Katherine Brading: Unity, Change, and What There Is
4 November 2011, 11:30 am - 1:00 pm EDT
ABSTRACT
Dr. Brading’s lecture considers such fundamental questions as ‘What is there?’ and ‘How, if at all, can what there is undergo change?’ She explores the relationships between matter, space and time by means of an approach to physics that has its origins in Newton’s engagement with Descartes’ philosophy.
SPEAKER PROFILE
Katherine Brading is an Associate Professor of Philosophy at the University of Notre Dame. She specializes in philosophy of physics, especially symmetries and conservation laws in contemporary physics, and including quantum mechanics, relativity, and seventeenth-century cosmology.
She received her BSc in Physics and Philosophy from King’s College London (1992), her BPhil (Philosophy) at Oxford (1996) and her DPhil (Philosophy) at Oxford (2002). Her most recent papers are A Note on General Relativity, Energy Conservation, and Noether’s Theorems (2005) and Are Gauge Transformations Observable?(with Harvey Brown, 2004).
Read more about Katherine Brading.