I am working on a project on the relation between
the life sciences and metaphysics in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries.
Specifically, I am tracing the evolution of the concepts of mechanism,
teleology, individuation, and laws in the metaphysics of Descartes,
Malebranche, Leibniz, Albrecht von Haller, and Caspar Friedrich Wolff as each
one tries to explain the generation of new organisms.
I have also published and am also working on a
number of papers on early modern women philosophers, including Margaret
Cavendish, Anne Conway, Mary Astell, and Émilie Du Châtelet. These will
culminate in three larger projects. The first project is on Cavendish's metaphysics
and natural philosophy, including their relation to her political philosophy
(especially as implied in her fiction), and including the conceptual relation
between her philosophy and that of Hobbes and Spinoza. The second project – in
collaboration with Andrew Janiak (Duke) – is on Du Châtelet's natural
philosophy, its conceptual relation to the work of Descartes, Leibniz, Wolff
and Newton, her historical role in the emergence of modern science, and the
gendered context of the sciences in the early modern period. The third project
uses the works of early modern women philosophers as a prism through which to
examine questions in the historiography of philosophy.
I have teaching interests in the Philosophy of
Education. I have started research (with papers forthcoming on women and
education as found in the thought of Astell and of Cavendish and Hobbes) on
early modern educational theories, including an investigation of theories of
women's education in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries.