ÐÓ°ÉÂÛ̳

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Current Visitors

Current Visitors of the CPNSS

Find out about the current visitors working on CPNSS research projects.

 

Daniel Häuser

Daniel Häuser is a doctoral candidate in political philosophy and an associate member of the DFG Graduate Program “Collective Decision Making” at Hamburg University. He writes about justice in migration, political legitimacy, democracy, and theories of moral rights. In his thesis, he investigates the justice and legitimacy of immigration restrictions, and the relationship between these two dimensions of normative evaluation.  

Dates of visit: January 2025 - September 2025

Email: d.hauser2@lse.ac.uk

Website: 

 

Research Project

Claiming Authority Across Borders: Towards a Cosmopolitan Statism 

Many political philosophers believe that demanding obligations of egalitarian justice and democratic inclusion arise only in distinctive political relationships, which are characterized by subjection to a coercively enforced system of political rule. Do states and their citizens stand in such political relationships to migrants and refugees, or do such relationships end at state borders? This question lies at the core of an ongoing debate in the philosophy of migration between proponents of statist and cosmopolitan accounts of justice in migration. In this project, I explore a novel intermediary view, which combines attractive features of the cosmopolitan and the statist position. This intermediary view is based on the idea that there are two distinct kinds of political relationships, which ground distinct sets of political obligations. I argue that political relationships of a weak kind extend beyond state borders, while political relationships of a strong kind obtain only between the citizens of legitimate states. Cosmopolitans are therefore right to insist that states have political obligations towards foreigners, while statists are right to insist that these obligations are more limited in scope than domestic political obligations.

 

Veronica Cibotaru

Currently I am visiting scholar at the Centre for Philosophy of Natural and Social Science at ÐÓ°ÉÂÛ̳ and a postdoctoral research fellow at the University of Tübingen – Center for Interdisciplinary and Intercultural Studies. Additionally, I am an affiliated researcher at the École Normale Supérieure - PSL, Husserl Archives, Paris. 
My research is situated mainly in the fields of philosophy of language, AI and religion. During my research stay at the CPNSS I will work on a research project devoted to the epistemology of the idea of universal grammar as it has been developed in contemporary linguistics. 

Dates of visit: April 2025 

Email: v.cibotaru@lse.ac.uk

Research Project

Universal Grammar: New Epistemological Challenges

The idea of a universal grammar which would be shared by all human languages and would correspond to a universal innate human faculty has been predominant in the field of contemporary linguistics, while at the same time it has been increasingly criticized in various disciplines.  During my research stay I will investigate three epistemological issues related to this idea which have not been addressed in the current scholarship: (1) epistemological status; (2) epistemological specificity; (3) the epistemological potential of large language models and new neurolinguistic theories for the idea of universal grammar. 

 

Raja Panjwani

Raja Panjwani is a postdoctoral associate in the Department of Biology at Georgetown University, working at the intersection of evolutionary biology and economic theory. He is also a consulting researcher at Microsoft Research in New York, where he works on human-oriented AI. Raja studied philosophy of science at Western Ontario and Oxford prior to completing his PhD in Economics at the NYU Stern School of Business in 2024. 

Dates of visit: January 2025 – May 2025

Email: r.panjwani1@lse.ac.uk

Research Project

A Model of Reflective Equilibrium

Reflective Equilibrium is an epistemic state in which one's evaluative judgments cohere with general principles justifying those judgments. This project will build on recent work in reason-based choice to develop a formal model of reflective equilibrium. In particular, the project will study how epistemic states which are out-of-equilibrium can be revised to approach equilibrium, and how various cognitive procedures impact the revision process. The project also seeks to characterize a notion of 'shared reflective equilibrium', the pursuit of which is at the heart of deliberative democratic institutions. The hope is that a formal model of the deliberation process can shed light on conditions for convergence versus polarization. 

As part of the Cohesive Capitalism Programme, Dr Panjwani will also be teaching seminars for PP406 Philosophy for Public Policy in the Department of Philosophy this Winter Term.

 

Marc Raguz

Originally from Australia, Marc is currently in the second year of his PhD at the University of Edinburgh. He received his master’s in philosophy from the University of Salzburg and his Bachelor of Mechanical and Materials Engineering from the University of Queensland. His areas of interest are philosophy of science, philosophy of mind and cognitive science, and philosophy of mathematics.

Dates of visit: January 2025 – April 2025

Email: m.raguz@lse.ac.uk

Research Project

Multiscale modelling, uncertainty, and inductive risk: Policy-making and challenges surrounding fusion energy.

His research is centred on complex (multiscale) modelling and the nature of scientific uncertainty in the fusion context, with a particular focus on the inductive risks and policy-making challenges surrounding the engineering, design, study, and application of fusion systems.

Marc works closely with philosophers of science at both the University of Edinburgh and within the broader philosophical community, together with the scientists and engineers at UKAEA, to gain clarity about the intricate conceptual challenges inherent in fusion energy, as well as how to approach policy-making in such an unfamiliar and uncertain environment. 

 

Percy Venegas Obando

Percy Venegas is the Editor-in-Chief of the Journal on AI Policy and Complex Systems (Policy Studies Organization, Washington, DC). His expertise covers a wide-ranging knowledge base that spans multiple disciplines in both the sciences and humanities, including doctor of engineering studies in Artificial Intelligence & Machine Learning (GWU), alongside graduate studies spanning the MSc in Software and Systems Security at Oxford, MSc in Finance and Banking at King’s College London; MSc in Epistemology, Ethics, and Philosophy of Mind at Edinburgh; a Masters in Sustainable Development and Corporate Responsibility at EOI in Spain; an MBA from MIB Trieste; and a licentiate degree in Electronic Engineering (ITCR). He has also completed lifelong learning and executive education programs at The Wharton School (Private Wealth Management), The New England Complex Systems Institute (VUCA: Volatility, Uncertainty, Complexity, and Ambiguity), The Santa Fe Institute (Collective Intelligence), Oxford’s Continuing Education (Quantum Computing), The Saïd Business School (Oxford AI Programme), The Aspen Institute Socrates Program (From AI to C-Creation), and the ÐÓ°ÉÂÛ̳ (Ethics in AI), among others. Percy is an affiliate of the King’s Institute for Artificial Intelligence (King’s College London). 

Percy’s practice follows an interdisciplinary and multi-agent approach, using evolutionary algorithms that connect ideas from different domains, exploiting curiosity and co-creativity and leading to innovative insights for problem-solving, policy design, and decision-making. His research interests include the Philosophy of Scientific Modelling, Neuroaesthetics, and Epistemic Uncertainty.

Date of visit: August 2024 – August 2025

Email: p.obando@lse.ac.uk

Research Project

Ethics, Neuro-aesthetics, and Evolutionary Modelling

Neuroaesthetics seeks neural correlates of beauty, surprise, and desire, including moral goodness and beauty judgments. Despite intriguing findings like the orbitofrontal cortex's involvement in moral judgment, beauty judgment, and decision-making, the neural apparatus's complexity hinders many potentially illuminating analyses. Computational evolutionary modelling offers an alternative approach. Time-evolving models using empirical data and generative heuristics create novel representations of systems or datasets. Evolutionary techniques measure the asymmetry in model agreement within an ensemble, providing automated hypothesis generation and inherent epistemic uncertainty. Propositions with certain goodness of fit interact in consensus with measurable aesthetic symmetrical qualities, while dissensus serves as an explanatory artifact for model ensemble uncertainty. The central question is: can aesthetics assist a modeler in gaining understanding?

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