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Accueil > Membres > Pages personnelles > GROSHOLZ Emily

GROSHOLZ Emily



Professor of Philosophy, The Pennsylvania State University
Member, REHSEIS

Me contacter

Website http://www.emilygrosholz.com


Cursus

Ph.D., Philosophy, Yale University, December 1978
Dissertation Title : “Unification and Growth of Mathematical Knowledge”
B.A., Ideas and Methods, University of Chicago, June 1972

Thesis Title : “Four Master Tropes in Poetry and Mathematics”
Gasthörerin, Philosophisches Seminar, Universität Muenster, Germany, Sept. 1976-June 1977


Grants and Academic Honors

  • Fernando Gil International Prize in Philosophy of Science 2017, which honors a work of particular excellence in philosophy of science, for Starry Reckoning : Reference and Analysis in Mathematics and Cosmology (Springer 2016). ($93,750)
  • Research in Paris 2011 Grant (Senior Level), for work at REHSEIS / SPHERE, UMR 7219 CNRS and University of Paris Denis Diderot – Paris 7, September 2011-January 2012 ($22,500)
  • Schreyer Honors College Distinguished Honors Faculty Program, 2012-14 ($8500)
  • Elizabeth McNulty Wilkinson Poetry Chair, Buffalo Seminary, Buffalo, March 2011 ($1500)
  • Institute for the Arts and Humanities, Pennsylvania State University and NEH Challenge Grant, Team Teaching
  • Across the Humanities, lecture series and course on African American philosophy, Spring Semester 2008 ($9500)
  • NEH Fellowship, for work on a book on the philosophy of mathematics, 2004-2005 ($24,000)
  • Visiting Fellowship, Clare Hall, University of Cambridge, 1997-1998 (non-stipendiary)
  • American Council of Learned Societies Fellowship, for work on Leibniz and the philosophy of mathematics, 1997 ($20,000)
  • Selma V. Forkorsch Prize for the best article published in Journal of the History of Ideas in 1996 ($500)
  • Alexander von Humboldt Transatlantic Cooperation Research Grant, with Herbert Breger (Director, Leibniz Archives, Hannover, Germany), for work on Leibniz and the history and philosophy of mathematics, 1994-1997 ($32,000)
  • Institute for the Arts and Humanistic Studies, Pennsylvania State University, grants for two conferences on the philosophy and history of mathematics, 1995, 1996 ($7500)
  • Guggenheim Foundation Fellowship, September 1988-August 1989, for poetry ($20,000)
  • Ingram Merrill Foundation Grant, 1988, for poetry ($10,000)
  • NEH Fellowship, National Humanities Center (Research Triangle Park, North Carolina), September 1985-June 1986, for work on a book on seventeenth century philosophy ($20,000)
  • Djerassi Foundation Artist-in-Residence, Woodside, California, May 1-June 15 1984
  • Deutscher Akademischer Austauschdienst Study Visit, for research on Leibniz manuscripts, Leibniz Archiv, Hannover, West Germany, Summer 1983 ($3000)
  • American Council of Learned Societies Study Grant, for the study of classical physics, Sept. 1982-February 1983 ($8000)
  • Institute for the Arts and Humanistic Studies, Pennsylvania State University, Faculty Research Grant, for research on Leibniz, Paris, France, March 1981-July 1981 ($3000)
  • Danforth Fellow, 1973-78 (Tuition and stipend)
  • University Scholar, University of Chicago, 1968-72 (Tuition)


Teaching and Research Positions

  • Edwin Erle Sparks Professor, Department of Philosophy, Pennsylvania State University, 2017-Present.
  • Liberal Arts Research Professor, 2011-2016 ; Professor, 1993-2011 ; Associate Professor with tenure, 1987-1993 ; Assistant Professor, l979-1987, Department of Philosophy
  • Member, Center for Fundamental Theory, Institute for Gravitation and the Cosmos, 2009-Present
  • Affiliate, Department of English, Pennsylvania State University, 2006-Present
  • Affiliate, Department of African and African American Studies, Pennsylvania State University, 1996-Present
  • Fellow, Institute for the Arts and Humanities, Pennsylvania State University, 1995- 2011
  • Chercheur Associé Étranger de SPHERE / REHSEIS (Equipe Recherches Epistémologiques et Historiques
  • sur les Sciences Exactes et les Institutions Scientifiques), Université Paris Denis Diderot (Paris 7) et Centre
  • National de la Recherche Scientifique, 2005-Present
  • Member, Centre d’Études Leibniziennes (Mathesis), La Sorbonne, 2012-Present
  • Life Member, Clare Hall, University of Cambridge, 1998-Present
  • Associate, Center for Philosophy of Science, University of Pittsburgh, July 1992-Present
  • Senior Foreign Researcher, SPHERE / REHSEIS, September 2011-January 2012
  • Visiting Professor, Université Paris Ouest-Nanterre-La Défense – Paris 10 (May-June 2010)
  • Visiting Scholar, REHSEIS / Université Paris 7 / CNRS (2004-2005)
  • Visiting Fellow, Clare Hall, University of Cambridge, 1997-1998
  • Visiting Scholar, Dept. of History and Philosophy of Science, 1997-1998 and Dept. of Philosophy, 1998, University of Cambridge
  • Adjunct Associate Professor, Department of Philosophy, University of Pennsylvania, Jan.- May 1992
  • Senior Research Fellow, Institute for History and Philosophy of Science and Technology, University of Toronto, 1988-89
  • Fellow, National Humanities Center, 1985-86
  • Lecturer, Department of Philosophy, Yale University, Sept. 1978-June 1979
  • Instructor, Three Day Critical Seminar : “Poetry and Travel,” Writing the Rockies Creative Writing Workshop, Western State University of Colorado, July 2016.
  • Instructor, Three Day Critical Seminar : “Poetry, Space and Time,” with visit to Gunnison Observatory, Writing the Rockies Creative Writing Workshop, Western State University of Colorado, July 2015.
  • Panelist, Writing the Rockies Creative Writing Workshop, Western State University of Colorado, July 2012, July 2015, July 2016, July 2017.
  • Instructor or Panelist, West Chester University Poetry Conference, May 1995, June 1996, June 2000, June 2001, June 2004, June 2006, June 2013, June 2014, June 2016, June 2017, June 2018, June 2019
  • Instructor, Sewanee Writers’ Conference, July 1990, July 1991, and July 1993.
  • Instructor, Wesleyan Writers’ Conference, June 1993.
  • Instructor, Bread Loaf Writers’ Conference, August 1991.
  • Instructor, Chautauqua Writers’ Center, July 1990, August 1992, June 1997.


Consultant Positions

  • Member, Wissenschaftlicher Beirat, Gottfried-Wilhelm Leibniz Gesellschaft, 2018-Present
  • Member, Five-Member Steering Committee, Association for the Philosophy of Mathematical Practice, 2015-2018
  • Member, Directive Committee, Association for the Philosophy of Mathematical Practice, 2014-2019
  • Member, Editorial Board, Journal of Mathematics and the Arts, 2018-Present
  • Member, Advisory Board, Journal of Humanistic Mathematics, 2010-Present
  • Member, Editorial Board, Studia Leibnitiana, 2002-Present
  • Member, Board of Directors and Editorial Board, Journal of the History of Ideas, 1998-Present
  • Reader for Yale University Press, Springer Verlag, Oxford University Press (Oxford and New York), Cambridge University Press, Princeton University Press, Bucknell University Press, Cornell University Press, Harvester Press, University of Chicago Press, St. Martin’s Press, Pennsylvania State University Press, Wadsworth, SUNY University Press, Kluwer.
  • Reader for The British Journal for Philosophy of Science, Isis, Journal of Symbolic Logic, Philosophy of Science, The Mathematical Intelligencer, Archiv für Geschichte der Philosophie, Studies in History and Philosophy of Science, Philosophia Mathematica, Foundations of Science, Philosophia Scientiae, Studia Leibnitiana, History of Philosophy Quarterly, Hypatia, American Philosophical Quarterly, Journal of Speculative
  • Philosophy, Philosophy and Rhetoric, Synthèse, Journal of the History of Ideas, Journal of the History of Philosophy, Perspectives on Science, Sciences et Technique en Perspective (Nantes), Canadian Journal of Philosophy, Mathematical Reviews, Topics in Cognitive Science, Studies in the Novel, Mathematical Intelligencer, International Journal of the Platonic Tradition, History and Philosophy of Logic, Epoché, Journal for Research in Mathematics Education, Mosaic : Journal for the Interdisciplinary Study of Literature, Journal of Humanistic Mathematics
  • Referee or Advisor for the Danish Council for Independent Research ; MacArthur Foundation ; the Heinz
  • Foundation ; the National Humanities Center ; National Science Foundation ; Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada ; Canadian Philosophical Association ;Israel Science Foundation ; Research Foundation Flanders ; Rockefeller Foundation (Bellagio) ; Comité scientifique international, Les Langages Scientifiques (séminaires et colloques), Université Université de Grenoble, 1998 ; Tagungskomitee, VII Internationale Leibniz-Kongress, Berlin, 2001.
  • Curator, “Farhad Ostovani : Works on Paper and Prints,” Samek Art Gallery, Bucknell University, October 2012.
  • Advisory Editor, The Hudson Review, 1984-Present
  • Final Judge, Able Muse Write Prize for Poetry, 2020
  • President, Poets’ Prize Committee, 1993-1996 ; Judge, Poets’ Prize, 1988-2004
  • Judge, Poetry Society of America Awards, 1989
  • Judge, National Book Awards, 1995 (declined for family reasons)
  • Judge, Glascock Poetry Contest, Mount Holyoke College, 1996
  • Referee for tenure and promotion cases at Pomona College, Cornell University, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Colorado College, and University of Nebraska English Departments ; and at Emory University, Texas A&M University, University of Toledo, and University of the West Indies Philosophy Departments.
    I have also raised or contributed funds within Penn State University to mount the following conferences, residencies, and lecture series : Poetry Reading and Lecture on Alberto Giacometti by Yves Bonnefoy, March 1984 ($1000) ; Poetry Reading and Lecture on Greek Poetry by Katerina Anghelaki-Rooke, April 1990 ($1000) ; Conference on “The Thought of W. E. B. Du Bois,” March 20-21 1992 ($8000) ; Lecture series by Jules Vuillemin on Aristotle’s Poetics, October 13-22 1992 ($4000) ; Two Conferences on “The Growth of Mathematical Knowledge,” April 1995 ($16,000) and “History and Philosophy of Mathematics,” April 1996 ($24,000) ; Residency of Elhanon Yakira, Hebrew University, 1996-97 ($14,000) ; Symposium on the Poetry of Maxine Kumin, 1997 ($5000) ; Lectures on the Holocaust, genocide, and the problem of evil by Israel Charny, Hebrew University, April 1999 ($1800) ; Conference on “Legacies of Simone de Beauvoir,” November 1999 ($27,000) ; Lectures on Newton and Scientific Rationality, and the influence of African thought on European culture (January 2000), Residency at IAHS (Summer 2000), and lectures on Fanon and post-colonial Africa (March 2002), Koffi Maglo, Virginia Polytechnic Institute & State University, Moravian College, and M.I.T. ($3200) ; Sarah Starbuck, United States Fund for UNICEF (September 2003) ; Lecture Series on African American Philosophy (Spring 2008), co-taught with Christine Clark-Evans : Lewis Gordon, Harvey Cormier, Joy James, Koffi Maglo ($10,100) ; Workshops on Philosophy of Science (September 2008), Evelyn Fox-Keller ($1500) ; Lectures Series on Feminist Philosophy (Spring 2010), Sonia Kruks ($1000) ; Lecture and Poetry Reading by Roald Hoffmann, March 2011 ($750) ; Poetry Reading by Anne Stevenson, October 2011 ($2000) ; Discussion on Poetry and Painting with Farhad Ostovani, October 2012 (with Bucknell University, $2000) ; Workshop on Time and Complexity in Modern Cosmology with Abhay Ashtekar, John Norton, Gordon Fleming, Elie During, David Sloan, Alexis de Saint Ours, William Nelson, Bryan Roberts, and Thomas Pashby, April 2013($5000) ; Seminars on Spinoza with Ursula Goldenbaum, Emory University and Elhanan Yakira, Hebrew University, Jerusalem, March / April 2013 ; Seminars with Constance Borde and Sheila Malovany-Chevallier, translators of the new English edition of Beauvoir’s The Second Sex, October 2013 ($3000) ; Seminar on Modern British Poetry with Graham Fawcett, May 2014 ($500) ; Lecture by Elhanan Yakira (April 2018) ; Seminar on Poetry by Ryan Wilson (November 2018).


Teaching

Graduate Seminars on History and Philosophy of Science, History and Philosophy of Mathematics, Kant, Locke, Berkeley, Hume, Reid, Leibniz, Spinoza, Descartes, Malebranche, Arnauld, Continental Rationalism, British Empiricism, African American Philosophy, Twentieth Century British Poetry, Logic.

  • Undergraduate Courses on History and Philosophy of Science, Early Modern Philosophy, Twentieth Century British Poetry, Contemporary American Poetry, African American Philosophy, Epistemology, Ethics, Logic, Poetry and Cosmology, Philosophy and Literature, Aesthetics, Children and Social Justice, Philosophy of Biology, Philosophy of Mathematics.
  • 2000-2020 Ph.D. Dissertation Committees : Director : Ryan Pollock, Alastair Goff, David Seltzer, Amanda Hicks [State University of New York at Buffalo], Franklin Perkins, Evgenia Cherkasova, Daniel Campos, Diana Rhodes. Member : Tano Posteraro, Samuel Gault, Giulia Miotti [University of Rome], Aminah Hasan, David Agler, Michael Harrison (Mathematics), Travis Morrison (Mathematics), Sonny Arora (Mathematics), Ryan Flynn (Mathematics), William Chen (Mathematics), Ayla Gafni (Mathematics), Haining Wang (Mathematics), John Nale, Valérie Debuiche [University of Picardy Jules Verne], Hasana Sharp, Amy Wendling, Rebecca Wayland.
  • Advisor. Postdoctoral and doctoral students who have come to Penn State to work with me include Koffi Maglo [University of Burgundy], Emiliano Ippoliti [University of Rome ‘La Sapienza’] and Giulia Miotti [University of Rome ‘La Sapienza’].

Teachnig initiatives

Teaching Initiatives :

  • (a) I attended and received a certificate for a ten-week course on college teaching offered by the Center for Excellence in Learning and Teaching (PSU), Fall 1998.
  • (b) I helped to plan, attended, and led a discussion session at Colloquy 2000, Building Synergy between Research and Teaching, May 29, 2000, Penn State University.
  • (c) I was awarded, with James Stewart, a grant from the Fund for Excellence in Learning and Teaching (PSU) and an additional $600 from the Office for Educational Equity (PSU) for a proposal entitled ‘The Cost of Philosophy : Martin Luther King and Dietrich Bonhoeffer.’ We and our students created a multi-media record of the intersection of two courses (one on ethics, and the other on African American philosophy) and a conference on Bonhoeffer’s influence in America and South Africa. Fall 1999. ($2500)
  • (d) I presented this course at the 8th Annual Teaching and Learning with Technology Symposium, April 1, 2000, Penn State University. Another colleague, Christine Clark-Evans, joined us to help with its development ; we received further funds from FELT ($2000), and added new material.
  • (e) I taught a four-session series on the thought of Dietrich Bonhoeffer to a class of adults at the State College Presbyterian Church (Feb.-March 2000).
  • (f) I developed a three-credit service-learning course, ‘Children and Social Justice,’ which I presented at a symposium, ‘A Blueprint for the Public Scholarship of Service Learning at Penn State,’ March 29, 2003. This course took place during Fall 2003 and Spring 2004, and included guest speakers from UNICEF, the Human Rights Institute at the University of Iowa, and the Campaign for Child Survival ; Penn State specialist David Post ; a Humphrey Fellow who works for Save the Children in Myanmar (Burma) ; and the rector of a mission church in the Chaco region of Argentina. It also included field work with homeless children in the Dominican Republic for some students, supported by the Schreyer Honors College, and service learning at the local elementary schools in State College.
  • (g)) Working with Christine Clark-Evans, I developed a new course Philosophy / AAAS 469, African American Philosophy, and was awarded a grant from the Institute for Arts and Humanities (PSU) to support a lecture series to accompany it. We invited Lewis Gordon (Temple), Joy James (Williams), Harvey Cormier (SUNY/Stony Brook) and Koffi Maglo (University of Cincinnati) to lecture, as well as James Stewart and Thomas Poole, in Spring 2008. ($9500)
  • (h) I developed a new course Philosophy 497A, ‘Science, Women and Traditional Knowledge,’ which combines recent work in the philosophy of biology with case studies of projects that successfully combine Western scientific knowledge with traditional knowledge, to solve problems of poverty and environmental degradation. In Spring 2010, it included lectures by colleagues from the departments of Women’s Studies, Rural Sociology, STS, Geography, and AAAS at Penn State, as well as the Centre for Development and Environment at the University of Bern, Switzerland.
  • (i) I developed a course on twentieth century British poetry, at the request of the English Department ; I have taught it every Spring from 2009 to the present. During the same period, I have participated in related workshops and seminars at two writers’ conferences, and taught courses on philosophy and literature for the Philosophy Department, with an emphasis on German, Russian and English Romanticism, and writing on British literature for the Hudson Review and PN Review. Eliot’s Modernism is a direct rejection of Romanticism, and that conflict plays out for the rest of the century.
  • (j) I was named a Schreyer Honors College Distinguished Honors Faculty, a position which included $8500 over three years to enhance classroom teaching, as well as informal programs with undergraduates at the Schreyer Honors College, Penn State. Visitors have included British poet Anne Stevenson, Iranian artist
  • Farhad Ostovani, chemist and Nobel Laureate Roald Hoffmann, French philosopher Elie During, Constance Borde and Sheila Malovany-Chevallier (English translators of The Second Sex), Israeli philosopher Elhanan Yakira, and the composer Bruce Trinkley. I led a trip to New York City to explore the parks of south Manhattan, Governor’s Island and the new Brooklyn Bridge Park with journalist and writer Paula Deitz ; and I organized a Workshop on Cosmology and Time, which included a trip to the laboratory of Kurt Gibble, an expert of accurate clocks. (2011-2014).
  • (k) At “Writing the Rockies” where I taught a three-day seminar on “Poetry and Cosmology,” I arranged for a trip to the Gunnison Valley Observatory, and we looked at the moon, planets and galaxies (July 2015).


Service

Service

  • Sabbatical Leave Committee, College of the Liberal Arts, 2008-11
  • Commission for Women, Member, 1998-2004 ; Co-chair, Faculty Issues Committee, 2002-03
  • Senator, Faculty Senate, 1990-92 ; CFW Liason, 2001-02
  • College of the Liberal Arts Planning Advisory Committee, 1991-93
  • Chair, Committee on Faculty Affairs, College of the Liberal Arts, 1990-91
  • Instant Tenure Review Committee, College of the Liberal Arts, 1993-95
  • Interdisciplinary Graduate Program in the Humanities, 1979-1990
  • Women’s Studies Committee, 1979-85
  • Co-Chair, Public Events Committee, 2016-2018
  • Director of Undergraduate Studies, Philosophy Department, 2012-2016
  • Co-Chair, Public Events Committee, 2013-2014
  • AD-14 Review Committee of Philosophy Department Head, Fall 2010
  • Chair, Advisory Committee, Philosophy Department, 2006-2009
  • Graduate Placement Officer, Philosophy Department, 2005-2009
  • Member, Environmental Studies Search Committee, Philosophy Department, 2008-9
  • Chair, Latino Philosophy Search Committee, Philosophy Department, 2006-7.
  • Member, African American Philosophy Search Committee, Philosophy Department, 2001-2002 ; 2007-8.
  • Library Liason, Philosophy Department, 2000-2004
  • Chair, Committee on Teaching, Philosophy Department, 1999-2000
  • Chair, Headship Search Committee, Philosophy Dept., 1992-93
  • Chair, Committee on Diversity Requirement, Philosophy Dept., 1990-92
  • Co-Chair, Ethics Chair Search Committee, Philosophy Dept., 1992-93
  • Graduate Program Review Committee, 1996-97
  • Executive Committee, Philosophy Dept. 1982-84, 1986-88, 1991-92, 1993-94

Quelques publications

Publications in Philosophy

  • Biology, Mathematics, Ethics and Practical Deliberation : The Growing Importance of the Interaction of Science and Politics. Springer Verlag, forthcoming in 2021. Synthese Library Book Series (edited by Otávio Bueno). Part I : Historical Background. Part II : Current Debates in the Philosophy of Biology. Part III : Inspiring Case Studies from California and Minnesota : Science and Politics.
  • Great Circles : The Transits of Mathematics and Poetry. Springer Verlag 2018. My book on poetry and mathematics helps to inaugurate the new series Mathematics, Culture and the Arts (edited by Marjorie Senechal, Jed Buchwald,
  • Gizem Karaali and Jeremy Gray). Part I : A Life in Mathematics and Poetry (Childhood, Adolescence, University Education, Adulthood) ; Part II : The Homestead (Great Circles, Ratios and Proportions, Periodicity in English Verse) ; Part III : Shipping Out (Algebra, Going with the Flow, Infinitesimal Calculus) ; Part IV : The Sky’s the Limit ! (Compactification, Set Theory and Algebraic Topology, Three Cosmological Poems).
  • Starry Reckoning : Reference and Analysis in Mathematics and Cosmology. Springer Verlag, SAPERE, 2016. In Studies in Applied Philosophy, Epistemology and Rational Ethics Series (edited by Lorenzo Magnani). Preface. Introduction. Chapter 1. Reference and Analysis. Chapter 2. Philosophy of Mathematics and Philosophy of History. Chapter 3. Rethinking Ampliative Reasoning. Chapter 4. Algebraic Number Theory and the Complex Plane. Chapter 5. Fermat’s Last Theorem and the Logicians. Chapter 6. The Representation of Time in the 17th Century. Chapter 7. The Representation of Time from 1700 to the Present. Chapter 8. Analysis and Reference in the Study of Astronomical Systems. Afterword. Appendices and Glossary.
  • Time and Cosmology : Philosophers and Scientists in Dialogue. Special issue of Studies in History and Philosophy of Modern Physics, Volume 52 Part A, November 2015. I was invited to guest edit this issue by the editor Dennis Dieks, based on a workshop I organized at Penn State, April 2013. It includes contributions by Abhay Ashtekar, John Norton, Lee Smolin, Gordon Fleming, Jeremy Butterfield, Julian Barbour, Bryan Roberts, Thomas Pashby, Alexis de Saint-Ours, David Sloan and myself.
  • Leibniz, Time, and History. Special issue of Studia Leibnitiana , Band 44 / Heft 1. Franz Steiner Verlag, 2013. I was invited to guest edit this issue by the editor Herbert Breger. Some of these essays were the basis of a panel discussion at the Leibniz Weltkongress, Hannover, September 2011 ; it includes contributions by Jean-Pascal Anfray, Michael Futch, Ursula Goldenbaum, Samuel Levey, Elhanan Yakira, and myself.
  • Logic and Knowledge. Co-edited with Carlo Cellucci and Emiliano Ippoliti. Cambridge Scholars Publishing, 2011. The Introduction is written jointly by the three editors, and the collection of eighteen essays includes my “Logic, Mathematics, Heterogeneity.”
  • Representation and Productive Ambiguity in Mathematics and the Sciences. Oxford University Press, 2007. This book has been given substantive, positive reviews in Philosophia Mathematica, Review of Metaphysics, Isis, British Journal for Philosophy of Science, Studia Leibitiana, Philosophical Reviews (Notre Dame, on line journal), the Mathematical Intelligencer, Metascience, History and Philosophy of Logic, and O nó dó problema ocidental (a philosophical blog in Portuguese).
  • The Legacy of Simone de Beauvoir. Edited. Oxford University Press, 2004 / 2006. A collection of essays inspired by the 50th anniversary of The Second Sex. Essays by Susan James, Catherine Wilson, Claude Imbert, Toril Moi, Michèle Le Doeuff, Nancy Bauer, Anne Stevenson, and myself, as well as my Introduction and my translations of the Imbert and Le Doeuff essays.
  • The Growth of Mathematical Knowledge. Edited, with Herbert Breger. Kluwer, 1999.The Introduction is written by myself, and my essay, “The Partial Integration of Domains, Hybrids, and the Growth of Mathematical Knowledge,” is included. Synthèse Library 289.
  • Leibniz’s Science of the Rational. Co-authored with Elhanan Yakira. Studia Leibnitiana Sonderheft 26. Franz Steiner Verlag, 1998.
  • W. E. B. Du Bois on Race and Culture : Philosophy, Politics, Poetics. Co-edited with J. Stewart and B. Bell. The central third of the Editors’ Introduction is mine, and my essay “Nature and Culture in Du Bois’s Quest of the Silver Fleece” is included. Routledge, 1997.
  • Cartesian Method and the Problem of Reduction. Oxford University Press, 1991.
  • “On the Plains and Prairies of Minnesota : The Role of Mathematical Statistics in Biological Explanation,” Special Issue (Topical Collection) of Synthese, ed. Emiliano Ippoliti, Sorin Ioan Bangu and Marianna Antontti, forthcoming.
  • “Prologue,” introductory essay for The Bounds of Myth : The Logical Path from Action to Knowledge, ed. Gustavo Esparza, Nassim Bravo and Claudia Calabrese, forthcoming from Brill.
  • “Generalization and Imagination in Number Theory,” Mathematics, Philosophy and History, ed. N. Goethe, to be submitted to Springer.
  • “Inescapable Geometry : Reflections on Cantor’s and Dedekind’s Theory of Numbers,” “Innovation et nécessité : La perspective de Hourya Benis-Sinaceur sur les travaux de Cavaillès au sujet de Dedekind et Cantor, et une réponse à cette perspective” translated into French in a Festschrift, L’Epistemologie de derans : Melanger en l’honneur de Houya Benis-Sinaceur, Classiques Garnier, 2021.
  • “The Growth of Mathematical Knowledge : An Account in Terms of Intersecting Domains, Patterns of Reasoning, Shifts in Notation, and the Combination of Reference and Leibnizian Analysis,” Fernando Gil Prize Lecture, Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation, 2020.
  • “The Central Roles of Diagrams in Algebraic Topology,” Diagrammatic Representation and Inference, Proceedings of Diagrams 2018, eds. P. Chapman, G. Stapleton, A. Moktefi, S. Perez-Kriz, F. Bellucci, Springer 2018, pp. 814-7.
  • “Scientific Discovery and Inference : Between the Lab and Field in Biology,” co-authored with Tano Posteraro and Alex Grigas, Special Issue of Topoi on inference and discovery in the sciences, eds. Emiliano Ippoliti and Thomas Nickles. Topoi, June 2018, online, 13 pages : https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s11245-018-9572-2
  • Edition of Leibniz’ “Mathesis Generalis : LH XXXV, 1, 9, fol. 9-14” (ca. 1700), included in G. W. Leibniz, Mathesis Universalis : Écrits sur la mathématique universelle, David Rabouin (Ed.), Paris : VRIN, 2018, pp. 169-180.
  • “Reuben Hersh on the Growth of Mathematical Knowledge : Kant, Geometry and Number Theory,” Humanizing Mathematics and its Philosophy : Essays Celebrating the 90th Birthday of Reuben Hersh, ed. Bharath Sriraman, Birkhäuser, Springer / Birkhäuser, 2017, pp. 97-114.
  • “Two English Translations of Simone de Beauvoir’s The Second Sex,” Blackwell Companion to Simone de Beauvoir, eds. N. Bauer and L. Hengehold, Wiley-Blackwell, 2017, pp. 59-70.
  • “Leibnizian Analysis, Canonical Objects, and Generalization,” in The Oxford Handbook of Generality in Mathematics and the Sciences, eds. Karine Chemla, David Rabouin, and Renaud Chorley, Oxford University Press, 2016, pp. 329-344.
  • “Searching for the Middle Term : Descartes, Gassendi, and Modern Biology,” Special Issue of IYYUN, The Jerusalem Philosophical Quarterly 65 (July 2016), pp.1-19.
  • Entry on “The Meditations” in the Cambridge Descartes Lexicon, ed. Lawrence Nolan, Cambridge University Press, 2016, pp. 487-490.
  • “Models of the Skies,” Models and Inferences in Science, eds. F. Sterpetti and E. Ippoliti, SAPERE Series, Springer Verlag, 2016, pp. 77-94.
  • “The Uses of Models in Petroleum and Natural Gas Engineering,” co-authored with Kahindo Kamau, Models and Inferences in Science, eds. F. Sterpetti and E. Ippoliti, SAPERE Series, Springer Verlag, 2016, pp. 241-253.
  • “Editor’s Introduction,” Special issue : Cosmology and Time : Philosophers and Scientists in Dialogue. Guest Ed. E. Grosholz, Studies in History and Philosophy of Modern Physics, Vol. 52 Part A (November 2015), pp. 1-7.
  • “Letter to the Editor,” Response to Nathalie Nya’s response to my essay “Simone de Beauvoir and Practical Deliberation,” PMLA, Vol. 124, No. 1 (January 2009), pp. 199-205, in Forum, PMLA, Vol. 130, No. 1 (January 2015), pp. 169-171.
  • “Leibniz’s Mathematical and Philosophical Analysis of Time,” in G. W. Leibniz : Interrelations between Mathematics and Philosophy, D. Rabouin, P. Beeley, and N. Goethe, eds., Archimedes Series 41, New Studies in the History and Philosophy of Science and Technology, Springer Verlag, 2015, pp. 75-88.
  • “Leibniz, Locke and Cassirer : Abstraction and Analysis,” Leibniz and Analysis, Studia Leibnitiana, Band 45, Heft 1 (2014), Special issue on Analysis edited by H. Breger and Wen Chao Li, pp. 97-108.
  • “Fermat’s Last Theorem and the Logicians,” From a Heuristic Point of View : Essays in Honor of Carlo Cellucci, E. Ippoliti and C. Cozzo, ed. Cambridge Scholars Publishing, 2014, pp. 147-162.
  • “Reflections on Voice and Character,” in Les Plis de la Voix, ed. M. de Gaudemar, Lambert-Lucas (2013), pp. 81-90.
  • “Teaching the Complex Numbers : What History and Philosophy of Mathematics Suggest,” Journal of Humanistic Mathematics, Vol. 3, No. 1. (On-line)
  • “Philosophy of Mathematics and Philosophy of History,” Paradigmi : Revista di critica filosofia. Special issue on philosophy of mathematics, ed. C. Cellucci, Vol. 29, No. 1 (2011), pp. 13-28.
  • “Leibniz’s Metaphysics of Time and his Practice as Historian and Physicist,” Proceedings of the IX Internationaler Leibniz Kongress, Hannover, Germany, September 2011, Band II, pp. 417-424. This paper is part of a three person panel, Leibniz, History and Time, which I organized ; the other two presenters were Ursula Goldenbaum and Jean-Pascal Anfray.
  • “Studying Populations without Molecular Biology : Aster Models and a New Argument Against Reductionism,” Studies in History and Philosophy of Science, Part C : Studies in History and Philosophy of Biological and Biomedical Sciences 42 (2011), pp. 246-51.
  • “Logic, Mathematics, Heterogeneity,” with a discussion by Valeria Giardino, Logic and Knowledge, E. Grosholz, C. Cellucci and E. Ippoliti, eds., Cambridge Scholars Publishing, 2011, pp. 305-319.
  • “The Representation of Time in Galileo, Newton and Leibniz : Reference and Analysis,” 2010 Lovejoy Lecture, Journal of the History of Ideas, Vol. 72, No. 3 (July 2011), pp. 333-350.
  • “Space and Time,” in the Oxford Handbook of Philosophy in Early Modern Europe, Desmond Clarke and Catherine Wilson, eds., Oxford University Press, 2011, pp. 51-70.
  • “Locke et Leibniz : Forme et expérience,” (tr. Gaetan Pegny), in Locke et Leibniz : Deux styles de rationalité, M. de Gaudemar and P. Hamou, eds., Europaea Memoria Series, Series I, Vol. 84, Georg Olms, 2010, pp. 93-108.
  • “Aristotle, Shakespeare, and the Problem of Character,” Special Issue on Philosophy and Poetry, Midwest Studies in Philosophy, Vol. XXXIII (2009), E. Lepore, P. A. French, and H. Wettstein, eds., pp. 198-208.
  • “Leibniz on Mathematics and Representation : Knowledge through the Integration of Irreducible Diversity,” The Philosophy of the Young Leibniz, M. Kulstad, M. Laerke, and D. Snyder, eds., Studia Leibnitiana Sonderheft 35, Franz Steiner Verlag, 2009, pp. 95-110.
  • “Simone de Beauvoir and Practical Deliberation,” PMLA, Vol. 124, No. 1 (January 2009), pp. 199-205.
  • “Productive Ambiguity in Leibniz’s Representation of Infinitesimals,” Infinitesimal Differences : Controversies between Leibniz and his Contemporaries, U. Goldenbaum and D. Jessup, eds., Walter de Gruyter, 2008, pp. 153-170.
  • “Locke, Leibniz and Hume on Form and Experience,” Leibniz : What Kind of Rationalist ?, ed. M. Dascal, Springer Academic Publications, 2008, pp. 167-182.
  • “How to Say True Things in Algebraic Topology,” Demonstrative and Non-demonstrative Reasoning in Mathematics and Natural Science,” eds. P. Pecere and C. Cellucci, Edizioni dell’ Università degli Studi di Cassino, 2006, 27-54.
  • “Constructive Ambiguity in Mathematical Reasoning,” Mathematical Reasoning and Heuristics, eds. D. Gillies and C. Cellucci, King’s College Publications, 2005, pp. 1-23.
  • “Jules Vuillemin’s La Philosophie de l’algèbre : The Philosophical Uses of Mathematics,” Philosophie des mathématiques et théorie de la connaissance : L’Oeuvre de Jules Vuillemin, R. Rashed and P. Pellegrin, eds. Paris : Albert Blanchard, 2005, pp. 253-270.
  • “Descartes : Meditations on First Philosophy,” The Classics of Western Philosophy, J. Gracia, G. Reichberg, and B. Schumacher, eds., Blackwell Publishers, 2003, pp. 217-233.
  • “The Cartesian Revolution. La Géométrie. Understanding Descartes : Reception of the Géométrie.” In Italian. Storia della scienza, S. Petruccioli, ed. 10 vols. Rome : Istituto della Enciclopedia Italiana, Vol. V (2002), pp. 440-452.
  • “Theomorphic Expression in Leibniz’s Discourse on Metaphysics,” Studia Leibnitiana, Thematic Issue : Towards the Discourse on Metaphysics, G. H. R. Parkinson, ed., Band 33, Heft 1 (2001), pp. 4-18.
  • “Fedorof’s Translation of McClintock : The Uses of Chemistry in the Reorganization of Genetics,” Tools and Modes of Representation in the Laboratory Sciences, U. Klein, ed. Boston Studies Series in the Philosophy of Science, Kluwer, 2001, pp. 199-218.
  • “Leibnizian Analysis, Mathematics and Nature : The Search for Conditions of Intelligibility,” Nihil Sine Ratione, VI. Internationaler Leibniz-Kongress, Hannover, September 2001. Vortrage 1. Teil, pp. 426-33.
  • “Frege and the Surprising History of Logic : Introduction to Claude Imbert, ‘Gottlob Frege, One More Time’,” Hypatia,Vol. 15, No. 4 (Fall 2000), pp. 151-55.
  • “How Symbolic and Iconic Languages Bridge the Two Worlds of the Chemist : A Case Study from Contemporary Bioorganic Chemistry,” with Roald Hoffmann. Of Minds and Molecules : New Philosophical Perspectives on Chemistry, S. Rosenfeld and N. Bhushan, eds., Oxford U. Press, 2000, pp. 230-47. Reprinted in Roald Hoffmann on the Philosophy, Art and Social Setting of Chemistry, Jeffrey Kovac and Michael Weisberg, eds., Oxford University Press, 2012, pp. 222-241.
  • “L’analogie dans la pensée mathématique de Leibniz,” L’Actualité de Leibniz : Les Deux Labyrinths, D. Berlioz and F. Nef, eds., Studia Leibnitiana Supplementa 34, Franz Steiner Verlag, 1999, pp. 511-22.
  • “Leibniz and Plato Against the Materialists,” Journal of the History of Ideas, Vol. 57, No. 2 (April 1996), pp. 255-76.
  • “Reduction in the Formal Sciences,” Proceedings of the Conference on Physical Interpretations of Relativity Theory (Late Papers) London, September 1994, pp. 28-51.
  • “Leibniz’s Correspondence with Hartsoeker and Remond,” Leibniz und Europa, VI. Internationaler Leibniz-Kongress, Hannover, July 1994, pp. 293-300.
  • “Descartes and the Individuation of Physical Objects,” Individuation and Identity in Early Modern Philosophy, K. Barber and J. Gracia, eds., State University of New York Press, 1994, pp. 41-58.
  • “L’impatto di Cartesio e di Leibniz sulla filosofia analitica americana” (“The Impact of Descartes and Leibniz on American Analytic Philosophy,”) Specchi Americani : La filosofia europea nel Nuovo Mondo, C. Marrone, G. Coccoli, G. Santese, F. Ratto, eds., Rome : Castelvecchi, 1994, pp. 74-95.
  • “Leibniz and the Two Labyrinths,” Leibniz and Adam, E. Yakira and M. Dascal, eds., Tel Aviv : University Publishing Projects Ltd., 1993, pp. 65-77.
  • “Objects and Structures in the Formal Sciences,” PSA 1992, Proceedings of the 1992 Biennial Meetings of the Philosophy of Science Association, Vol. 1 (Contributed Papers), pp. 251-60.
  • “Was Leibniz a Mathematical Revolutionary ?” Revolutions in Mathematics, Donald Gillies, ed., Oxford University Press, 1992, pp. 117-33.
  • “Cartesian Method and the Geometry,” Descartes : Critical Assessments (Four Volumes), Georges Moyal, ed., Routledge, 1991, vol. 1, pp. 80-93.
  • “Problematic Objects between Mathematics and Physics,” PSA 1990, Proceedings of the 1990 Biennial Meetings of the Philosophy of Science Association, Vol. 2 (Invited Papers), pp. 385-95.
  • “Descartes’ Geometry and the Classical Tradition,” Revolution and Continuity : Essays in the History and Philosophy of Early Modern Science, Peter Barker and Roger Ariew, eds., Catholic University of America Press, Studies in Philosophy and the History of Philosophy Series, 1990, pp. 183-96.
  • “Descartes and Galileo : The Quantification of Force and Time,” Mathématiques et philosophie de l’antiquité à l’age classique : Hommage à Jules Vuillemin, R. Rashed, ed., Paris : Editions du Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique, 1990, pp. 195-213.
  • “Geometry and Force : Descartes, Galileo and Torricelli,” PSA 1988, Proceedings of the 1988 Biennial Meetings of the Philosophy of Science Association, Vol. 2 (Invited Papers), pp. 237-48.
  • “Leibniz’ Formalist Realism and an Early Problem in the Theory of Differential Equations,” Leibnizian Inquiries, Nicholas Rescher, ed., Center for Philosophy of Science (Pittsburgh) Publications in Philosophy of Science Series, University Press of America, 1990, pp. 37-43.
  • “Leibniz’ Investigation of Differential Equations around 1690,” Leibniz : Tradition und Actualität, V. Internationaler Leibniz-Kongress, Hannover, November 1988, pp. 327-34.
  • “Some Uses of Proportion in Newton’s Principia, Book I,” Studies in History and Philosophy of Science, Vol. 18, No. 2 (1987), pp. 209-20.
  • “Women, History and Practical Deliberation,” Journal of Speculative Philosophy, Vol. 1, No. 3, 1987, pp. 218-26. Reprinted in Feminist Thought and the Structure of Knowledge, Mary Gergen, ed., New York University Press, 1988. pp. 173-181.
  • “Two Leibnizian Manuscripts of l690 Concerning Differential Equations,” Historia Mathematica, 14 (1987), pp. 1-37. Transcription from original Latin, translation into English, commentary and notes.
  • “Three Cartesian Epistemologies,” Graduate Faculty Philosophy Journal (New School for Social Research), special issue on seventeenth century science, Vol. 12, Nos. 1 and 2 (1988), pp. 49-80.
  • “A Case Study in the Application of Mathematics to Physics : Descartes’ Principles of Philosophy, Part II,” PSA 1986, Proceedings of the 1986 Biennial Meeting of the Philosophy of Science Association, Vol. 1 (Contributed Papers), A. Fine and P. Machamer, eds., pp. 116-24.
  • “Two Episodes in the Unification of Logic and Topology,” The British Journal for the Philosophy of Science, 36 (1985), pp. 147-57.
  • “Beyond First-Order Predicate Logic : The Impact of Topology on Logic,” Sciences et Techniques en Perspective (Nantes), Vol. 5 (November 1984), pp. 26-41.
  • “Leibniz’ Unification of Geometry with Algebra and Dynamics,” Studia Leibnitiana, Sonderheft 13 : Leibniz’ Dynamica, pp. 198-208.
  • “The Legacy of Leibnizian Formalism,” Leibniz, Werk und Wirkung, IV. Internationaler Leibniz- Kongress, Hannover, November 1983, pp. 238-46.
  • “Wittgenstein and the Correlation of Arithmetic and Logic,” Ratio, Vol. 23, No. 1, June 1981, pp. 33-45.
  • “Descartes’ Unification of Algebra and Geometry,” in Descartes : Philosophy, Mathematics and Physics, S. Gaukroger, ed. (Harvester Press, 1980), pp. 156-68.
  • Review of Making and Breaking Mathematical Sense : Histories and Philosophies of Mathematical Practice, by Roi Wagner (Princeton University Press, 2017), HOPOS : The Journal of the International Society for the History and Philosophy of Science, Vol. 10, Issue 1 (May 2020).
  • Review essay of Realizing Reason, by Danielle Macbeth (Oxford University Press, 2014), Journal of Humanistic Mathematics, Vol. 7, No. 1 (January 2017), pp. 62-73.
  • Review essay of Spinoza and the Case for Philosophy, by Elhanan Yakira (Cambridge University Press, 2014), IYYUN, The Jerusalem Philosophical Quarterly 65 (July 2016), pp. 1-5.
  • “Symmetry,” review essay of Love and Math : The Heart of Hidden Reality, by Edward Frenkel (New York : Basic Books, 2013), Journal of Humanistic Mathematics (published online January 2015).
  • Review essay of Rethinking Logic : Logic in Relation to Mathematics, Evolution, and Method, by Carlo Cellucci (Springer, 2013), Philosophia Mathematica, Vol. 23, No. 1, pp. 136-140 (published online in September 2014).
  • Review essay of From Eve to Evolution : Darwin, Science, and Women’s Rights in Gilded Age America by Kimberley A. Hamlin (University of Chicago Press, 2014), Women’s Review of Books, 32/1 (January /February 2015), pp. 3-4.
  • Review essay of William Byers, How Mathematicians Think, Using Ambiguity, Contradiction, and Paradox to Create Mathematics (Princeton University Press, 2007), The Mathematical Intelligencer, Vol. 36, issue 3 (September 2014), pp. 84-87.
  • “Candles in the Dark : Émilie du Châtelet and Mary Somerville,” review essay of Seduced by Logic : Émilie du Châtelet, Mary Somerville, and the Newtonian Revolution (Oxford University Press, 2012), Hudson Review, Vol. LXV, No. 4 (Winter 2013), pp. 669-676.
  • “Against One-Sidedness,” review essay of Edward Skidelsky, Ernst Cassirer, The Last Philosopher of Culture (Princeton University Press, 2007), Hudson Review, Vol. LXII, No. 4 (Winter 2010), pp. 691-98. Reprinted in Spanish translation by Cinthia García Soria, La Gaceta No. 492 (Dec. 2011), pp. 6-8 ; Fondo de Cultura Económica, Mexico City, Mexico.
  • Review of Michael Futch, Leibniz’s Metaphysics of Time and Space (Dordrecht and Boston : Springer Verlag, 2008). Journal of the History of Philosophy, Vol. 48, No. 2 (April 2010), pp. 246-7.
  • Review essay of Sandra Harding, Sciences from Below : Feminisms, Postcolonialities, and Modernities
  • (Durham and London : Duke University Press, 2008), and Emily Monosson, ed. Motherhood, the Elephant in the Laboratory, (Ithaca and London : Cornell University Press / ILR Press, 2008). The Women’s Review of Books, Summer 2009.
  • Review essay of Matthew L. Jones, The Good Life in the Scientific Revolution : Descartes, Pascal, Leibniz and the Cultivation of Virtue, University of Chicago Press, 2006. Early Science and Medicine, Vol. 12, No. 4 (2007), pp. 453-456.
  • Review essay of Patricia Hill Collins, Black Sexual Politics : African Americans, Gender, and the New Racism, Routledge, 2005, Hypatia, Vol. 22, No. 4 (2007), pp. 209-212.
  • Review essay of Joseph Mazur, Euclid in the Rainforest, Pi Press, 2005, The Mathematical Intelligencer, Vol. 28, No. 2 (2006), pp. 84-88.
  • Review essay of Karine Chemla et Guo Shuchun, eds., Les Neuf Chapitres : Le Classique mathématique de la Chine ancienne et ses commentaires, Dunod, 2004, Gazette des Mathématiciens, No. 105 (July 2005), pp. 49-56.
  • Review of C. Sasaki, Descartes’s Mathematical Thought, Kluwer, 2003, Philosophia Mathematica (III) 13 (2005).
  • Review essay of Ursula Klein, Experiments, Models, Paper Tools : Cultures of Organic Chemistry in the Nineteenth Century, Stanford University Press, 2003, Studies in History and Philosophy of Science, 36 (2005), pp. 411-417.
  • Review of Benno Artmann, Euclid B The Creation of Mathematics, Springer Verlag, 1999, Philosophia Mathematica, Vol. 9 (2000), No. 2, pp. 246-7.
  • Review of Carlo Cellucci, Le Ragioni della Logica, Laterza, 1998, Isis 91 (2) (June 2000), 426-7.
  • Review of Benoit Timmermans, La resolution des problèmes de Descartes à Kant, Isis 89 (3) (Sept. 1998), 546-7.

Literary Publications

  • Reflections on Poetry and the World : Walking along the Hudson. A collection of literary essays, forthcoming from Cambridge Scholars Publishing in 2021. Part I : Huge Cloudy Figures of a High Romance (Kumin, Milosz, Rilke, Kooser, Beauvoir, Colette, Keats). Part II : Poetry and Practical Deliberation. Part III : Poetry and Other Worlds. Part IV : Walking along the Hudson.
  • The Stars of Earth : New and Selected Poems. (Poems, with drawings by Farhad Ostovani.) Word Galaxy / Able Muse Press, 2017.
  • Songs of Two Bellevilles. Compact Disc. Songs composed by Bruce Trinkley : my poems about Belleville, a neighborhood in Paris, and poems by Julia Kasdorf about Belleville, Pennsylvania. Carl V. Shinko, ed., Longfooter Productions, 2017.
  • Childhood (poems, with drawings by Lucie Vines Bonnefoy), Accents Publishing (2014). This book has raised over $3500 for UNICEF since it was launched.
  • こどもの時間 A Japanese translation by Atsuko Hayakawa (Tsuda College, Tokyo) with illustrations by Chihiro Iwasaki and musical compositions by Kaori Muraji and Koko Tanikawa ; it was published by Kurumed Shuppan (2015). Kaori Muraji included two of these compositions in her MP3 Album Rhapsody Japan in 2016, and Koko Tanikawa included three in her Compact Disc entitled First Piano Lesson in 2018. A film was made of the book-launch by Kazunori Kurimoto ; Muchiro Oshima is also setting some of the poems to music. The poem “Snowdrop” was turned into a dance by Michiyo Sato, with recitation by Clara Kumagai.
  • Infanzia. An Italian translation by Sara Amadori (University of Bologna), Raffaelli Editore (2016).
  • Childhood Songs, for Soprano and Piano. Compact Disc. Eight of the poems in Childhood set to music by the Italian composer Mirco De Stefani. Rivoalto, Venice, 2016 and were performed in concert at the Villa Marcello Loredan Franchin near Venice by soprano Christine Nadal and pianist Igor Cognolato, November 2019.
  • Enfance. A French translation by Pascale Drouet (University of Poitiers), Editions Lambert-Lucas (2017).
  • Kindheit. A German translation by Ulrike Blatter is complete, and has just been published by Wehrhahn Verlag, Hannover (2020).
  • Bencmbo. A Bulgarian translation by Katerina Stoykova-Klemer is complete, to be published by Signs Publishing House, 2021.
  • A translation by Masud Uzzaman into Bangla is underway.
  • Translations into Romanian, Russian, Portuguese, Swahili, Turkish, Hebrew, Xhosa, Chinese and Spanish are under discussion.
  • The Second Movement : Fukushima. Studio Ghibli (Tokyo), 2015. Co-translation with Atsuko Hayakawa and Arthur Binard of poems in Japanese by Ryoichi Wago, Shigeko Sato, Jo-taro Wakamatsu and local school children. Preface by Sayuri Yoshinaga and illustrations by Kazuo Oga.
  • Proportions of the Heart : Poems that Play with Mathematics (poems, with mathematical art by Robert Fathauer), Tessellations Publishing, 2014. This book was featured on the mathematics blog of Evelyn Lamb for Scientific American, Roots of Unity, in April 2015, in recognition of National Poetry Month ; and on the FQXi blog of Zeeya Merali, in May 2015, along with a podcast of three of my physics poems.
  • Beginning and End of the Snow. Bucknell University Press / Rowman & Littlefield, 2012. English translation of
  • Yves Bonnefoy’s book of poems Début et fin de la neige, with a new Preface by the author written for this volume and eight watercolors by Farhad Ostovani. Some of these translations appeared in the “translation issue” of The Hudson Review (Winter 2009) ; and some of them are included in a CD, Chansons de la Grande Neige, by composer Mirco De Stefani, produced by Rivoalto di Venezia (Italy). A portion of my essay “Song, Rain, Snow : Translating the Poetry of Yves Bonnefoy,” in the same issue of The Hudson Review, serves as an Afterword.
  • Feuilles / Leaves (poems), William Blake & Co., 2007, with Farhad Ostovani. This chapbook includes a series of Farhad Ostovani’s Goldberg Variations, and a suite of my poems with French translations by Alain Madeleine-Perdrillat en face.
  • The Abacus of Years (poems), David R. Godine, 2002.
  • Telling the Barn Swallow : Poets on the Poetry of Maxine Kumin, E. Grosholz, ed., University Press of New England, 1996. This collection includes my essay “Maxine Kumin’s Poetry of Metamorphosis.”
  • Eden (poems), Johns Hopkins University Press, 1992.
  • Shores and Headlands (poems), Princeton University Press, 1988.
  • The River Painter (poems), University of Illinois Press, 1984.
  • Poems from these books have been anthologized in Hollow Palaces, an anthology of modern country house poems, ed. J. Greening and K. J. Gerdner, Liverpool University Press, forthcoming ; Bridges 2020, Bridges 2018, Bridges 2016 and Bridges 2013, ed. Sarah Glaz, Tesselations Publishing ; The Norton Introduction to Literature, 13th Edition, ed. Kelly J. Mays, 2018 ; Love Affairs at the Villa Nelle, ed. M. Taylor and J. Roberts, Kelsay Books, 2018 ; Fire and Rain : Ecopoetry of California, eds. Lucille Lang Day and Ruth Nolan, Scarlet Tanager Books, 2018 ; Mortals and Immortals (Celebration of the 35th Anniversary of the Burchfield Penney Art Center), ed. Don Metz, Blaze Vox,
  • 2014 ; Poets Translate Poets, ed. Paula Deitz, Syracuse University Press, 2013 ; Penguin’s Poems for Love, ed. Laura Barber, Penguin Books, 2009 ; Strange Attractors : Poems of Love and Mathematics, eds. JoAnne Growney and Sarah Glaz, A. K. Peters, Ltd., 2008 ; The Shape of Content : Creative Writing in Mathematics and Science, eds. M. Senechal, C. Davis, J. Zwicky, A. K. Peters, Ltd., 2008 ; Conversation Pieces : Poems that Talk to Other Poems, ed. K. Brown, Knopf, Everyman’s Library, 2007 ; Rhyming Poems : A Contemporary Anthology, ed. W. Baer, University of Evansville Press, 2007 ; Lineas conectadas : neuva poesía de Estados Unidos / Connecting Lines : New Poetry from the United States, ed. A. Lindner, a bilingual 2-vol. anthology where poems are presented in both English and Spanish, Sarabande Books, 2006 ; Norton Introduction to Literature, 9th Edition and Shorter 9th Edition, eds. J. P. Hunter, K. Mays, A. Booth, Norton, 2005 ; Western Wind : An Introduction to Poetry, eds. D. Mason and J. F. Nims, McGraw-Hill, 2005 ; Contemporary American Poetry, eds. R. S. Gwynn and A. Lindner, Pearson/ Longman / Penguin, 2005 ; Women’s Writing : Past and Present, ed. C. Zilboorg, Cambridge Contexts in Literature, Cambridge University Press, 2004 ; Words Brushed by Music : The Best Poems from the First 25 Years of the Johns Hopkins Poetry Series, ed. J. Irwin, Johns Hopkins University Press, 2004 ; Poetry in Motion from Coast to Coast : 120 Poems from the Subways and the Buses, eds. E. Paschen and B. Fletcher, Norton, 2002 ; The Norton Introduction to Literature, 8th Edition, eds. J. P. Hunter, K. Mays, J. Beaty, Norton, 2002 ; The Spirit of Pregnancy, ed. B. Goldberg, Contemporary Books, 2000 ; Verse and Universe : Poems on Science and Mathematics, ed. K. Brown, Milkweed Press, 1998 ; Rebel Angels : 25 Poets of the New Formalism, eds. M. Jarman and D. Mason, Story Line Press, 1996 ; Formal Introductions : An Investigative Anthology, ed. D. Gioia, Aralia Press, 1994 ; An Introduction to Poetry (8th, 9th, 10th edition) and Literature : An Introduction to Fiction, Poetry, and Drama, eds. X. J. Kennedy and D. Gioia, HarperCollins Publishers, 1993/94 - 2002 ; A Formal Feeling Comes : Poems in Conspicuous Form by Contemporary Women, ed. A. Finch, Story Line Press, 1993/4 ; Articulations : The Body and Illness in Poetry, ed. J. Mukand, Iowa City : University of Iowa Press, 1994 ; The Virago Book of Birth Poems, ed. C. Otten, Virago Press, 1993 ; Parallels : Artists/Poets, New York : Midmarch Arts Press, 1993 ; Love Poems by Women, ed. W. Mulford, Ballantine Books, 1990 ; Gathered Waters, ed. Cort Conley, Backeddy Books, 1985.
  • “Yeats’ Poetics,” my English translation of Yves Bonnefoy’s “La Poétique de Yeats,” which first appeared in the Hudson Review, Vol. LXIX , No. 3 (Autumn 2016), pp. 403-425, is included, slightly revised, in Yves Bonnefoy : A Reader, Vol. II, Critical Prose, eds. S. Romer and J. Naughton, Carcanet, 2020.
  • Essay on Ted Kooser, Hudson Review, Volume LXXIII (Autumn 2020), pp. 400-426.
  • “Letter from Rome,” forthcoming in the Hudson Review.
  • “One Poem,” forthcoming in Literary Accents.
  • “Figures of Speech and Figures of Thought,” dialogue with myself and Edward Rothstein, moderated by Grace Schulman, forthcoming in The Mathematical Intelligencer. Available online : https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s00283-019-09937-0
  • “One Poem,” Think : A Journal of Poetry, Fiction and Essays, Winter / Spring 2020, Vol. 10.1, pp. 46-49.
  • Advisory Editor for the section on Maxine Kumin in Volume CLC 451 of the series Contemporary Literary Criticism, Gage / Layman Poupard Publishing, pp. 129-212, 2020. I collected and annotated 17 critical essays, interviews and biographies, and wrote an assessment of the major trends in scholarship on Kumin.
  • “Report : Mathematical Art Exhibition at Bridges Linz,” Journal of Mathematics and the Arts and online : https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/17513472.2019.1691430 (December 2019)
  • “Four Poems,” Hudson Review, Volume LXXII (Autumn 2019), pp. 383-386.
  • “Elegy,” a suite of five poems, Hudson Review, 70th Anniversary Issue, Vol. LXXI (Autumn 2018), pp. 230-232.
  • “Childhood and Vibrant Stasis in Olga Sedakova’s Poetry,” for Olga Sedakova : Poems, Philosophies, Points of Contention, eds. S. Sandler, M. Khotimsky, M. Krimmel, O. Novikov, published in both Russian and English. The Russian version was published in 2016 by Novoe Literaturnoe Obozrenie Press (Moscow). The English version was published by the University of Wisconsin Press in 2018. The project was supported by a grant from the Moscow Charitable Fund to Support Scholarship in Philosophy. My essay was translated into Russian by Dr. Ksenia Akefal.
  • “Hyperspace, Poetic Science Fiction and Algebraic Topology, Proceedings of Bridges Stockholm 2018 : Mathematics, Music, Art, Architecture, Culture, eds. E. Torrence, B. Torrence, C. Séquin, K. Fenyvesi, Tessellations Publishing, 2018, pp. 259-264.
  • “Exploring the Supernatural Lapse of Time in Fairyland and General Relativity : How Modern Poetry Plays with Space and Time and Lives on the Edges,” PN Review, 244 (2018), pp.
  • “The Art of Translation,” Literary Matters, online journal of the Association of Literary Scholars, Critics, and Writers, Issue 10.2, Winter 2018.
  • “Four Poems,” Bridges Stockholm 2018 Poetry Anthology, ed. S. Glaz, pp. 15-18.
  • “Six Poems,” and an interview-conversation with Mark Jarman (4600 words), in the No. 23 / Summer 2017 issue of Able Muse Review, where I am the featured poet, pp. 62-79.
  • “Great Books, Poetry and Mathematics,” Proceedings of Bridges Waterloo 2017 : Mathematics, Music, Art, Architecture, Culture, Tessellations Publishing, 2017, pp. 339-342.
  • “Do I Write as a Woman Poet, or a Poet who is a Woman ?” Plume, online poetry journal archived by St. Petersburg College, July 2017.
  • “Philosophy and Poetry : Keats’ Forest of the Mind,” Think : A Journal of Poetry, Criticism and Reviews, Vol. 7.2 / Fall 2017, pp. 70-74.
  • “Three Poems,” PN Review 235 (2017), p. 38.
  • “Four Poems,” The Hudson Review, Vol. LXX / 1 (Spring 2017), pp. 93-96.
  • “A Poem,” Blue Lyra Review, online journal, Issue 6.2 (2017).
  • “The Golden Ratio : Poetry and Mathematics,” PN Review 234 (2017), pp. 16-20. (Featured article on PN Review website.)
  • “Four Poems,” Bridges Finland 2016 Poetry Anthology, ed. S. Glaz, pp. 19-22.
  • “Two Poems,” Think : A Journal of Poetry, Criticism and Reviews, Vol. 6.2 (Spring 2016), pp. 32-33.
  • “Encounters with Bashō,” Letter from Tokyo, Kamakura, and Kyoto, PN Review 229 (2016), pp. 14-18. (Featured article on PN Review website.)
  • “Two Poems,” San Diego Reader, February 17, 2016.
  • “Letter from Denmark,” Hudson Review, Vol. LXVII / 4 (Winter 2016), pp. 539-545.
  • “Five Poems,” Hudson Review, Vol. LXVII / 3 (Autumn 2015), pp. 404-408.
  • “Six Poems,” PN Review 226 (2015), pp. 40-41.
  • “The Vision of Ruth Fainlight : Poetry and Painting,” Think : A Journal of Poetry, Criticism and Reviews, Vol. 6.1 (Fall 2015), pp. 61-79.
  • “Letter from Rome,” Hudson Review, Vol. LXVIII, No. 2 (Summer 2015), pp. 189-193.
  • “Julia Randall’s Poetic Finitude : Mapping the Infinite onto a Poem,” Proceedings of Bridges Baltimore 2015 : Mathematics, Music, Art, Architecture, Culture, Tessellations Publishing, 2015, pp. 283-288.
  • “Space, Time and Poetic Form : Golden Slippers, Poems by Eleanor Wilner and W. S. Di Piero,” Think : A Journal of Poetry, Reviews and Criticism, Vol. 5 / 1 (Fall 2014), pp. 80-93.
  • Translation from Romanian (with Adam Sorkin) of a poem by Liliana Ursu, Prairie Schooner, Vol. 88 / 4, p. 66.
  • “Returning as a Barn Swallow : Maxine Kumin,” one of a set of six short memoirs edited by Robin Becker, American Poetry Review, Vol. 44 / 1 (January / February 2015), pp. 35-38.
  • “La Nouvelle Athènes,” “Les Gobelins,” and “Montmartre / Batignolles,” entries in City Secrets Paris, ed. Robert Kahn, Fang Duff Kahn Publishers, 2014, pp. 185-187, 229-231, and 262-264.
  • “Great Circles : The Analysis of a Concept in Mathematics and Poetry,” Special issue on poetry, ed. S. Glaz, Journal of Mathematics and the Arts, Vol. 8 / 1-2, 2014, pp. 24-30.
  • “Personages and the Claim of the Heart in Dostoevsky’s The Brothers Karamazov,” Hudson Review, Vol. LXVII, No. 1 (Spring 2014), pp. 83-96.
  • “Hanford, Gainesville, Rome : The Landscapes of Debora Greger,” Sewanee Review, Vol. CXXII, No. 1 (Winter 2014), pp. 75-89.
  • “Letter from St. Petersburg,” Hudson Review, Vol. LXVI, No. 4 (Winter 2014), pp. 613-619.
  • “Letter from Moscow,” Hudson Review, Vol. LXVI, No. 3 (Autumn 2013), pp. 438-445.
  • Translations from Old French of ten poems by Thibaut de Champagne and one by Hue de la Ferté, as well as of an introductory essay, “The Songs of Thibaut de Champagne (1201-1253),” by Anne Ibos-Augé. My translations were included in the program when the songs were performed by Alla Francesca (the ensemble-in-residence at the Musée de Cluny) in the Medieval Sculpture Hall of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, in December 2012, and are now in the booklet for the CD of their performance produced by AEON. Hudson Review, Vol. LXV, No. 3 (Autumn 2012), pp. 419-438.
  • Six poems-with-photographs in Levure Littéraire / Art & Music, No. 6 (September 2012), ed. Rodica Draghinescu, on-line journal.
  • Translations from Spanish of two poems by Jorge Luis Borges, Hudson Review, Vol. LXIV, No. 2 (Summer 2011), pp. 241-2.
  • “The Hudson Review, Women, and Poetry,” in the Sewanee Review, Vol. CXIX, No. 1 (Winter 2011), pp. 150-161.
  • English translation of Yves Bonnefoy, “L’Été de Nuit,” for a CD booklet of musical settings of the poems, composed by Mirco De Stefani, Rivoalto de Venezia, 2011.
  • “The Poetry of Leo Connellan,” Fair Warning : Leo Connellan and His Poetry, S. Murphy and M. Nelson, eds., Printed Matter Press, 2011, pp. 83-6.
  • “The Poetry of Memory,” Aspects of Robinson : Homage to Weldon Kees, C. Buckley and C. Howell, eds., The Backwaters Press, 2011, pp. 60-2.
  • “Compacting Time : Anne Stevenson’s Poems of Memory,” Hudson Review, Vol. LXII, No. 3 (Autumn 2009), pp. 405-416. Reprinted as a revised and expanded version in Voyages over Voices : Critical Essays on Anne Stevenson, A. Leighton, ed., University of Liverpool Press, 2010, pp. 151-163.
  • “Crossing the Canal St. Martin,” Eclectica Magazine, http://www.eclectica.org/v14n4/toc.html (under Travel Section, 6500 words), Fall 2010.
  • “The Modern Essay, Robert Louis Stevenson, and the Hudson Review,” PN Review 195 (2010), pp. 30-33.
  • “Song, Rain, Snow : Translating the Poetry of Yves Bonnefoy,” an essay, along with ten translations of poems by Bonnefoy, Hudson Review, Vol. LXI, No. 4 (Winter 2009), pp. 618-642. Some of these translations appear in a CD booklet of musical settings of the sequence La Grande Neige, composed by Mirco De Stefani, Rivoalto de Venezia, 2009.
  • Translations of six poems and an essay by Olga Sedakova, with Larissa Volokhonsky, Hudson Review, Vol. LXI, No. 4 (Winter 2009), pp. 687-694.
  • “Nouvelles Lectures de Simone de Beauvoir aux Etats-Unis,” (tr. E. Dauzat), Le Magazine Littéraire, No. 471 (January 2008), 52-53.
  • “Tree, Lily, Rose, Grape : Object and Thought in the Painting of Farhad Ostovani,” Hudson Review, LX, No. 4 (Winter 2008), 621-629.
  • “On Necklaces,” Best American Essays 2008, Adam Gopnik and Robert Atwan, eds., Houghton Mifflin, 2008, pp. 75-89 ; first published in Prairie Schooner, Summer 2007, Vol. 81, No. 2, pp. 182-195.
  • “Letter from Helsinki,” Hudson Review, Vol. LIX, No. 1 (Spring 2006), pp. 6-13.
  • Translation of a poem by Yves Bonnefoy, Hudson Review, LVII, No. 3 (Autumn 2005), pp. 411-412.
  • “The Uses of Periodicity in English Verse,” Hudson Review, Vol. LVIII, No. 2 (Summer 2005), pp. 259-274.
  • “Letter from Paris,” Hudson Review, Vol. LVIII, No. 1 (Spring 2005), pp. 6-17.
  • “Poetry and Practical Deliberation,” Unrelenting Readers : The New Poet-Critics, P. Hedeen and D. Myers, eds., Story Line Press, 2004, pp. 73-93.
  • “The Loss of Innocence,” Connecticut Review, Vol. XXIV, No. 1 (Spring 2002), pp. 13-27.
  • “Frederick Morgan’s New York Suite in Poems for Paula,” Sewanee Review, Vol. CIX, No. 1 (Winter 2001), 129-34.
  • “The Poetry of Anne Stevenson,” Michigan Quarterly Review, Vol. XL, No. 4 (Fall 2001), 727-38. Reprinted in The Way You Say the World : A Celebration for Anne Stevenson, John Lucas and Matt Simpson, eds., Shoestring Press, 2003.
  • Six translations of poems by Yves Bonnefoy, Hudson Review special issue on French literature, Vol. LIV, No. 3 (Autumn 2001), 433-38
  • “ ‘Huge Cloudy Figures of a High Romance’ : Shadows, Sensation, and the Infinite in the Poetry of John Keats,” Hudson Review, Vol. 53, No. 4 (Winter 2001), pp. 599-606.
  • “Poetry and Science in America,” The Measured Word : Essays on Poetry and Science, K. Brown, ed., University of Georgia Press, 2001, pp. 69-89. First published in Princeton University Library Chronicle, special issue on American poetry, 1908-1992, Vol. LV, No. 3 (Spring 1994), pp. 532-552.
  • “Mrs. Thurston’s Neighborhood : A Sense of Place in the Poetry of Mona Van Duyn,” Discovery and Reminiscence : Essays on the Poetry of Mona Van Duyn, Michael Burns, ed., University of Arkansas Press, 1998, pp. 47-61.
  • “The Valsaintes Poems of Yves Bonnefoy,” Mary Ann Caws, ed., special issue of L’Esprit Créateur, Vol. XXXVI, No. 3 (Fall 1996), pp. 52-64.
  • “Distortion, Explosion, Embrace : The Poetry of Alice Fulton,” Michigan Quarterly Review, Vol. 34, No. 2 (Spring 1995), pp. 213-29.
  • Ten translations of poems included in Yves Bonnefoy, New and Selected Poems, J. Naughton and A. Rudolf, eds., University of Chicago Press, 1995, pp. 72-95.
  • Thirteen biographies (Ackerman, Adams, Di Piero, Feldman, Fulton, Hadas, Howes, Levertov, Miles, Olson, Pack, Pollitt, Turner) for the Oxford Companion to Twentieth Century Poetry in English, Ian Hamilton, ed.
  • “Class and Poetry on the Outskirts of Philadelphia,” New England Review, Vol. 12, No. 2 (Spring 1993), pp. 19-22.
  • “Roald Hoffmann’s Praise of Synthetic Beauty,” Studies in American Jewish Literature, Vol. 9, No. 2, Fall 1990, pp. 224-7.
  • “Altamira and Santiago de Compostela,” Pequod, Special Issue on Literature and the Visual Arts, Nos. 28 and 29, 1989, pp. 226-34.
  • “Letter from Toronto,” Hudson Review, Vol. 42, No. 3, Autumn 1989, pp. 362-7.
  • “The Insufficiency of Lyric and the Richness of Poetry,” Cumberland Poetry Review, special issue on Donald Davie, Vol. 8, No. 1, Fall 1988, pp. 5-10.
  • “Rationalist, Empiricist : The Poetry of Julia Randall and Josephine Miles,” Cumberland Poetry Review, Vol. VI, No. 1 (Fall 1986), pp. 76-97.
  • “Milosz and the Moral Authority of Poetry,” The Hudson Review, Vol. 39, No. 2, Summer 1986, pp. 251-70. Reprinted in Conversant Essays : Contemporary Poets on Poetry, James McCorkle, ed., Wayne State University Press, 1990, pp. 65-78.
  • “Form, Flux and Pattern : The Poetry of Dorothy Roberts,” Cumberland Poetry Review, Vol. 4, No. 2, Spring 1985, pp. 22-34.
  • “Imagining Human Action,” Kenyon Review, Vol. 5, No. 2, Spring 1983, pp. 64-6.
  • “Angels, Language and the Imagination : A Reconsideration of Rilke’s Poetry,” Hudson Review, Vol. 35, No. 3.
  • “The Interpretation of Dream Poems : Freud, Surrealism and Contemporary American Poetry,” New England Review, Vol. 4, No. 2, Winter 1981, pp. 292-231.
  • “Painting the Rivers,” review essay on seven travel books and scholarly works about the river systems of central Eurasia, Hudson Review, Vol. LXVI, No. 1 (Spring 2013), pp. 175-182.
  • “Report : Mathematical Poetry at Bridges 2012, Baltimore, MD, July 2012,” Journal of Mathematics and the Arts, Vol. 6, No. 4 (December 2012), pp. 219-20.
  • “Poetry in the Wild : Two Books on Polar Exploration and the Life of Darwin,” review of two books of poetry, American Scientist, Vol. 100, No. 3 (May-June 2012), pp. 262-63.
  • “Echoes of Romanticism : New English Poetry,” review essay of seven books of British poetry, Hudson Review, Vol. LXIV, No. 2 (Summer 2011), pp. 341-51.
  • “The Poetics of Landscape Architecture,” review essay of Paula Deitz, Of Gardens (University of Pennsylvania, 2010), Sewanee Review, Vol. CXIX, No. 3 (Summer 2011), pp. l – liv.
  • “The Isolated Protagonist : Three Novels by Orhan Pamuk, Jenny McPhee, and Laura Stevenson,” review essay of Orhan Pamuk, The Museum of Innocence (Knopf, 2009), Jenny McPhee, A Man of No Moon (Counterpoint, 2009), and Laura Stevenson, Return in Kind (Separate Star, 2010), Hudson Review, Vol. LXIII, No. 3 (Autumn 2010), pp. 521-27.
  • “Kenneth Burke and Shakespeare,” review essay of Kenneth Burke on Shakespeare, S. Newstok, ed. (Parlor Press, 2007), Hudson Review, Vol. LXI, No. 3 (Fall 2008), pp. 537-44.
  • “Thick on Severn Snow the Leaves,” review essay of The Letters of A. E. Housman, 2 vols. (Oxford University Press, 2007), Hudson Review, Vol. LX, No. 4 (Winter 2008), pp. 691-99.
  • “Masculine Poetics : Works, Days and Cars,” review of six books of poetry, Hudson Review, Vol. LIX, No. 3 (Autumn 2006), pp. 500-508.
  • “Poetry and Painting : Two Exhibitions in Honor of Yves Bonnefoy,” review of two art exhibits, Hudson Review, Vol. LVIII, No. 4 (Winter 2006), pp. 660-66.
  • “Review of Joe Ashby Porter’s The Near Future,” Golden Handcuffs Review, Vol. I, No. 7 (Winter / Spring 2006), pp. 223-26.
  • “Flights of Imagination,” review of six books of poetry, Hudson Review, Vol. LVII, No. 1 (Spring 2004), pp. 159-65.
  • “Jean Starobinski’s History of ‘Reaction’ : The Uses and Dangers of Metaphorical Language,” review essay of Jean Starobinski, Action and Reaction : The Life and Adventures of a Couple (Zone Books, 2003), The Hudson Review, Vol. LVI, No. 4 (Winter 2004), pp. 726-732.
  • “Flint and Iron,” review of eight books of poetry, Hudson Review, Volume LIII, No. 3 (Fall 2000), pp. 495-504.
  • “Love and the Creation of Value,” review essay on Irving Singer, The Pursuit of Love (Johns Hopkins University Press, 1994), Hudson Review, Vol. 47, No. 4 (Winter 1995), pp. 661-6.
  • “Over the Hill,” review of eight books of poetry, Hudson Review, Vol. 46, No. 3 (Fall 1993), pp. 570-8.
  • “Two Perspectives on Romanticism,” review of Carol Jacobs, Uncontainable Romanticism (Johns Hopkins University Press, 1989) and T. Ziolkowski’s German Romanticism and Its Institutions (Princeton University Press, 1989), Hudson Review, Vol. 44, No. 3, Spring 1991, pp. 150-4.
  • “Beyond the Circle of the Self,” review of eight books of poetry, Hudson Review, Vol. 43, No. 2, Summer 1990, pp. 324-34.
  • “Hope and Illusion in a Late Age : The Poetics of Yves Bonnefoy,” review essay on Yves Bonnefoy, The Act and the Place of Poetry, John T. Naughton, ed. and trans. (U. of Chicago, 1989), Hudson Review, Vol. 42, No. 2, Winter 1988-89, pp. 667-74.
  • “Marriages and Partings,” review of six books of poetry, Hudson Review, Vol. 40, No. 1, Spring 1987, pp. 156-164.
  • “The Importance of Being Learned,” review of three books of poetry, The New York Times Book Review, Jan. 4 1987, pp. 22 and 24.
  • “Family Ties,” review of ten books of poetry, Hudson Review, Vol. 37, No. 4, Winter 1984-85, pp. 647-59.
  • “New Renderings,” review of nine books of foreign language poetry in English translation, Hudson Review, Vol. 37, No. 1, Spring 1984, pp. 132-42.
  • “Masterworkers and Others,” review of twelve books of poetry, Hudson Review, Vol. 36, No. 3, Autumn 1983, pp. 582-92.
  • “Arms and the Muse,” review of four books of poetry, New England Review, Vol. 5, No. 4, pp. 634-46. Repr. in Writing in a Nuclear Age, J. Schley, ed., University Press of New England, 1983.
  • “Poetry Chronicle,” review of nine books of poetry, Hudson Review, Vol. 35, No. 2, Autumn 1982, pp. 319-33.
  • “Nicholas de Staël,” review of an exhibit of paintings, Hudson Review, Vol. 34, No. 3, Autumn 1981, pp. 397-400.
  • “Writing Landscape : Five Poets,” review of five books of poetry, New England Review, Vol. 3, No. 4, pp. 604-16.
  • “Mazzaro, Vendler, Freud & Co.,” review of two books of criticism, Hudson Review, Vol. 33, No. 4, Winter 1981, pp. 596-602.
  • “Poetry Chronicle,” review of fourteen books of poetry, Hudson Review, Vol. 33, No. 2, Summer 1980, pp. 293-308. Portion reprinted in Certain Solitudes : On the Poetry of Donald Justice, eds. D. Gioia and W. Logan, University of Arkansas Press, 1997.
  • Review of John Hollander’s Spectral Emanations : New and Selected Poems (Atheneum, 1979) in Grolier’s Masterplots 1979 Annual, Grolier Enterprises, 1979.


Presentations

“The Poetry of Ted Kooser,” Writing the Rockies, on line, August 2020.

  • “How Western Tradition Shapes the Relation between Body and Soul,” Futures of Tradition Symposium, Cornell University. Keynote Speaker. May 2020. (Postponed)
  • “Rome and Egypt,” Conference on W. E. B. Du Bois and the Ancient Mediterranean,” Penn State,May 2020. (Postponed)
  • “Frederick Feirstein and Fathering,” Panel on the Poetry of Frederick Feirstein, West Chester Poetry Conference, April 2020. (Postponed)
  • “Mathematics and Explanation in Marine Biology in California,” 5th International APMP Conference, Zurich, January 2020 (presented in absentia).
  • “Philosophical Debates about Scientific Explanation : Biology, Big Data, Scientific Meaning and Politics,” University of Rome ‘La Sapienza,’ December 2019.
  • “Realism, Eliminativism, Instrumentalism : Koffi Maglo on Scientific and Philosophical Debates about the Reality of Race,” University of Rome ‘La Sapienza,’ November 2019.
  • “Big Data, Mathematical Models, Biological Research, and the Politics of Climate Change,” Conference on the Explanatory and Heuristic Power of Mathematics, University of Rome ‘La Sapienza,’ June 2019.
  • “Productive Ambiguity in Biology : Philosophy of Biology Rethinks the Interactions of Mathematical Models with Empirical Data, History and Ethics,” Lecture for Science, Technology and Society, University of California at Davis.
  • “A New Understanding of Rationality in Philosophy of Biology : How Big Data Links Mathematical Models and Empirical Data with Environmental Politics,” Lecture for Data Science Initiative, University of California at Davis.
  • “Leibnizian Analysis in Metaphysics, Mathematics, Physics, Geology and Biology : From Fox Keller, Back to Leibniz and on to Darwin,” Three hours seminar : Atlelier Mathesis, SPHERE, University of Paris Denis Diderot, Paris 7, March 2019.
  • “Figures of Speech and Figures of Thought,” Dialogue with myself and Edward Rothstein, moderated by Grace Schulman, Poets House, New York City, March 2019.
  • “Simone de Beauvoir, Philosophical Memoir, and Practical Deliberation,” panel on “Les memoirs et la philosophie,” with Karen Newman (moderator), Manon Garcia and Margaret Simons, International Forum “Penser avec Simone de Beauvoir Aujour’hui,” University of Paris Denis Diderot – Paris 7, October 2018.
  • Moderator, Panel on “Simone de Beauvoir’s Feminist Art of Living,” with Céline Leboeuf (speaker) and Jacqueline Martinez (commentator), SPEP, Pennsylvania State University, October 2018.
  • “Hyperspace, Poetic Science Fiction and Algebraic Topology,” Bridges 2018, Stockholm, July 2018.
  • “The Central Role of Diagrams in Algebraic Topology,” Diagrams 2018, Edinburgh, June 2018 (in absentia).
  • “How Number Theory and Logic Benefit from Productive Ambiguity : Goedel, Mazur, Wiles and Macintyre,” CSHPM Kenneth O. May Lecture, Plenary Talk, Joint Meeting of the Canadian Philosophical Association and the Canadian Society for the History and Philosophy of Mathematics, Montréal, Canada, June 2018.
  • “The Growth of Mathematical Knowledge : An Explanation in Terms of Intersecting Domains, Patterns of Reasoning, Shifts in Notation, and the Combination of Reference and Leibnizian Analysis,” Award Ceremony, Fernando Gil International Prize for Philosophy of Science, Fundação Calouste Gulbenkian, Lisbon, April 2018.
  • “How the Interaction of Number Theory and Logic Contribute to the Growth of Mathematical Knowledge : Gödel, Wiles and Macintyre,” Seminar, with responses from Adelino Dias Cardoso, Maria Filomena Moder, Paulo Almeida, and Ricardo Lopes Coelho, Fundação Calouste Gulbenkian, Lisbon, April 2018.
  • “The Combination of Reference and Analysis in the Study of Astronomical Systems,” Seminar, Center for Philosophy of Sciences, University of Lisbon, April 2018.
  • “The Growth of Mathematical Knowledge : Intersecting Domains, Shifts in Notation, Analysis and Reference,” Faculty of Philosophy and Faculty of Mathematics, Astronomy, and Physics, University of Cordoba, Argentina, March 2018.
  • “Analytic Number Theory, Model Theory and Philosophy,” Faculty of Philosophy and Faculty of Mathematics, Astronomy, and Physics, University of Cordoba, Argentina, March 2018.
  • “Locke, Leibniz and Hume on Form and Experience,” Torcuato Di Tella University, Buenos Aires, March 2018.
  • “How Mathematics Grows : Ontology, Reasoning, Notation, Reference and Analysis,” Semiomaths Conference, Zurich, March 2018.
  • “Wiles’ Proof of Fermat’s Last Theorem and the Logicians,” and “Poetry and Science,” Department of English and Department of Mathematics, University of Texas at Dallas, February 2018.
  • “Translating Yves Bonnefoy,” and presentation of Enfance, Conference on Translation, University of Poitiers, November 2017.
  • “Mathematical Explanation : Algebraic Number Theory and the Complex Plane,” Department of Mathematics, Pennsylvania State University, November 2017.
  • “Productive Ambiguity in Mathematics and the Sciences,” and “Women and Poetry,” Department of Philosophy, Case Western University, November 2017.
  • Symposium on Philosophy of Science, with Robert Crane and Sam Kean, The Penn State Science Policy Society, Pennsylvania State University, October 2017.
  • “Great Books, Poetry and Mathematics,” Bridges Waterloo 2017, Waterloo, Canada, July 2017.
  • “Poetry, Philosophy, Mathematics,” and “Cosmology as the Middle Term between Poetry and Philosophy,” Writing the Rockies 2017, July 2017.
  • “Inescapable Geometry : Reflections on Cantor’s and Dedekind’s Theory of Numbers,” Conference in Honor of Hourya Sinaceur, University of Paris Denis Diderot – Paris 7, June 2017.
  • “Do I Write as a Woman Poet, or as a Poet who is a Woman ?” West Chester Poetry Conference, June 2017.
  • “Theory Reduction, Algebraic Number Theory, and the Complex Plane,” Annual Mathematics and Philosophy Lecture, Department of Philosophy, University of Calgary, March 2017.
  • “Time in the Seventeenth Century : Mathematics, Physics and Metaphysics,” Inaugural Lecture, Science and Metaphysics Series, University of Rome “La Sapienza,” and University of Calgary, March 2017
  • “The Art of Translation,” with composer Mirco De Stefani, University of Bologna / Forlì, March 2017.
  • “Speaking of Max : A Conversation on the Poetry of Maxine Kumin,” New Hampshire Poetry Festival, Concord, NH, September 2016.
  • “The Poetry of Travel,” Three-day Critical Seminar at Writing the Rockies, Gunnison, Co., July 2016.
  • “Running Against the Wind : How Poets Use Inertial Motion as a Poetic and Conceptual Figure,” Poetry Symposium, with Paul Edwards and Thomas Cable, at Writing the Rockies, Gunnison, Co. July 2016.
  • “Poetry and Philosophy,” Poetry Panel with Christopher Norris, Niles Ritter and Frederick Turner, at Writing the Rockies, Gunnison, Co., July 2016.
  • “The Dial and Marianne Moore, The Nation and Grace Schulman, the Hudson Review and Paula Deitz,” with Grace Schulman, at Poets’ House (Poets of New York Tour), New York, June 2016.
  • Judge for Great Debate I : Poetry or Verse ? At 21st Annual Poetry Conference, Exploring Form & Narrative, West Chester University, Pa., June 2016.
  • “Translating Poetry : French to English, English to French,” Writers in the Schools and Hudson Review, School for International Studies, Brooklyn, May 2016.
  • “Motion, Function, Action : What Spinoza and Leibniz Can Teach Contemporary Philosophy of Biology,” 2016 Spinoza-Leibniz Workshop, Michigan State University, May 2016.
  • “Number Theory, Logic, Geometry : How Mathematicians Think,” IREM (Institut de Recherche sur l’Enseignement des Mathématiques de Paris), University of Paris Denis Diderot – Paris 7, March 2016.
  • “Descartes and Gassendi : Mathematics, Metaphysics, Mechanics,” Workshop on the Objections and Replies, Hebrew University, Jerusalem, January 2016.
  • “Poetry and Mathematics,” One-day workshop at BIRS, Banff, Canada, January 2016.
  • “Great Circles : Poetry, Mathematics and Philosophy,” Waseda University, Tokyo, December 2015.
  • “G. W. Leibniz : Metaphysics, Religion, Diplomacy,” Christian Culture Research Center, Seisen University, Tokyo, December 2015.
  • “Poetry, Women, Space and Time,” Tsuda College, Tokyo, December 2015.
  • “Reasonable Passions and Erotic Reason in Dostoevsky,” ASEEES Meetings, Philadelphia, November 2015.
  • “Reference and Analysis in Analytic Number Theory,” FPMW7 Meetings, Paris, November 2015.
  • “Report on Cultures of Mathematical Research Training Workshop,” APMP Meetings, Paris, November 2015.
  • “Danielle Macbeth, Frege, and the Languages of Mathematics,” Greater Philadelphia Philosophy Consortium, Haverford College, September 2015.
  • “Ampliative Reasoning : The Specificity of Mathematical Language and the Uses of Ambiguity,” CLMPS, University of Helsinki, August 2015.
  • “Logic and Arithmetic : A Relationship but not a Reduction,” Conference on History and Philosophy of Logical Notation, Talinn, Estonia, August 2015.
  • “Julia Randall’s Poetic Finitude : Mapping the Infinite onto a Poem,” Bridges 2015, Baltimore, August 2015.
  • “Poetry and Cosmology,” Three-day workshop, Writing the Rockies, Gunnsion, Co., July 2015.
  • “Ruth Fainlight’s Poetic Vision : Poetry and Painting,” Writing the Rockies, Gunnison Co., July 2015.
  • Panel, “Cultures of Mathematical Research Training,” funded by International Council of Science / International Union for History and Philosophy of Science / International Mathematical Union, University of Hamburg, June 2015.
  • “Response to Lecture on James Redfield,” University of Chicago, May 2015.
  • “Theory Reduction and Mathematical Meaning : Gödel Numbering, Logic and Number Theory,” CEPERC, Aix-Marseilles University, March 2015.
  • “Le raisonnement ampliatif en théorie des nombres,” IREM (Institut de Recherche sur l’Enseignement des Mathématiques de Paris), University of Paris Denis Diderot – Paris 7, March 2015.
  • “Poetry and Science,” with Ruth Padel and Lavinia Greenlaw, Upper Wimpole Street Literary Salon, London, March 2015.
  • “Responses to Panelists Abram Kaplan, Michael J. Barany and Jemma Lorenat : Evidence in Mathematical Understanding,” History of Science Society Meetings, Chicago, November 2014 (contributed in absentia.)
  • “How Models Mediate between Theory and Scientific Data : Molcules, Solar Systems, Galaxies,” Conference on Scientific Models, University of Rome “La Sapienza,” Rome, September 2014.
  • “Number Theory and the Complex Plane,” Second Joint International Meeting of the Israel Mathematical Union and the American Mathematical Society, Panel on Recent Trends in the History and Philosophy of Mathematics, Tel Aviv, June 2014.
  • “Translating Bonnefoy and Sedakova,” Panel on Poets Translate Poets, West Chester University Poetry Conference, June 2014.
  • “Remembering Maxine Kumin,” Poets of New England Poetry Tour, May 2014.
  • Panel on the Life Sciences in Early Modern Philosophy, with François Duchesneau, Jutta Schickore and Justin Smith and myself as organizer and moderator, 75th Anniversary Meetings of the Journal of the History of Ideas, Philadelphia, May 2014.
  • “Translating the Poetry of Yves Bonnefoy,” Panel and Workshop on Translation, Poetry Translation Conference, Centre College, Danville, Kentucky, April 2014.
  • “Writing and Drawing in Series : Yves Bonnefy’s Snow and Summer Nights and Farhad Ostovani’s Horizons and Irises,” Signature du Livre Farhad Ostovani, Musée Jenisch, Vevey, Switzerland, March 2014.
  • “Persons and Personages in Leibniz’s Political Philosphy,” Conference in honor of Martine de Gaudemar, Paris Nanterre, November 2013.
  • “Great Circles : The Analysis of a Concept in Mathematics and Poetry,” Workshop on Creative Writing in Mathematics and Science, Banff International Research Station for Mathematical Innovation and Discovery, Banff, Canada, November 2013.
  • “Reducibility and Meaning : Logic and Number Theory,” Midwest Philosophy of Mathematics Workshop 2013, Champaign – Urbana, Illinois, October 2013.
  • “Ampliative Reasoning : Explanation in Number Theory,” Conference on Mathematical Values, Mathematical Cultures Project, London, September 2013.
  • “The Uses of Spondaic Rhythms in the Poetry of Yeats and Pound,” Critical Seminar on “Understanding the Expressive Purposes of Rhythm : Meters, Measures, Free Verse,” West Chester University Poetry Conference, June 2013.
  • “Personages and the Claim of the Heart in Dostoevsky’s The Brothers Karamazov,” Conference on La Voix des Personnages by Martine de Gaudemar, La Sorbonne and University of Paris Nanterre, May 2013.
  • “Response to Alexis de Saint-Ours,” Workshop on Cosmology and Time, Penn State, April 2013.
  • “Hanford, Gainesville, Rome : The Landscapes of Debora Greger,” Aiken Taylor Award Lecture, Sewanee Review, University of the South, Sewanee, Tennessee, March 2013.
  • “Simone de Beauvoir and The Second Sex,” Texas A&M University, College Station, Texas, March 2013.
  • “Problem Reduction in Algebraic and Analytic Number Theory,” Mathematics and Philosophy (19th and 20th c.) Working Group, SPHERE, University of Paris Denis Diderot – Paris, December 2012.
  • “Golden Slippers : Space, Time and Poetic Form in the Poetry of Eleanor Wilner and W. S. Di Piero,” Third Annual Symposium on Poetry Criticism, Writing the Rockies, Western State College, Gunnison, Colorado, July 2012.
  • Comments on Julian Barbour, Leibniz and Newton : “The Development of Machian Themes in the Twentieth Century,” “The Nature of Time,” “Relational Concepts of Space and Time,” Ex Nihilo ? Conference on Julian Barbour, Philosophy and Physics Workshop, University of Paris Denis Diderot – Paris 7, June 2012.
  • “Philosophy of Mathematics and Philosophy of History : Wiles’ Proof of Fermat’s Last Theorem,” Distinguished Visitor Program, Haverford College, February 2012.
  • “Fermat’s Last Theorem and the Logicians,” Weeklong workshop on Explicit versus Tacit Knowledge in Mathematics, Mathematisches Forschungsinstitut Oberwolfach, Germany, January 2012. I presented a revised version of the paper to the STS Seminar, University College London, January 2012.
  • “Fermat’s Last Theorem and the Number Theorists,” Institut Poincaré, Paris, January 2012.
  • “Leibniz, Des Bosses, Newton and the Analysis of Time as a Metaphysical Problem,” Seminar on Leibniz and Des Bosses, École Normale Supérieure rue d’Ulm, Paris, December 2011.
  • “Claudine Tiercelin on Peirce : Pragmatic Epistemology,” Seminar on Mathematical Practice, REHSEIS / SPHERE, University of Paris Denis Diderot – Paris 7, November 2011.
  • “Leibniz’s Metaphysics of Time and his Practice as Historian and Physicist,” panel discussion with Jean-Pascal Anfray, Ursula Goldenbaum, and myself (organizer), IX Internationaler Leibniz-Kongress, Hannover, Germany, September 2011.
  • “Reference and Analysis in the Study of Time,” panel discussion on Historical Epistemology, with Karine Chemla and Koen Vermeir (REHSEIS-SPHERE), 14th Congress of Logic, Methodology and Philosophy of Science, Nancy, France, July 2011.
  • “Leibniz, Locke, and Cassirer : Abstraction and Analysis,” Conference on Analysis as a Mathematical Method : Leibniz and Precursors,” Leibniz Endowed Professorship (Wenchao Li), Leibniz Universität Hannover, Germany, May 2011.
  • “Reference and Analysis : The Representation of Time by Galileo and Newton,” Institute for Gravitation and the Cosmos, Pennsylvania State University, October 2010.
  • “Logic, Mathematics, and Heterogeneity,” Conference on Logic and Knowledge, University of Rome La Sapienza, June 2010.
  • “Goethe and Schelling,” with Lore Huehn, Department of Philosophy, Freiburg University, June 2010.
  • A twelve hour lecture series, in French, on “Forme symbolique et parole efficace : Beauvoir et Colette, Rilke, Yves Bonnefoy, Anne Stevenson,” University of Paris Nanterre – Paris 10, May 2010.
  • “The Reception of The Second Sex in the United States,” Colloquium on The Second Sex, Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales, Paris, May 2010.
  • “The Representation of Time in Galileo, Newton, and Leibniz : Reference and Analysis,” A. O. Lovejoy Lecture, University of Pennsylvania, April 2010.
  • “The Modern Essay, Robert Louis Stevenson, and the Hudson Review,” Symposium “In Praise of the Essay : Practice and Form,” English Department, Fordham University, and Welcome Table Press, April 2010.
  • “The Representation of Time : Galileo, Descartes, Newton, Leibniz,” Workshop on Intersections between Mathematics and Philosophy in the Thought of Leibniz,” Ideals of Proof Interdisciplinary Project (Michael Detlefsen and David Rabouin), Department of History and Philosophy of Science, University of Paris Diderot – Paris 7 / REHSEIS / Collège de France / University of Nancy, March 2010.
  • “The Representation of Time in 19th and 20th c. Mechanics,” Seminar on Modes, Levels, and Orders of Description in the Physical Sciences, REHSEIS / University of Paris Diderot – Paris 7 / CNRS, March 2010.
  • “Abstract and Concrete : The Importance of Method in Ecological Genetics,” Conference on Historical Epistemology, University of Leuven, December 2009.
  • “The Representation of Time : Awareness, Mathematics, and the Puzzle of Asymmetry,” Department of History of Science, Medicine and Technology, University of Wisconsin / Madison, October 2009 ; and Philosophy Department, University of Minnesota, October 2009.
  • Workshop on the philosophy of biology (with Ruth Shaw, Department of Ecology, Evolution, and Behavior), Philosophy Department, University of Minnesota, October 2009.
  • “Abstraction vs. Generality : Cassirer’s Substanz und Funktion,” REHSEIS / University of Paris Diderot – Paris 7, March 2009.
  • “Teaching the Complex Numbers : What History and Philosophy of Mathematics Suggest,” University of Paris Diderot – Paris 7, March 2009.
  • “Combining Abstract and Concrete Representations in Mathematics : A Case Study in Textbook Exposition,” 2008 Joint Meeting of the Association for Symbolic Logic and the American Philosophical Association, Philadelphia, December 2008.
  • “Why Does Philosophy of Mathematics Need History ?” Midwest Philosophy of Mathematics Workshop 9, Notre Dame University, South Bend, November 2008.
  • “Plato, Leibniz, Analysis, and History,” Philosophy Department, De Paul University, Chicago, October 2008.
  • Joint Book Session with Evelyn Fox Keller on her Making Sense of Life : Explaining Biological Development with Models, Metaphors, and Machines and my Representation and Productive Ambiguity in Mathematics and the Sciences, Philosophy Department, Pennsylvania State University, September 2008.
  • “Leibnizian Analysis : The Search for Conditions of Intelligibility,” Department of Philosophy, University of Freiburg, Germany, June 2008.
  • “Simone de Beauvoir and Practical Deliberation,” Conference on The Legacies of Simone de Beauvoir, Northumbria University, Newcastle, U.K., June 2008.
  • “Philosophy and the Arts,” Philosophy Alumni Conference, Yale University, April 2008.
  • “Mathematical Representation,” Center for Philosophy of Science, University of Pittsburgh, April 2008.
  • “Leibnizian Analysis,” REHSEIS / University of Paris Denis Diderot / CNRS, November 2007.
  • “Reflections on Voice and Character : Marlowe’s Doctor Faustus and Shakespeare’s Othello,” Conference ‘Autour de Stanley Cavell,’ University of Paris X (Nanterre), November 2007.
  • “Women, Poetry and The Hudson Review,” Conference on The Hudson Review, Princeton University, November 2007.
  • “The Problem of Character in Shakespeare’s Tempest and The Winter’s Tale,” University of Paris X (Nanterre), May 2007.
  • “Translating Yves Bonnefoy,” Hudson Review Symposium on Translation, New York, April 2007.
  • “Literary Form and Periodicity,” Panel on “Mirror Neurons, Mathematics, Metaphor and Mind : Where Science and Poetic Craft Meet,” AWP 2007 Conference, Atlanta, February 2007.
  • “Leibniz on Ambiguity in Mathematical Notation : Universal Method and the Study of Curves,” VII. Internationaler Leibniz-Kongress, Hannover, Germany, July 2006.
  • “The Poetry of Julia Randall,” Conference on “Exploring Form and Narrative,” West Chester University, June 2006.
  • “Leibniz’s Calculus : Ambiguous Notation and Metaphysics,” Metaphysical and Mathematical Discussion of the Status of Infinitesimals in Leibniz’s Time, Emory University, March 2006.
  • “The Method of Analysis in Descartes’ Geometry : Combining the Geometrical, Mechanical and Cossist Traditions”, Helsinki Collegium for Advanced Studies, University of Helsinki, January 2006.
  • “Diagrams and Notation in Topology and Differential Geometry Textbooks,” Séminaire, Histoire des Sciences, Histoire du Texte, REHSEIS / University of Paris 7 / CNRS, May 2005 ; University of Rome “La Sapienza,” June 2005.
  • “Leibniz, Locke and Hume on Experience : The Lessons of Mathematics and the Law,” Conference on “Leibniz : What Kind of Rationalist ?,” Hebrew University / Tel Aviv University, May 2005.
  • “Symbolic Icons and Iconic Symbols in Descartes’ Classification of Curves,” Séminaire, Histoire et Epistémologie des Mathématiques, REHSEIS / University of Paris 7 / CNRS, April 2005.
  • “How Icons Help Bridge the Gap between the Infinite and the Finite,” Séminaire, Histoire et Epistémologie des Mathématiques, REHSEIS / University of Paris 7 / CNRS, March 2005.
  • “Topology in the Era of Jean Cavaillès,” Séminaire, Les Années Cavaillès, Ecole Normale Supérieure / Centre Cavaillès / Maison des Sciences de l’Homme, Paris, January 2005.
  • “Leibniz’s Mathematical Invention 1674-1684 : Combining the Abstract and the Concrete in Mathematics,” Séminaire, Recherches sur la Généralité, Philosophie des sciences et problèmes méthodologiques, REHSEIS / University of Paris 7 / CNRS, January 2005.
  • “Les emplois de l’ambiguité : Descartes’ Géométrie”, REHSEIS / University of Paris 7 / CNRS, Dec. 2004.
  • “Locke and Leibniz on the Adjustment of Judgment,” Conference on “Locke and Leibniz,” Nanterre, October 2004.
  • “The Uses of Controlled Ambiguity in Mathematics : Galileo’s Discorsi” Conference on “Mathematical Reasoning, Heuristics and the Development of Mathematics,” University of Rome “La Sapienza,” September, 2004.
  • “The Legacy of Simone de Beauvoir,” Colorado College, October 2003 ; roundtable discussion with Catharine Stimpson, Carol Gilligan, Nancy Bauer, and myself, Maison Française, NYU, April 2004 ; roundtable discussion with Claude Imbert, Nancy Bauer, Anne Stevenson, Catherine Wilson, Susan James, and myself, Institut Français, London, October 2004.
  • “Poetry, Mathematics, and Science,” Workshop on Mathematics and Creative Writing, Banff International Research Station, Banff, September 2003 ; April 2004.
  • “Claire Katz’s Levinas, Judaism, and the Feminine,” Philosophy Colloquium Series, Pennsylvania State University, March 2004.
  • “The Combination of “Paper Tools” in Scientific Reduction : Leibniz’s Mathematical Invention : 1674 – 1684,” Conference on The Young Leibniz, Rice University, April 2003. Available on CD ROM. 
  • “The Souls of Black Folk,” with James Stewart, Gettysburg College, April 2003.
  • “Poetry and Science,” with Robert Morgan and James Applewhite, Duke University, March 2003.
  • “Fractals, Bach, and Poetry,” with Benoit Mandelbrot and Rosalyn Tureck, Entertaining Science at the Cornelia Street Café, New York, September 2002.
  • “Reduction and Representation in Mathematics and Chemistry : A Comparison,” Conference on The Cognitive Foundations of Mathematics, Rome, September 2002.
  • “New Uses for Jules Vuillemin’s Philosophie de l’algèbre : Reduction, Representation and ‘Paper Tools’ in the 17th Century,” Colloque en hommage à Jules Vuillemin, Paris, June 2002.
  • “Philosophy and Scientific Development,” with Richard Burian. Moravian College, March 2002.
  • “The House We Never Leave : Childhood, Shelter, and Freedom in the Writings of Beauvoir and Colette,” Blanchard Means Lecture, Trinity College (Hartford), February 2002.
  • “Leibnizian Analysis, Mathematics, and Nature : The Search for Conditions of Intelligibility,” Nihil Sine Ratione, VI. Internationaler Leibniz-Kongress, Berlin, September 2001.
  • “Expression and Theomorphism in Leibniz’s Discourse on Metaphysics,” The Midwest Seminar in the History of Early Modern Philosophy, May 2001, The University of Chicago.
  • “Kant’s Doctine of Space and the Mathematical Investigation of Figure,” Conference on Kant and the Primacy of Practical Reason, The Pennsylvania State University, March 2001.
  • “Dedekind and the Arithmetization of Analysis,” Midwest Philosophy of Mathematics Workshop, Carnegie Mellon, December 2000.
  • “Descartes and Leibniz on Method,” NEH Summer Institute on Descartes (Roger Ariew and Daniel Garber, Directors), Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University, July 2000.
  • “The Poetry of Anne Stevenson,” and “The New York Poems in Frederick Morgan’s Poems for Paula,” Conference on Exploring Form and Narrative, West Chester University, June 2000.
  • “Barbara McClintock and Nina Fedoroff : A Case Study in Scientific Translation and Theory Reduction,” Workshop on Types of Paper Tools and Traditions of Representation in the History of Chemistry, Max Planck Insitute for the History of Science, Berlin, December 1999 ; Fourth In-House Workshop, Center for Philosophy of Science, U. of Pittsburgh, October 2001 ; Department of Philosophy, University of Oklahoma, October 1999.
  • “Intelligibilité, analyse et histoire : repenser la philosophie des mathématiques,” three lectures on the concept of number, Ecole Normale Supérieure, Paris, June 1999.
  • “Euclid, Leibniz, Dedekind, and Parsons on Number,” presented at the conference “Modern Mathematical Thought : Historical and Philosophical Approaches,” Philosophy of Science Center, University of Pittsburgh, May 1998.
  • “How Symbolic and Iconic Languages Bridge the Two Worlds of the Chemist : A Case Study from Contemporary Bioorganic Chemistry,” presented with Roald Hoffmann, Stendhal Univeristy, Grenoble, March 1998.
  • “The Use of Symbolic and Iconic Languages in Mathematics : Euclid, Descartes, and Newton,” Department of History and Philosophy of Science, University of Cambridge, January 1998 ; Department of Mathematics, Open University, February 1998.
  • “Leibniz, Newton, Parsons, and the Riddle of Applied Mathematics,” Hebrew University, December 1997.
  • “Leibnizian Analysis : Monadology and Mathematics,” University of Glasgow, November 1997 and University of Dundee, November 1997.
  • “Leibniz, Reason, and Number,” King’s College, London, October 1997.
  • “Leibniz on Mathematics and Metaphysics,” Leibniz Gesellschaft, Hannover, Germany, Auguest 1997.
  • “Analogy in the Mathematical Thought of Leibniz,” Conference on “L’Actualité de Leibniz,” Cérisy, France, June 1995 ; 5th Annual Workshop on the History of Mathematics, Goettingen, July 1995.
  • “The Partial Integration of Domains, Hybrids, and the Growth of Mathematical Knowledge,” Conference on the Growth of Mathematical Knowledge, Pennsylvania State University, April 1995.
  • “The Valsaintes Poems of Yves Bonnefoy,” Conference entitled “Autour d’Yves Bonnefoy,” CUNY Graduate School and University Center, March 1995.


Poetry Readings (1985-2020)

Carmine Street Metrics Series, March 2020 (with Q. Lehr) ; Mary E. Rollings Reading Series, Penn State, January 2020 ; Suffolk University, September 2019 ; New England Mobile Book Fair (with J. Schreiber), September 2019 ; Bridges 2019, Linz, July 2018 ; Powwow River Poets Reading Series (with J. Schreiber), May 2019 ; Pennsylvania Center for the Book (with S. Blake, K. Forsythe and C. Garison), April 2019 ; Poets House New York City, March 2019 ; Bowers Writers House, Elizabethtown College, March 2019 ; Bridges 2018, Stockholm, July 2018 ; Writing the Rockies, Gunnison Co., July 2018, 2017, 2016, 2015 and July 2012 ; West Chester Poetry Conference, June 2018, 2017, 2016, 2014, 2013 ; University of Texas / Dallas, February 2018 ; Case Western University, October

  • 2017 ; Bridges 2017, Waterloo, Ontario ; Kurumed Shuppan, Tokyo, with Atsuko Hayakawa, Kaori Muraji and Koko Tanikawa, December 2015 ; Bridges 2015, Baltimore, July 2015 ; Webster’s Book Store (State College, Pa.), May 2015 ; Centre College, Danville, Kentucky, March 2014 ; Banff International Research Station, Banff, Canada, November 2013 ; Bridges 2013, Enschede, The Netherlands, July 2013 ; Stadler Poetry Center, Bucknell University, October 2012 ; Bridges 2012, Baltimore, July 2012 ; Bridges 2011, Coimbra, Portugal, July 2011 ; Buffalo Seminary, March 2011 ; Schreyer Honors College, Penn State, March 2011 ; Palmer Museum of Art, April 2010 ; University of Wisconsin, October 2009 ; Mathematical Association of America / American Mathematical Society, Washington D. C., Jan. 2009 ; Juilliard School, May 2007 ; Burchfield-Penny Center (Buffalo), March 2006 ; Williamsville High School, (Williamsville, NY), March 2006 ; Manayunk Art Center, Pennsylvania, May 2005 ; Stadler Center for Poetry, Bucknell University, April 2004 ; Colorado College, October 2003 ; The Young Women’s Leadership School, New York, May 2003 ; National Humanities Center, March 2003 ; University of North Carolina, March 2003 ; Cornelia Street Café, Entertaining Science Series, New York, September 2002 ; The Pennsylvania State University, April 2002 ; Nicholas Roerich Museum Poetry Series, New York, January 2002 ; Gallows Hill Bookstore, Trinity College, Connecticut, January 2002 ; Manayunk Art Center, Pennsylvania, April 2001 ; University of Oklahoma, October 1999 ; Olean Public Library Series, October 1999 ; National Humanities Center, Twentieth Anniversary Celebration, March 1999 ; National Humanities Center, March 1999 ; National Arts Club, NYC, October 1998 ; Hudson Review Fiftieth Anniversary Celebration, NYC, May 1998 ; Kimbolton Castle (UK), January 1998 ; Curtis Insitute of Music, March 1997 ; Mount Holyoke College, April 1996 ; Borders Book Store, Philadelphia, March 1995 ; Curtis Institute of Music, March 1995 ; International Writers Center, Washington University, November 1994 ; Amherst College, November 1994 ; Duke University, April 1994 ; Guilford College, April 1994 ; North Carolina Wesleyan University, April 1994 ; East Carolina University, April 1994 ; Poetry Society of Virginia, October 1993 ; Adelphi University, October 1993 ; Nicholas Roerich Museum Poetry Series, NYC, November 1992 ; Chapters Book Store, Washington D. C., September 1992 ; Catskills Poetry Workshop, July 1992 ; International Poetry Forum, Pittsburgh, October 1991 ; Lycoming College, February 1991 ; Johns Hopkins University, November 1990 ; Burchfield Center (Buffalo), April 1990 ; The Poetry Center of the 92nd St. Y, New York, March 1990 ; Just Buffalo Literary Center, April 1989 ; Moonstone Poetry Series (Philadelphia), March 1989 ; Chapters Bookstore, March 1989 ; Valparaiso University, April 1987 ; University of Michigan, November 1986 ; Cumberland Poetry Review (Nashville), April 1986 ; Dartmouth College, December 1985 ; SUNY at Stony Brook, December 1985.


Media

Interview about Great Circles : The Transits of Mathematics and Poetry from Springer https://link.springer.com/epdf/10.1007/s00283-019-09937-0?author_access_token=Pvy92YpygXEta70gEt9rsPe4RwlQNchNByi7wbcMAY7QFqfymEpRQHm5fhuVZkuyQOHuMw0OjBpHZKa4EXqmklhlopaH_B580hL5b-6lVBT3yZfqcKjC0ei-tvKNirwbg0ybXDf9kcRLIIXK96suww%3D%3D


WORK IN PROGRESS


Books

  • Where the Light Shines Through. A book of poems.
  • Here and There. A chapbook of poems.
  • Traveling, Light and Dark, Discovery and Translation, a collection of literary essays about my travels, about to be submitted. Part I : Here and There (Toronto, Altamira, Santiago de Compostela, Helsinki, St. Petersburg, Moscow, Rome, Japan, Denmark). Part II : A Year in Paris. Part III : Crossing the Canal St. Martin. Part IV : Memories of Greece. Part V : Painting the Rivers : Armchair Traveling in the Middle East.