Catherine Elgin
Catherine Z. Elgin is a philosopher working in epistemology and the philosophies of art and science. She is currently a professor of philosophy of education at the Graduate School of Education at Harvard University.
Education and career
She holds a Ph.D. from Brandeis University where she studied with Nelson Goodman. She has held tenure-track and visiting positions at many universities, including Michigan State University, Vassar College, Princeton University, and MIT. In 2023, she was elected a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts & Sciences.Philosophical work
Elgin's work has considered such questions as "what makes something cognitively valuable?" As an epistemologist, she considers the pursuit of understanding to be of higher value than the pursuit of knowledge.In Considered Judgment, Elgin argues for "a reconception that takes reflective equilibrium as the standard of rational acceptability."
Works
With Reference to Reference, Hackett, 1983Reconceptions in Philosophy and Other Arts and Sciences, with Nelson Goodman, Routledge, 1988- * German translation: Revisionen. Philosophie und andere Künste und Wissenschaften, 1993The Philosophy of Nelson Goodman, v. 1. Nominalism, Constructivism, and Relativism,, v. 2. Nelson Goodman's New Riddle of Induction,, v. 3. Nelson Goodman's Philosophy of Art,, v. 4. Nelson Goodman's Theory of Symbols and its Applications,, 1997Between the Absolute and the Arbitrary Cornell University Press, 1997Considered Judgment, Princeton University Press, 1996Philosophical Inquiry: Classic and Contemporary Readings, with Jonathan E. Adler. 2007
- , The Philosophers' Magazine, December, 2012True Enough, MIT Press, 2017
- "Understanding in Science and Elsewhere": Interview with Catherine Z. Elgin about her philosophy and her intellectual biography, published 2019 on 3:AM Magazine and republished on 3:16