Interdisciplinary Studies
Victoria Kamsler
A visitor in the Program in Interdisciplinary Studies from 2003 till 2006,
Victoria Kamsler has taught ethics and political philosophy at
Harvard, Wellesley, Bryn Mawr, Queens College CUNY, the University of
Georgia, and both the Politics and Philosophy Departments at
Princeton. While at the Institute for Advanced Study, she had a
concurrent appointment in the Princeton Philosophy Department,
teaching seminars in Environmental Ethics and Political
Judgment. In October 2004 she organized a Forum on
the Environment, at Princeton University.
Victoria Kamsler is on the Advisory Board of the All Species Foundation,
a cooperative venture among scientists and environmental theorists
dedicated to the taxonomy and genomic identification of all living
species. While a graduate student at Oxford University, she worked in
the British House of Commons, on the congressional staff of
Congresswoman Patricia Schroeder and in the Foreign Policy Office of
Senator Edward Kennedy. She also worked as a public policy consultant
at ICF, a major Washington DC consulting firm, specializing in
environmental and nuclear regulatory issues.
While at IAS, her research interests included articles and invited lectures
on the following subjects:
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Democratic Theory
Pursuing Philip Pettit's suggestion that contemporary theories of
deliberative democracy are unduly "ratiocinative," she address Pettit's
"conceptual challenge" with a theory of conceptualization and
cognitive innovation in democratic discourse. She considers the relation
of theoretical and practical reason in deliberation, the role of
theoretical reason in conceptualization, and considers recent work in
the philosophy of language that helps us to understand how concepts
are formed and transformed.
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Kant and Political Judgment
Hannah Arendt famously held that Kant's Critique of Judgment contained
Kant's 'unwritten political philosophy.' This view has influenced a
large and growing body of literature on judgment. A close reading of
Kant reveals 'Arendt's mistake,' and retrieves other aspects of Kant's
account, neglected by Arendt, that do in fact yield insights into
political judgment.
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Capabilities and the Environment
The capability theory of Amartya Sen and Martha Nussbaum has provided
an invaluable alternative to standard economic accounts of
welfare. Can environmental values be represented within the terms of
this theory? If not, what consequences does this have for the theory,
and can it be appropriately reconfigured?
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Thucydides and Hobbes on Deliberation
Two of the great skeptics of democracy present related accounts of the
defects of deliberation as a tool of practical rationality. Their
arguments prefigure certain contemporary criticisms of deliberative
democracy, and provide unlooked-for avenues for enhancement of
democratic theory.
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History of Utopian Thought
More than a hundred years before the publication of Thomas More's
Utopia, Christine de Pisan's Book of the City of Ladies put forward an
idealized 'city in speech' combining a distinctive proto-feminist
therapeutic approach to philosophical argument, virtue theory,
allegory and historiography.
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