• 1976-77 (Michigan)
Joel Feinberg—"Voluntary Euthanasia and the Inalienable Right to Life" • 1977-78 (Stanford)
Thomas Nagel—"The Limits of Objectivity" • 1977-78 (Michigan)
Karl Popper—"Three Worlds" • 1977-78 (Oxford)
John Rawls—"The Basic Liberties and Their Priority" • 1978-79 (Utah)
Lord Ashby—"The Search for an Environmental Ethic" • 1978-79 (Utah State)
R.M. Hare—"Moral Conflicts" • 1978-79 (Stanford)
Amartya Sen—"Equality of What?" • 1978-79 (Michigan)
Edward O. Wilson—"Comparative Social Theory" • 1979-80 (Cambridge)
Raymond Aron—"Arms Control and Peace Research" • 1979-80 (Oxford)
Jonathan Bennett—"Morality and Consequences" • 1979-80 (Michigan)
Robert Coles—"Children as Moral Observers" • 1979-80 (Stanford)
Michel Foucault—"Omnes et Singulatim: Towards a Criticism of 'Political Reason'" • 1979-80 (Utah)
Wallace Stegner—"The Twilight of Self-Reliance: Frontier Values and Contemporary America" • 1979-80 (Harvard)
George Stigler—"Economics or Ethics?" • 1980-81 (Harvard)
Brian Barry—"Do Countries Have Moral Obligations? The Case of World Poverty" • 1980-81 (Oxford)
Saul Bellow—"A Writer from Chicago" • 1980-81 (Stanford)
Charles Fried—"Is Liberty Possible?" • 1980-81 (Cambridge)
John Passmore—"The Representative Arts as a Source of Truth" • 1980-81 (Utah)
Joan Robinson—"The Arms Race" • 1980-81 (Hebrew University)
Solomon H. Snyder—"Drugs and the Brain and Society" • 1981-82 (Cambridge)
Kingman Brewster—"The Voluntary Society" • 1981-82 (Oxford)
Freeman Dyson—"Bombs and Poetry" • 1981-82 (Australian National University)
Leszek Kolakowski—"The Death of Utopia Reconsidered" • 1981-82 (Utah)
Richard Lewontin—"Biological Determinism" • 1981-82 (Michigan)
Thomas C. Schelling—"Ethics, Law, and the Exercise of Self-Command" • 1981-82 (Stanford)
Alan Stone—"Psychiatry and Morality" • 1982-83 (Utah)
Carlos Fuentes—"A Writer from Mexico" • 1982-83 (Stanford)
David Gauthier—"The Incompleat Egoist" • 1982-83 (Cambridge)
H.C. Robbins Landon—"Haydn and Eighteenth-Century Patronage in Austria and Hungary" • 1982-83 (Jawaharlal Nehru University)
Ilya Prigogine—"Only an Illusion" • 1983-84 (Oxford):
Donald D. Brown—"The Impact of Modern Genetics" • 1983-84 (Stanford):
Leonard B. Meyer—"Music and Ideology in the Nineteenth Century" • 1983-84 (Utah):
Helmut Schmidt—"The Future of the Atlantic Alliance" • 1983-84 (Michigan):
Herbert Simon—"Scientific Literacy as a Goal in a High-Technology Society" • 1983-84 (Harvard):
Quentin Skinner—"The Paradoxes of Political Liberty" • 1983-84 (Helsinki):
Georg Henrik von Wright—"Of Human Freedom" • 1984-85 (Michigan):
Nadine Gordimer—"The Essential Gesture: Writers and Responsibility" • 1984-85 (Oxford):
Barrington Moore—"Authority and Inequality under Capitalism and Socialism" • 1984-85 (Cambridge):
Amartya K. Sen—"The Standard of Living" • 1984-85 (Stanford):
Michael Slote—"Moderation, Rationality, and Virtue" • 1985-86 (Stanford):
Stanley Cavell—"The Uncanniness of the Ordinary" • 1985-86 (Michigan):
Clifford Geertz—"The Uses of Diversity" • 1985-86 (Utah):
Arnold S. Relman—"Medicine as a Profession and a Business" • 1985-86 (Oxford)
T. M. Scanlon—"The Significance of Choice" • 1985-86 (Harvard):
Michael Walzer—"Interpretation and Social Criticism" • 1986-87 (Cambridge):
Roger Bulger—"On Hippocrates, Thomas Jefferson, and Max Weber: The Bureaucratic, Technologic Imperatives and the Future of the Healing Tradition in a Voluntary Society" • 1986-87 (Michigan):
Daniel Dennett—"The Moral First Aid Manual" • 1986-87 (Oxford):
Jon Elster—"Taming Chance: Randomization in Individual and Social Decisions" • 1986-87 (Harvard):
Jürgen Habermas—"Law and Morality" • 1986-87 (Stanford):
Gisela Striker—"Greek Ethics and Moral Theory" • 1986-87 (Utah):
Laurence H. Tribe—"On Reading the Constitution" • 1987-88 (Cambridge):
Louis Blom-Cooper—"The Penalty of Imprisonment" • 1987-88 (Harvard):
Robert A. Dahl—"The Pseudodemocratization of the American Presidency" • 1987-88 (California):
William Theodore de Bary—"The Trouble with Confucianism" • 1987-88 (Michigan):
Albert Hirschman—"Two Hundred Years of Reactionary Rhetoric: The Case of the Perverse Effect" • 1987-88 (Madrid):
Javier Muguerza—"The Alternative of Dissent" • 1987-88 (Warsaw):
Lord Quinton—"The Varieties of Value" • 1987-88 (Oxford):
Frederik van Zyl Slabbert—"The Dynamics of Reform and Revolt in Current South Africa" • 1987-88 (Buenos Aires):
Barry Stroud—"The Study of Human Nature and the Subjectivity of Value" • 1988-89 (California):
S. N. Eisenstadt—"Cultural Tradition, Historical Experience, and Social Change: The Limits of Convergence" • 1988-89 (Chinese University):
Fei Xiaotong—"Plurality and Unity in the Configuration of the Chinese People" • 1988-89 (Stanford):
Stephen J. Gould—"Challenges to Neo-Darwinism and Their Meaning for a Revised View of Human Consciousness" • 1988-89 (Cambridge):
Albert Hourani—"Islam in European Thought" • 1988-89 (Michigan):
Toni Morrison—"Unspeakable Things Unspoken: The Afro-American Presence in American Literature" • 1988-89 (Yale):
John G. A. Pocock—"Edward Gibbon in History: Aspects of the Text in The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire" • 1988-89 (Utah):
Judith N. Shklar—"American Citizenship: The Quest for Inclusion" • 1988-89 (Oxford):
Michael Walzer—"Nation and Universe" • 1989-90 (Cambridge):
Umberto Eco—"Interpretation and Overinterpretation: World, History, Texts" • 1989-90 (Harvard):
Ernest Gellner—"The Civil and the Sacred" • 1989-90 (Michigan):
Carol Gilligan—"Joining the Resistance:Psychology, Politics, Girls, and Women" • 1989-90 (Princeton):
Irving Howe—"The Self and the State" • 1989-90 (Stanford):
János Kornai—"I. Market Socialism Revisited" and "II. The Soviet Union's Road to a Free Economy: Comments of an Outside Observer" • 1989-90 (Oxford):
Bernard Lewis—"Europe and Islam" • 1989-90 (Yale):
Edward Nicolae Luttwak—"Strategy: A New Era?" • 1989-90 (Utah):
Octavio Paz—"Poetry and Modernity" • 1990-91 (Princeton):
Annette Baier—"Trust" • 1990-91 (Cambridge):
Gro Harlem Brundtland—"Environmental Challenges of the 1990s: Our Responsibility toward Future Generations" • 1990-91 (Stanford)
G.A. Cohen—"Incentives, Inequality, and Community" • 1990-91 (Yale):
Robertson Davies—"Reading and Writing" • 1990-91 (Oxford):
David N. Montgomery—"Citizenship and Justice in the Lives and Thoughts of Nineteenth-Century American Workers" • 1990-91 (Michigan):
Richard Rorty—"Feminism and Pragmatism" • 1991-92 (Cambridge):
David Baltimore—"On Doing Science in the Modern World" • 1991-92 (Utah):
Jared Diamond—"The Broadest Pattern of Human History" • 1991-92 (Michigan):
Christopher Hill—"The Bible in Seventeenth-Century English Politics" • 1991-92 (UC Berkeley):
Helmut Kohl • 1991-92 (Princeton):
Robert Nozick—"Decisions of Principle, Principles of Decision" • 1991-92 (Oxford):
Roald Sagdeev—"Science and Revolutions" • 1991-92 (Stanford):
Charles Taylor—"Modernity and the Rise of the Public Sphere" • 1992-93 (Princeton):
Stanley Hoffmann—"The Nation, Nationalism, and After: The Case of France" • 1992-93 (Utah):
Evelyn Fox Keller—"Rethinking the Meaning of Genetic Determinism" • 1992-93 (Cambridge):
Christine Korsgaard—"The Sources of Normativity" • 1992-93 (Yale):
Fritz Stern—"I. Mendacity Enforced: Europe, 1914-1989" and "II. Freedom and Its Discontents: Postunification Germany" • 1993-94 (UC San Diego):
K. Anthony Appiah—"Race, Culture, Identity: Misunderstood Connections" • 1993-94 (UC Berkeley):
Oscar Arias Sanchez—"Poverty: The New International Enemy" • 1993-94 (Cambridge):
Peter Brown—"Aspects of the Christianisation of the Roman World" • 1993-94 (Stanford):
Thomas E. Hill Jr.—"Respect for Humanity" • 1993-94 (Utah):
A.E. Dick Howard—"Toward the Open Society in Central and Eastern Europe" • 1993-94 (Utah):
Jeffrey Sachs—"Shock Therapy in Poland: Perspectives of Five Years" • 1993-94 (Oxford):
Gordon Slynn—"Law and Culture – A European Setting" • 1993-94 (Harvard):
Lawrence Stone—"Family Values in a Historical Perspective" • 1993-94 (Michigan):
William Julius Wilson—"The New Urban Poverty and the Problem of Race" • 1994-95 (Stanford):
Amy Gutmann—"Responding to Racial Injustice" • 1994-95 (Princeton):
Alasdair MacIntyre—"Truthfulness, Lies, and Moral Philosophers: What Can We Learn from Mill and Kant?" • 1994-95 (Cambridge):
Sir Roger Penrose—"Space-time and Cosmology" • 1994-95 (Yale):
Richard Posner—"Euthanasia and Health Care: Two Essays on the Policy Dilemmas of Aging and Old Age" • 1995 (Princeton)
Antonin Scalia—"Common-law Courts in a Civil-Law System: The Role of the United States Federal Courts in Interpreting the Constitution and Laws" • 1994-95 (Harvard):
Cass R. Sunstein—"Political Conflict and Legal Agreement" • 1994-95 (Oxford):
Janet Suzman—"Who Needs Parables?" • 1995-96 (Princeton):
Harold Bloom—"I. Shakespeare and the Value of Personality" and "II . Shakespeare and the Value of Love" • 1995-96 (Yale):
Peter Brown—"The End of the Ancient Other World: Death and Afterlife between Late Antiquity and the Early Middle Ages" • 1995-96 (Stanford):
Nancy Fraser—"Social Justice in the Age of Identity Politics: Redistribution, Recognition, and Participation" • 1995-96 (UC Riverside):
Mairead Corrigan Maguire—"Peacemaking from the Grassroots in a World of Ethnic Conflict" • 1995-96 (Harvard):
Onora O'Neill—"Kant on Reason and Religion" • 1995-96 (Cambridge):
Gunther Schuller—"I. Jazz: A Historical Perspective", "II. Duke Ellington" and "III. Charles Mingus" • 1996-97 (Cambridge):
Dorothy Cheney—"Why Animals Don't Have Language" • 1996-97 (UC San Francisco):
Marian Wright Edelman—"Standing for Children" • 1996-97 (Oxford):
Francis Fukuyama—"Social Capital" • 1996-97 (Toronto):
Peter Gay—"The Living Enlightenment" • 1996-97 (Harvard):
Stuart Hampshire—"Justice Is Conflict: The Soul and the City" • 1996-97 (Stanford):
Barbara Herman—"Moral Literacy" • 1996-97 (Yale):
Liam Hudson—"The Life of the Mind" • 1996-97 (Utah):
Elaine Pagels—"The Origin of Satan in Christian Tradition" • 1996-97 (Michigan):
T. M. Scanlon—"The Status of Well-Being" • 1996-97 (Princeton):
Robert Solow—"Welfare and Work" • 1997-98 (Prague):
Timothy Garton Ash—"The Direction of European History" • 1997-98 (Harvard):
Myles Burnyeat—"Culture and Society in Plato's Republic" • 1997-98 (Princeton)
J. M. Coetzee "The Lives of Animals" • 1997-98 (Michigan):
Antonio Damasio—"Exploring the Minded Brain" • 1997-98 (Stanford):
Arthur Kleinman—"Experience and Its Moral Modes: Culture, Human Conditions, and Disorder" • 1997-98 (Oxford):
Michael Sandel—"What Money Can't Buy: The Moral Limits of Markets" • 1997-98 (Yale):
Elaine Scarry—"On Beauty and Being Just" • 1997-98 (Utah):
Jonathan Spence—"Ideas of Power: China's Empire in the Eighteenth Century and Today" • 1997-98 (Cambridge):
Stephen Toulmin—"The Idol of Stability" • 1998-99 (Michigan):
Walter Burkert—"Revealing Nature amidst Multiple Cultures: A Discourse with Ancient Greeks" • 1998-99 (Utah):
Geoffrey Hartman—"Text and Spirit" • 1998-99 (Yale):
Steven Pinker—"The Blank Slate, the Noble Savage, and the Ghost in the Machine" • 1998-99 (Princeton):
Judith Jarvis Thomson—"Goodness and Advice" • 1998-99 (Oxford):
Sidney Verba—"Representative Democracy and Democratic Citizens: Philosophical and Empirical Understandings" • 1998-99 (UC Davis):
Richard White—"The Problem with Purity" • 1999-2000 (Stanford):
Jared Diamond—"Ecological Collapses of Pre-industrial Societies" • 1999-2000 (Oxford):
Geoffrey Hill—"Rhetorics of Value" • 1999-2000 (Princeton):
Michael Ignatieff—"I. Human Rights as Politics" and "II. Human Rights as Idolatry" • 1999-2000 (Cambridge):
Jonathan Lear—"Happiness" • 1999-2000 (Harvard):
Wolf Lepenies—"The End of "German Culture"" • 1999-2000 (UC Santa Barbara):
William C. Richardson—"Reconceiving Health Care to Improve Quality" • 1999-2000 (Utah):
Charles Rosen—"Tradition without Convention: The Impossible Nineteenth-Century Project" • 1999-2000 (Michigan):
Helen Vendler—"Poetry and the Mediation of Value: Whitman on Lincoln" • 1999-2000 (Yale):
Marina Warner—"Spirit Visions" • 2000-01 (Cambridge)
K. Anthony Appiah—"The State and the Shaping of Identity" • 2001 (Michigan):
Michael Fried—"Roger Fry's Formalism" • 2000-01 (Michigan):
Partha Dasgupta • 2000-01 (Utah):
Sarah Hrdy—"The Past, Present, and Future of the Human Family" • 2000-01 (Yale):
Alexander Nehamas—"A Promise of Happiness: The Place of Beauty in a World of Art" • 2000-01 (Princeton):
Robert Pinsky—"American Culture and the Voice of Poetry" • 2000–01 (Berkeley):
Joseph Raz—
The Practice of Value • 2000-01 (Harvard):
Simon Schama • 2001 (Stanford):
Dorothy Allison—"I. Mean Stories and Stubborn Girls" and "II. What It Means to Be Free" • 2001 (Oxford):
Sydney Kentridge—"Human Rights: A Sense of Proportion" • 2001-02 (Harvard):
Kathleen Sullivan • 2001 (UC Berkeley):
Sir Frank Kermode—"Pleasure, Change, and the Canon" • 2002 (Utah):
Benjamin R. Barber—"Democratic Alternatives to the Mullahs and the Malls" • 2002 (Princeton):
T. J. Clark—"Painting and Ground Level" • 2002 (Harvard):
Lorraine Daston—"I. The Morality of Natural Orders" and "II. Nature's Customs vs. Nature's Laws" • 2002 (UC Berkeley):
Derek Parfit—"What We Could Rationally Will" • 2002 (Yale):
Salman Rushdie—"Step Across This Line" • 2002 (Oxford):
Laurence H. Tribe—"The Constitution in Crisis" • 2003 (Harvard):
Richard Dawkins—"I. The Science of Religion" and "II. The Religion of Science" • 2003 (Princeton):
Frans de Waal—"Morality and the Social Instincts" • 2003 (Princeton):
Jonathan Glover—"Towards Humanism in Psychiatry" • 2003 (Oxford):
David M. Kennedy—"The Dilemma of Difference in Democratic Society" • 2003 (Cambridge):
Martha C. Nussbaum—"Beyond the Social Contract: Toward Global Justice" • 2003 (Stanford):
Mary Robinson—"I. Human Rights and Ethical Globalization" and "II. The Challenge of Human Rights Protection in Africa" • 2003 (Yale):
Garry Wills—"Henry Adams: The Historian as a Novelist" • 2004 (Berkeley):
Seyla Benhabib—"Reclaiming Universalism: Negotiating Republican Self-Determinism and Cosmopolitan Norms" • 2004 (Harvard):
Stephen Breyer—"Active Liberty: Interpreting Our Democratic Constitution" • 2004 (Stanford):
Harry Frankfurt—"I. Taking Ourselves Seriously" and "II. Getting it Right" • 2004 (Michigan):
Christine Korsgaard—"Fellow Creatures: Kantian Ethics and Our Duties to Animals" • 2005 (Cambridge):
Carl Bildt—"Peace After War: Our Experience" • 2005 (University of Utah)
Paul Farmer—"Never Again? Reflections on Human Values and Human Rights" • 2005 (UC Berkeley):
Axel Honneth—"Reification: A Recognition-Theoretical View" • 2005 (Stanford):
Avishai Margalit—"I. Indecent Compromise" and "II. Decent Peace" • 2005 (Yale):
Ruth Reichl—"Why Food Matters" • 2005 (Michigan):
Marshall Sahlins—"Hierarchy, Equality, and the Sublimation of Anarchy: the Western Illusion of Human Nature" • 2005 (Harvard):
James Q. Wilson—"I. Politics and Polarization" and "II. Religion and Polarization" • 2006 (Stanford):
David Brion Davis—"Exiles, Exodus, and Promised Lands" • 2006 (UC Berkeley):
Allan Gibbard—"Thinking How to Live with Each Other" • 2006 (Utah):
Margaret H. Marshall—"Tension and Intentions: The American Constitutions and the Shaping of Democracies Abroad" • 2007 (Cambridge):
Judy Illes—"Medicine, Neruoscience, Ethics, and Society" • 2007 (Michigan):
Brian Skyrms—"Evolution and the Social Contract" • 2007 (Utah):
Bill Viola—"Presence and Absence" • 2007 (Princeton):
Susan Wolf—"Meaning in Life and Why It Matters" • 2008 (Utah):
Howard Gardner—"What is Good Work? Achieving Good Work in Turbulent Times" • 2008 (Princeton):
Marc Hauser—"The Seeds of Humanity" • 2008 (Cambridge):
Lisa Jardine—"What's Left of Culture and Society?" • 2008 (Tsinghua University):
David Miller—"Global Justice and Climate Change: How Should Responsibilities Be Distributed?" • 2008 (Harvard):
Sari Nusseibeh—"Philosophical Reflections on the Israeli-Palestinian War" • 2008 (Berkeley):
Annabel Patterson—"Pandors's Boxes" • 2008 (Stanford):
Michael Tomasello—"Origins of Human Cooperation" • 2009 (Yale University):
John Adams—"Doctor Atomic and His Gadget" • 2009 (University of Utah):
Isabel Allende—"In the Hearts of Women" • 2009 (Cambridge):
Sir Christopher Frayling—"Art and Religion in the Modern West: Some Perspectives" • 2009 (Harvard):
Jonathan Lear—"To Become Human Does Not Come That Easily" • 2009 (UC Berkeley):
Jeremy Waldron—"Dignity, Rank and Rights" • 2009 (Stanford):
Roberto Mangabeira Unger-"The Future of Religion and the Religion of the Future" • 2010 (Princeton University):
Bruce Ackerman—"The Decline and Fall of the American Republic" • 2010 (UC Berkeley):
Abdullahi Ahmed An-Na'im—"Transcending Imperialism: Human Values and Global Citizenship" • 2010 (Stanford):
Mark Danner—"Torture and the Forever War" • 2010 (Utah):
Spike Lee—"America through My Lens: The Evolving Nature of Race and Class in the Films of Spike Lee" • 2010 (Michigan):
Susan Neiman—"Victims and Heroes" • 2010 (Princeton):
Robert Putnam—"American Grace" • 2010 (Oxford):
Ahmed Rashid—"Afghanistan and Pakistan: Past Mistakes, Future Directions?" • 2010 (Michigan):
Martin Seligman—"Flourish: Positive Psychology and Positive Interventions" • 2010 (Cambridge):
Susan J. Smith—"Care-full Markets: Miracle or Mirage?" • 2011-12 (Michigan):
John Broome—"The Public and Private Morality of Climate Change" • 2011-12 (Stanford):
John M. Cooper—"Ancient Philosophies as a Way of Life" • 2011-12 (Harvard):
Esther Duflo—"Human Values and the Design of the Fight against Poverty" • 2011-12 (Cambridge):
Ernst Fehr—"The Psychology and Economics of Authority" • 2011-12 (Princeton):
Stephen Greenblatt—"Shakespeare and the Shape of a Life: The Uses of Life Stories" • 2011-12 (Yale):
Lisa Jardine—"The Two Cultures: Still Under Consideration" • 2011 (Yale):
Rebecca Newberger Goldstein—"The Ancient Quarrel: Philosophy and Literature" and "The Ancient Quarrel: Philosophy and Literature," • 2011 (Stanford):
Elinor Ostrom—"I. Frameworks" and "II. Analyzing One-Hundred-Year-Old Irrigation Puzzles" • 2011 (Harvard):
James Scott—"Four Domestications: Fire, Plants, Animals, and... Us" • 2011–12 (Berkeley):
Samuel Scheffler—"The Afterlife: I. How People Who Don't Yet Exist Matter More to Us than People Who Do and II. How the Present Depends the Future" • 2011-12 (Utah):
Abraham Verghese—"Two Souls Intertwined" • 2011-12 (Brasenose College):
Diane Coyle—"The Public Responsibility of the Economist" • 2012-13 (Oxford):
Michael Ignatieff—"Representation and Responsibility: Ethics and Public Office" • 2012-13 (Berkeley):
Frances Kamm—"I. Who Turned the Trolley?" and "II. How Was the Trolley Turned?" • 2012-13 (Cambridge):
Joseph Koerner—"The Viennese Interior: Architecture & Inwardness" • 2012-13 (Paris, France):
Claude Lanzmann—"Resurrections" • 2012-13 (Princeton):
Ian Morris—"Human Values in the Very Long Run" • 2012-13 (Harvard):
Robert Post—"Representative Democracy: The Constitutional Theory of Campaign Finance Reform" • 2012-13 (Utah):
Michael J. Sandel—"The Moral Economy of Speculation: Gambling, Finance, and the Common Good" • 2012-13 (Stanford):
William Bowen—"I. Costs and Productivity in Higher Education" and "II. Prospects for an Online Fix: Can We Harness Technology in the Service of our Aspirations?" • 2012-13 (Michigan):
Craig Calhoun—"The Problematic Public: Revisiting Dewey, Arendt, and Habermas" • 2013-14 (Oxford):
Shami Chakrabarti—"Human Rights as Human Values" • 2013-14 (Utah):
Neil deGrasse Tyson—"Science as a Way of Knowing" • 2013-14 (Yale):
Paul Gilroy—"The Black Atlantic and the Re-enchantment of Humanism" • 2013-14 (Yale):
Bruno Latour—"How Better to Register the Agency of Things" • 2013-14 (Stanford):
Nicholas Lemann—"The Transaction Society: Origins and Consequences" • 2013-14 (Michigan):
Walter Mischel—"Overcoming the Weakness of the Will" • 2013-14 (Cambridge):
Philippe Sands—"The Great Crimes: The Quest for Justice Among Individuals and Groups" • 2013-14 (UC Berkeley):
Eric Santner—"The Weight of All Flesh: On the Subject Matter of Political Economy" • 2013-14 (Oxford):
Peter Singer—"From Moral Neutrality to Effective Altruism: The Changing Scope and Significance of Moral Philosophy" • 2013-14 (Utah):
Andrew Solomon—"Love, Acceptance, Celebration: How Parents Make Their Children" • 2013-14 (Harvard): Archbishop
Rowan Williams–"The Paradox of Empathy" • 2014-15 (Stanford):
Danielle Allen—"Education and Equality" • 2014-15 (Princeton):
Elizabeth Anderson—"I. Private Government" and "II. When the Market Was 'Left'" • 2014-15 (Utah ):
Margaret Atwood—"Human Values in Age of Change" • 2014-15 (Yale):
Dipesh Chakrabarty—"The Human Condition of the Anthropocene" • 2014-15 (Cambridge):
Peter Galison—"Science, Secrecy and the Private Self" • 2014-15 (Michigan):
Ruth Bader Ginsburg—"A Conversation with Ruth Bader Ginsburg" • 2014-15 (Harvard):
Carlo Ginzburg—"Casuistry, For and Against: Pascal's Provinciales and Their Aftermath" • 2014-15 (UC Berkeley):
Philip Pettit—"I. From Language to Commitment" and "II. From Commitment to Responsibility" • 2015-16 (Stanford):
Andrew Bacevich—"The American Military Encounters Islam" • 2015-16 (Michigan):
Abhijit Banerjee—""What do Economists Do?"" • 2015-16 (Ochanomizu):
Dame Carol Black—"Women: Education, Biology, Power, and Leadership" • 2015-16 (Princeton):
Robert Boyd—"I. Not by Brains Alone: The vital role of culture in human adaptation" and "II. Beyond Kith and Kin: How culture transformed human cooperation" • 2015-16 (Yale):
Judith Butler—"Interpreting Non-Violence" • 2015-16 (Berkeley):
Didier Fassin—"The Will to Punish" • 2015-16 (Clare Hall):
Derek Gregory—"Reach for the Sky: Aerial Violence and the Everywhere War" • 2015-16 (Utah):
Siddhartha Mukherjee—""The Gene: An Intimate History"" • 2015-16 (Oxford):
Shirley Williams—""The Value of Europe and European Values"" • 2016 (Princeton):
Naomi Oreskes - Lecture I: "Trust in Science?" - Lecture II: "When Not to Trust Science, or When Science Goes Awry" • 2016-17 (Berkeley):
Seana Shiffrin—"I. Democratic Law" and "II. Common and Constitutional Law: A Democratic Legal Perspective" • 2017 (Harvard):
Bryan Stevenson—"Social Justice Action: How We Change the World" • 2017-18 (Berkeley):
Michael Warner–"Environmental Care and the Infrastructure of Indifference" • 2018 (Harvard):
Dorothy E. Roberts–"The Old Biosocial and the Legacy of Unethical Science" and "The New Biosocial and The Future of Ethical Science" • 2019-20 (Michigan):
Charles W. Mills—"Theorizing Racial Justice" • 2019 (Harvard):
Masha Gessen—"How We Think About Migration" and "Some Ideas for Talking About Migration" • 2021-22 (Princeton):
Elizabeth Kolbert—"Welcome to the Anthropocene: Lecture II - What Can We Do About It?" and "Welcome to the Anthropocene: Lecture I - What on Earth Have We Done?" • 2023 (Harvard):
Margaret Hiza Redsteer –"On Resilience: A Capacity to Absorb Disturbances and Shocks" and "Barriers to Transforming Climate Dialogues" • 2023-24 (Yale): Rob Nixon –"Ecology and Equity" • 2024 (Harvard):
Hahrie Han –"Stories of Democracy Realized" == Notes and references ==