophy of Science, 2013 Greg Macklem, History & Philosophy of Science, 2013 Pablo Ruiz, History & Philosophy of Science, 2012 Yvonne Gaspar, History & Philosophy of Science, 2009 Erik Peterson, History & Philosophy of Science, 2007 Jessica Weaver, History & Philosophy of Science, 2007

COURSES TAUGHT AT NOTRE DAME (2003- ) PLS 13186 University Seminar, Ancient Greece: Civilization & Savagery PLS 23101 Great Books Seminar I PLS 23102 Great Books Seminar II PLS 23101 Modernity Rising: Faith, Reason, and the Good Life (Seminar III) PLS 20412 PLS Sciences I: “Fundamental Concepts of Natural Science” PLS 30411 PLS Sciences II: “Scientific Inquiry” PLS 33102 Great Books Seminar IV PLS 40412 PLS Science III: “Science, Society, and the Human Person”

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PLS 481 Great Books Seminar V PLS 482 Great Books Seminar VI HPS 83602 History of Science, Technology, and Medicine Since 1750 HPS 83608 Historical Epistemology HPS 93651 Science & Democracy in America HPS 93791 History and Philosophy of Statistics HPS 664 Human Sciences/Natural Theology (first half of course) MGA 63999 Great Books & the Human Journey

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