John Dupré

  • Birthdate of John Dupré

    John Dupré was born July 3, 1952. He is a British philosopher and director of Egenis, the center for the study of life sciences. He is also a professor who teaches philosophy at the University of Exeter. Not only is it him, he is grouped together with Nancy Cartwright, Ian Hacking, Patrick Suppes, and Peter Galison. This group together is classified as the “Stanford school” of philosophy of science.
  • His Work

    Dupré has written books through his philosophical career to explain and help other philosophers on their journey. He wrote his first book in 1993 called “The Disorder of Things”. Some of his other work was Human Nature and the Limits of Science (2003), Human Nature and Other Animals (2002), Value-Free Science: Ideal or Illusion (2007), and many more.
  • Education

    Dupré attended the University of Oxford and the University of Cambridge. In 2010, he was elected a fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science. This was the result of his work on Darwinism. Later in 2018, he was elected vice-president and president-elect of the Philosopher of Science Association.
  • Thoughts on Philosophy

    Dupré is deemed as an important critic of biological research programs in the life science community. In particular, he is a major critic in evolution-biological stories and how they relate in sociobiology and evolutionary psychology. He argues such projects must remain speculative and only reflect on prejudices of researchers. John Dupre: Why Philosophy of Biology?