Philosophy Magazine

Cushing Prize 2020: John Dougherty

By Wuthrich

The John J. Reilly Center for Science, Technology, and Values at the University of Notre Dame is pleased to announce that Dr. John Dougherty, a Postdoctoral Fellow at the Munich Center for Mathematical Philosophy at the Ludwig Maximilians University of Munich, has been chosen as the winner of the 2020 James T. Cushing Memorial Prize in the History and Philosophy of
Physics for his paper, “Large Gauge Transformations and the Strong CP
Problem,” which is forthcoming in *Studies in the History and Philosophy of
Modern Physics*.

Dougherty was nominated by Professor Stephan Hartmann, the Director of the Munich Center for Mathematical Philosophy. In his nomination, Professor Hartmann writes: “Dougherty’s paper clearly articulates the interplay of physical and conceptual issues in the interpretation of the Standard Model and effectively uses the former to intervene on the latter. He shows that any adequate interpretation must answer relatively directly to experiment in a way that has not previously been appreciated. More generally, he carefully illustrates one role symmetries can play in drawing together the theory and practice of particle physics. Overall, the paper is a formidable argument against a popular view in the philosophy of physics, and future work on the foundations of high-energy physics will have to reckon with the problem Dougherty poses.”

The Cushing Prize includes a cash award of $2,000 and an invitation to deliver the 2020 Cushing Memorial Prize Lecture at Notre Dame.


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