Linacre College, Oxford
University of California, Berkeley
Clare Hall, Cambridge
Harvard University
University of Michigan
Princeton University
Stanford University
University of Utah
Yale University
Permanent lectureships are established at the following nine institutions:[4]
1977-78 (Stanford) —"The Limits of Objectivity"
Thomas Nagel
1977-78 (Michigan) —"Three Worlds"
Karl Popper
1977-78 (Oxford) —"The Basic Liberties and Their Priority"
John Rawls
1978-79 (Utah) —"The Search for an Environmental Ethic"
Lord Ashby
1978-79 (Utah State) —"Moral Conflicts"
R.M. Hare
1978-79 (Stanford) —"Equality of What?"
Amartya Sen
1978-79 (Michigan) —"Comparative Social Theory"
Edward O. Wilson
1979-80 (Cambridge) —"Arms Control and Peace Research"
Raymond Aron
1979-80 (Oxford) —"Morality and Consequences"
Jonathan Bennett
1979-80 (Michigan) —"Children as Moral Observers"
Robert Coles
1979-80 (Stanford) —"Omnes et Singulatim: Towards a Criticism of ‘Political Reason’"
Michel Foucault
1979-80 (Utah) —"The Twilight of Self-Reliance: Frontier Values and Contemporary America"
Wallace Stegner
1979-80 (Harvard) —"Economics or Ethics?"
George Stigler
1980-81 (Harvard) —"Do Countries Have Moral Obligations? The Case of World Poverty"
Brian Barry
1980-81 (Oxford) —"A Writer from Chicago"
Saul Bellow
1980-81 (Stanford) —"Is Liberty Possible?"
Charles Fried
1980-81 (Cambridge) —"The Representative Arts as a Source of Truth"
John Passmore
1980-81 (Utah) —"The Arms Race"
Joan Robinson
1980-81 (Hebrew University) —"Drugs and the Brain and Society"
Solomon H. Snyder
1981-82 (Cambridge) —"The Voluntary Society"
Kingman Brewster
1981-82 (Oxford) —"Bombs and Poetry"
Freeman Dyson
1981-82 (Australian National University) —"The Death of Utopia Reconsidered"
Leszek Kolakowski
1981-82 (Utah) —"Biological Determinism"
Richard Lewontin
1981-82 (Michigan) —"Ethics, Law, and the Exercise of Self-Command"
Thomas C. Schelling
1981-82 (Stanford) —"Psychiatry and Morality"
Alan Stone
1982-83 (Utah) —"A Writer from Mexico"
Carlos Fuentes
1982-83 (Stanford) —"The Incompleat Egoist"
David Gauthier
1982-83 (Cambridge) —"Haydn and Eighteenth-Century Patronage in Austria and Hungary"
H.C. Robbins Landon
1982-83 (Jawaharlal Nehru University) —"Only an Illusion"
Ilya Prigogine
1983-84 (Oxford): —"The Impact of Modern Genetics”
Donald D. Brown
1983-84 (Stanford): —"Music and Ideology in the Nineteenth Century”
Leonard B. Meyer
1983-84 (Utah): —"The Future of the Atlantic Alliance”
Helmut Schmidt
1983-84 (Michigan): —"Scientific Literacy as a Goal in a High-Technology Society”
Herbert Simon
1983-84 (Harvard): —"The Paradoxes of Political Liberty”
Quentin Skinner
1983-84 (Helsinki): —"Of Human Freedom”
Georg Henrik von Wright
1984-85 (Michigan): —"The Essential Gesture: Writers and Responsibility”
Nadine Gordimer
1984-85 (Oxford): —"Authority and Inequality under Capitalism and Socialism”
Barrington Moore
1984-85 (Cambridge): —"The Standard of Living”
Amartya K. Sen
1984-85 (Stanford): —"Moderation, Rationality, and Virtue”
Michael Slote
1985-86 (Stanford): —"The Uncanniness of the Ordinary”
Stanley Cavell
1985-86 (Michigan): —"The Uses of Diversity”
Clifford Geertz
1985-86 (Utah): —"Medicine as a Profession and a Business”
Arnold S. Relman
1985-86 (Oxford) —"The Significance of Choice"
T. M. Scanlon
1985-86 (Harvard): —"Interpretation and Social Criticism”
Michael Walzer
1986-87 (Cambridge): —"On Hippocrates, Thomas Jefferson, and Max Weber: The Bureaucratic, Technologic Imperatives and the Future of the Healing Tradition in a Voluntary Society”
Roger Bulger
1986-87 (Michigan): —"The Moral First Aid Manual”
Daniel Dennett
1986-87 (Oxford): —"Taming Chance: Randomization in Individual and Social Decisions”
Jon Elster
1986-87 (Harvard): —"Law and Morality”
Jürgen Habermas
1986-87 (Stanford): —"Greek Ethics and Moral Theory”
Gisela Striker
1986-87 (Utah): —"On Reading the Constitution”
Laurence H. Tribe
1987-88 (Cambridge): —"The Penalty of Imprisonment”
Louis Blom-Cooper
1987-88 (Harvard): —"The Pseudodemocratization of the American Presidency”
Robert A. Dahl
1987-88 (California): —"The Trouble with Confucianism”
William Theodore de Bary
1987-88 (Michigan): —"Two Hundred Years of Reactionary Rhetoric: The Case of the Perverse Effect”
Albert Hirschman
1987-88 (Madrid): —"The Alternative of Dissent”
Javier Muguerza
1987-88 (Warsaw): —"The Varieties of Value”
Lord Quinton
1987-88 (Oxford): —"The Dynamics of Reform and Revolt in Current South Africa”
Frederik van Zyl Slabbert
1987-88 (Buenos Aires): —"The Study of Human Nature and the Subjectivity of Value”
Barry Stroud
1988-89 (California): —"Cultural Tradition, Historical Experience, and Social Change: The Limits of Convergence”
S. N. Eisenstadt
1988-89 (Chinese University): —"Plurality and Unity in the Configuration of the Chinese People”
Fei Xiaotong
1988-89 (Stanford): —"Challenges to Neo-Darwinism and Their Meaning for a Revised View of Human Consciousness”
Stephen J. Gould
1988-89 (Cambridge): —"Islam in European Thought”
Albert Hourani
1988-89 (Michigan): —"Unspeakable Things Unspoken: The Afro-American Presence in American Literature”
Toni Morrison
1988-89 (Yale): —"Edward Gibbon in History: Aspects of the Text in The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire”
John G. A. Pocock
1988-89 (Utah): —"American Citizenship: The Quest for Inclusion”
Judith N. Shklar
1988-89 (Oxford): —"Nation and Universe”
Michael Walzer
1989-90 (Cambridge): —"Interpretation and Overinterpretation: World, History, Texts”
Umberto Eco
1989-90 (Harvard): —"The Civil and the Sacred”
Ernest Gellner
1989-90 (Michigan): —"Joining the Resistance:Psychology, Politics, Girls, and Women”
Carol Gilligan
1989-90 (Princeton): —"The Self and the State”
Irving Howe
1989-90 (Stanford): —"I. Market Socialism Revisited” and "II. The Soviet Union’s Road to a Free Economy: Comments of an Outside Observer”
János Kornai
1989-90 (Oxford): —"Europe and Islam”
Bernard Lewis
1989-90 (Yale): —"Strategy: A New Era?”
Edward Nicolae Luttwak
1989-90 (Utah): —"Poetry and Modernity”
Octavio Paz
1990-91 (Princeton): —"Trust”
Annette Baier
1990-91 (Cambridge): —"Environmental Challenges of the 1990s: Our Responsibility toward Future Generations”
Gro Harlem Brundtland
1990-91 (Stanford) —"Incentives, Inequality, and Community"
G.A. Cohen
1990-91 (Yale): —"Reading and Writing”
Robertson Davies
1990-91 (Oxford): —"Citizenship and Justice in the Lives and Thoughts of Nineteenth-Century American Workers”
David N. Montgomery
1990-91 (Michigan): —"Feminism and Pragmatism”
Richard Rorty
1991-92 (Cambridge): —"On Doing Science in the Modern World”
David Baltimore
1991-92 (Utah): —"The Broadest Pattern of Human History”
Jared Diamond
1991-92 (Michigan): —"The Bible in Seventeenth-Century English Politics”
Christopher Hill
1991-92 (UC Berkeley):
Helmut Kohl
1991-92 (Princeton): —"Decisions of Principle, Principles of Decision”
Robert Nozick
1991-92 (Oxford): —"Science and Revolutions”
Roald Sagdeev
1991-92 (Stanford): —"Modernity and the Rise of the Public Sphere”
Charles Taylor
1992-93 (Princeton): —"The Nation, Nationalism, and After: The Case of France”
Stanley Hoffmann
1992-93 (Utah): —"Rethinking the Meaning of Genetic Determinism”
Evelyn Fox Keller
1992-93 (Cambridge): —"The Sources of Normativity”
Christine Korsgaard
1992-93 (Yale): —"I. Mendacity Enforced: Europe, 1914-1989” and "II. Freedom and Its Discontents: Postunification Germany”
Fritz Stern
1993-94 (UC Berkeley): —"Poverty: The New International Enemy”
Oscar Arias Sanchez
1993-94 (Cambridge): —"Aspects of the Christianisation of the Roman World”
Peter Brown
1993-94 (Stanford): —"Respect for Humanity”
Thomas E. Hill Jr.
1993-94 (Utah): —"Toward the Open Society in Central and Eastern Europe”
A.E. Dick Howard
1993-94 (Utah): —"Shock Therapy in Poland: Perspectives of Five Years”
Jeffrey Sachs
1993-94 (Oxford): —"Law and Culture – A European Setting”
Lord of Hadley Slynn
1993-94 (Harvard): —"Family Values in a Historical Perspective”
Lawrence Stone
1993-94 (Michigan): —"The New Urban Poverty and the Problem of Race”
William Julius Wilson
1994-95 (Stanford): —"Responding to Racial Injustice”
Amy Gutmann
1994-95 (Princeton): —"Truthfulness, Lies, and Moral Philosophers: What Can We Learn from Mill and Kant?”
Alasdair MacIntyre
1994-95 (Cambridge): —"Space-time and Cosmology”
Sir Roger Penrose
1994-95 (Yale): —"Euthanasia and Health Care: Two Essays on the Policy Dilemmas of Aging and Old Age”
Richard Posner
1995 (Princeton) —"Common-law Courts in a Civil-Law System: The Role of the United States Federal Courts in Interpreting the Constitution and Laws"[7]
Antonin Scalia
1994-95 (Harvard): —"Political Conflict and Legal Agreement”
Cass R. Sunstein
1994-95 (Oxford): —"Who Needs Parables?”
Janet Suzman
1995-96 (Princeton): —"I. Shakespeare and the Value of Personality” and "II . Shakespeare and the Value of Love”
Harold Bloom
1995-96 (Yale): —"The End of the Ancient Other World: Death and Afterlife between Late Antiquity and the Early Middle Ages”
Peter Brown
1995-96 (Stanford): —"Social Justice in the Age of Identity Politics: Redistribution, Recognition, and Participation”
Nancy Fraser
1995-96 (UC Riverside): —"Peacemaking from the Grassroots in a World of Ethnic Conflict”
Mairead Corrigan Maguire
1995-96 (Harvard): —"Kant on Reason and Religion”
Onora O'Neill
1995-96 (Cambridge): —"I. Jazz: A Historical Perspective”, "II. Duke Ellington” and "III. Charles Mingus”
Gunther Schuller
1996-97 (Cambridge): —"Why Animals Don’t Have Language”
Dorothy Cheney
1996-97 (UC San Francisco): —"Standing for Children”
Marian Wright Edelman
1996-97 (Oxford): —"Social Capital”
Francis Fukuyama
1996-97 (Toronto): —"The Living Enlightenment”
Peter Gay
1996-97 (Harvard): —"Justice Is Conflict: The Soul and the City”
Stuart Hampshire
1996-97 (Stanford): —"Moral Literacy”
Barbara Herman
1996-97 (Yale): —"The Life of the Mind”
Liam Hudson
1996-97 (Utah): —"The Origin of Satan in Christian Tradition”
Elaine Pagels
1996-97 (Michigan): —"The Status of Well-Being”
T. M. Scanlon
1996-97 (Princeton): —"Welfare and Work”
Robert Solow
1997-98 (Prague): —"The Direction of European History”
Timothy Garton Ash
1997-98 (Harvard): —"Culture and Society in Plato's Republic”
Myles Burnyeat
1997-98 (Princeton) "The Lives of Animals"
J.M. Coetzee
1997-98 (Michigan): —"Exploring the Minded Brain”
Antonio Damasio
1997-98 (Stanford): —"Experience and Its Moral Modes: Culture, Human Conditions, and Disorder”[8]
Arthur Kleinman
1997-98 (Yale): —"On Beauty and Being Just”
Elaine Scarry
1997-98 (Utah): —"Ideas of Power: China’s Empire in the Eighteenth Century and Today”
Jonathan Spence
1997-98 (Cambridge): —"The Idol of Stability”
Stephen Toulmin
1998-99 (Michigan): —"Revealing Nature amidst Multiple Cultures: A Discourse with Ancient Greeks”
Walter Burkert
1998-99 (Utah): —"Text and Spirit”
Geoffrey Hartman
1998-99 (Yale): —"The Blank Slate, the Noble Savage, and the Ghost in the Machine”
Steven Pinker
1998-99 (Princeton): —"Goodness and Advice”
Judith Jarvis Thomson
1998-99 (Oxford): —"Representative Democracy and Democratic Citizens: Philosophical and Empirical Understandings”
Sidney Verba
1998-99 (UC Davis): —"The Problem with Purity”
Richard White
1999-2000 (Stanford): —"Ecological Collapses of Pre-industrial Societies”
Jared Diamond
1999-2000 (Oxford): —"Rhetorics of Value”
Geoffrey Hill
1999-2000 (Princeton): —"I. Human Rights as Politics” and "II. Human Rights as Idolatry”
Michael Ignatieff
1999-2000 (Cambridge): —"Happiness”
Jonathan Lear
1999-2000 (Harvard): —"The End of “German Culture””
Wolf Lepenies
1999-2000 (UC Santa Barbara): —"Reconceiving Health Care to Improve Quality”
William C. Richardson
1999-2000 (Utah): —"Tradition without Convention: The Impossible Nineteenth-Century Project”
Charles Rosen
1999-2000 (Michigan): —"Poetry and the Mediation of Value: Whitman on Lincoln”
Helen Vendler
1999-2000 (Yale): —"Spirit Visions”
Marina Warner
2001 (Michigan): —"Roger Fry's Formalism”
Michael Fried
2000-01 (Michigan):
Partha Dasgupta
2000-01 (Utah): —"The Past, Present, and Future of the Human Family”
Sarah Hrdy
2000-01 (Yale): —"A Promise of Happiness: The Place of Beauty in a World of Art”
Alexander Nehamas
2000-01 (Princeton): —"American Culture and the Voice of Poetry”
Robert Pinsky
2000-01 (Harvard):
Simon Schama
2001 (Stanford): —"I. Mean Stories and Stubborn Girls” and "II. What It Means to Be Free”
Dorothy Allison
2001 (Oxford): —"Human Rights: A Sense of Proportion”
Sydney Kentridge
2001-02 (Harvard):
Kathleen Sullivan
2001 (UC Berkeley): —"Pleasure, Change, and the Canon”
Sir Frank Kermode
2002 (Utah): —"Democratic Alternatives to the Mullahs and the Malls”
Benjamin R. Barber
2002 (Princeton): —"Painting and Ground Level”
T. J. Clark
2002 (Harvard): —"I. The Morality of Natural Orders” and "II. Nature's Customs vs. Nature's Laws”
Lorraine Daston
2002 (UC Berkeley): —"What We Could Rationally Will”
Derek Parfit
2002 (Yale): —"Step Across This Line”
Salman Rushdie
2002 (Oxford): —"The Constitution in Crisis”
Laurence H. Tribe
2003 (Harvard): —"I. The Science of Religion” and "II. The Religion of Science”
Richard Dawkins
2003 (Princeton): —"Morality and the Social Instincts”
Frans de Waal
2003 (Princeton): —"Towards Humanism in Psychiatry”
Jonathan Glover
2003 (Oxford): —"The Dilemma of Difference in Democratic Society”
David M. Kennedy
2003 (Cambridge): —"Beyond the Social Contract: Toward Global Justice”
Martha C. Nussbaum
2003 (Stanford): —"I. Human Rights and Ethical Globalization” and "II. The Challenge of Human Rights Protection in Africa”
Mary Robinson
2003 (Yale): —"Henry Adams: The Historian as a Novelist”
Garry Wills
2004 (Berkeley): —"Reclaiming Universalism: Negotiating Republican Self-Determinism and Cosmopolitan Norms”
Seyla Benhabib
2004 (Harvard): —"Active Liberty: Interpreting Our Democratic Constitution”
Stephen Breyer
2004 (Stanford): —"I. Taking Ourselves Seriously” and "II. Getting it Right”
Harry Frankfurt
2004 (Michigan): —"Fellow Creatures: Kantian Ethics and Our Duties to Animals”
Christine Korsgaard
2005 (Cambridge): —"Peace After War: Our Experience”
Carl Bildt
2005 (University of Utah) —"Never Again? Reflections on Human Values and Human Rights"[12]
Paul Farmer
2005 (UC Berkeley): —"Reification: A Recognition-Theoretical View”
Axel Honneth
2005 (Stanford): —"I. Indecent Compromise" and "II. Decent Peace”
Avishai Margalit
2005 (Yale): —"Why Food Matters”
Ruth Reichl
2005 (Michigan): —"Hierarchy, Equality, and the Sublimation of Anarchy: the Western Illusion of Human Nature”
Marshall Sahlins
2005 (Harvard): —"I. Politics and Polarization” and "II. Religion and Polarization”
James Q. Wilson
2006 (Stanford): —"Exiles, Exodus, and Promised Lands”
David Brion Davis
2006 (UC Berkeley): —"Thinking How to Live with Each Other”
Allan Gibbard
2006 (Utah): —"Tension and Intentions: The American Constitutions and the Shaping of Democracies Abroad”
Margaret H. Marshall
2007 (Cambridge): —"Medicine, Neruoscience, Ethics, and Society”
Judy Illes
2007 (Michigan): —"Evolution and the Social Contract”
Brian Skyrms
2007 (Utah): —"Presence and Absence”
Bill Viola
2007 (Princeton): —"Meaning in Life and Why It Matters”
Susan Wolf
2008 (Utah): —"What is Good Work? Achieving Good Work in Turbulent Times”
Howard Gardner
2008 (Princeton): —"The Seeds of Humanity”
Marc Hauser
2008 (Cambridge): —"What's Left of Culture and Society?”
Lisa Jardine
2008 (Tsinghua University): —"Global Justice and Climate Change: How Should Responsibilities Be Distributed?”
David Miller
2008 (Harvard): —"Philosophical Reflections on the Israeli-Palestinian War”
Sari Nusseibeh
2008 (Berkeley): —"Pandors's Boxes”
Annabel Patterson
2008 (Stanford): —"Origins of Human Cooperation”
Michael Tomasello
2009 (Yale University): —"Doctor Atomic and His Gadget”
John Adams
2009 (University of Utah): —"In the Hearts of Women”
Isabel Allende
2009 (Cambridge): —"Art and Religion in the Modern West: Some Perspectives”
Sir Christopher Frayling
2009 (Harvard): —"To Become Human Does Not Come That Easily”
Jonathan Lear
2009 (UC Berkeley): —"Dignity, Rank and Rights”
Jeremy Waldron
2009 (Stanford): -"The Future of Religion and the Religion of the Future"
Roberto Mangabeira Unger
2010 (Princeton University): —"The Decline and Fall of the American Republic”
Bruce Ackerman
2010 (UC Berkeley): —"Transcending Imperialism: Human Values and Global Citizenship”
Abdullahi Ahmed An-Na'im
2010 (Stanford): —"Torture and the Forever War”
Mark Danner
2010 (Utah): —"America through My Lens: The Evolving Nature of Race and Class in the Films of Spike Lee”
Spike Lee
2010 (Michigan): —"Victims and Heroes”
Susan Neiman
2010 (Princeton): —"American Grace”
Robert Putnam
2010 (Oxford): —"Afghanistan and Pakistan: Past Mistakes, Future Directions?”
Ahmed Rashid
2010 (Michigan): —"Flourish: Positive Psychology and Positive Interventions”
Martin Seligman
2010 (Cambridge): —"Care-full Markets: Miracle or Mirage?”
Susan J. Smith
2011-12 (Michigan): —"The Public and Private Morality of Climate Change”
John Broome
2011-12 (Harvard): —"Human Values and the Design of the Fight against Poverty”
Esther Duflo
2011-12 (Cambridge): —"The Psychology and Economics of Authority”
Ernst Fehr
2011-12 (Princeton): —"Shakespeare and the Shape of a Life: The Uses of Life Stories”
Stephen Greenblatt
2011-12 (Yale): —"The Two Cultures: Still Under Consideration”
Lisa Jardine
2011 (Yale): —"The Ancient Quarrel: Philosophy and Literature" and "The Ancient Quarrel: Philosophy and Literature," [14]
Rebecca Newberger Goldstein
2011 (Stanford): —"I. Frameworks” and "II. Analyzing One-Hundred-Year-Old Irrigation Puzzles”
Elinor Ostrom
2011 (Harvard): —"Four Domestications: Fire, Plants, Animals, and… Us”
James Scott
2011–12 (Berkeley): —"The Afterlife: I. How People Who Don't Yet Exist Matter More to Us than People Who Do and II. How the Present Depends the Future"[15]
Samuel Scheffler
2011-12 (Utah): —"Two Souls Intertwined”
Abraham Verghese
2011-12 (Brasenose College): —"The Public Responsibility of the Economist”
Diane Coyle
2012-13 (Oxford): —"Representation and Responsibility: Ethics and Public Office"[16]
Michael Ignatieff
2012-13 (Berkeley): —"I. Who Turned the Trolley?" and "II. How Was the Trolley Turned?"
Frances Kamm
2012-13 (Cambridge): —"The Viennese Interior: Architecture & Inwardness”
Joseph Koerner
2012-13 (Paris, France): —"Resurrections”
Claude Lanzmann
2012-13 (Princeton): —"Human Values in the Very Long Run”
Ian Morris
2012-13 (Harvard): —"Representative Democracy: The Constitutional Theory of Campaign Finance Reform”
Robert Post
2012-13 (Utah): —"The Moral Economy of Speculation: Gambling, Finance, and the Common Good”
Michael J. Sandel
2012-13 (Stanford): —"I. Costs and Productivity in Higher Education” and "II. Prospects for an Online Fix: Can We Harness Technology in the Service of our Aspirations?”
William Bowen
2012-13 (Michigan): —"The Problematic Public: Revisiting Dewey, Arendt, and Habermas”
Craig Calhoun
2013-14 (Oxford): —"Human Rights as Human Values”
Shami Chakrabarti
2013-14 (Utah): —"Science as a Way of Knowing”
Neil deGrasse Tyson
2013-14 (Yale): —"The Black Atlantic and the Re-enchantment of Humanism”
Paul Gilroy
2013-14 (Yale): —"How Better to Register the Agency of Things”
Bruno Latour
2013-14 (Stanford): —"The Transaction Society: Origins and Consequences”
Nicholas Lemann
2013-14 (Michigan): —"Overcoming the Weakness of the Will”
Walter Mischel
2013-14 (Cambridge): —"The Great Crimes: The Quest for Justice Among Individuals and Groups”
Philippe Sands
2013-14 (UC Berkeley): —"The Weight of All Flesh: On the Subject Matter of Political Economy”
Eric Santner
2013-14 (Oxford): —"From Moral Neutrality to Effective Altruism: The Changing Scope and Significance of Moral Philosophy”
Peter Singer
2013-14 (Utah): —"Love, Acceptance, Celebration: How Parents Make Their Children”
Andrew Solomon
2013-14 (Harvard): Archbishop –"The Paradox of Empathy"
Rowan Williams
2014-15 (Stanford): —"Education and Equality”
Danielle Allen
2014-15 (Princeton): —"I. Private Government” and "II. When the Market Was 'Left'"
Elizabeth Anderson
2014-15 (Utah ): —"Human Values in Age of Change”
Margaret Atwood
2014-15 (Yale): —"The Human Condition of the Anthropocene”
Dipesh Chakrabarty
2014-15 (Harvard): —"Casuistry, For and Against: Pascal's Provinciales and Their Aftermath”
Carlo Ginzburg
2014-15 (UC Berkeley): —"I. From Language to Commitment” and "II. From Commitment to Responsibility”
Philip Pettit
2015-16 (Stanford): —"The American Military Encounters Islam"
Andrew Bacevich
2015-16 (Michigan): —""What do Economists Do?"”
Abhijit Banerjee
2015-16 (Ochanomizu): —"Women: Education, Biology, Power, and Leadership"
Dame Carol Black
2015-16 (Princeton): —"I. Not by Brains Alone: The vital role of culture in human adaptation" and "II. Beyond Kith and Kin: How culture transformed human cooperation"
Robert Boyd
2015-16 (Yale): —"Interpreting Non-Violence"
Judith Butler
2015-16 (Berkeley): —"The Will to Punish"
Didier Fassin
2015-16 (Clare Hall): —"Reach for the Sky: Aerial Violence and the Everywhere War"
Derek Gregory
2015-16 (Utah): —""The Gene: An Intimate History"”
Siddhartha Mukherjee
2015-16 (Oxford): —""The Value of Europe and European Values"”
Shirley Williams
2016 (Princeton): - Lecture I: "Trust in Science?" - Lecture II: "When Not to Trust Science, or When Science Goes Awry"
Naomi Oreskes
2016-17 (Berkeley): —"I. Democratic Law” and "II. Common and Constitutional Law: A Democratic Legal Perspective”
Seana Shiffrin
2017-18 (Berkeley): –"Environmental Care and the Infrastructure of Indifference"
Michael Warner
2021-22 (Princeton): —"Welcome to the Anthropocene: Lecture II - What Can We Do About It?" and "Welcome to the Anthropocene: Lecture I - What on Earth Have We Done?"
Elizabeth Kolbert
2023-24 (Yale): Rob Nixon–"Ecology and Equity"