Ludo SCHOENMAKERS (KLI), 2025-10-23 15:00 (CET). Please join our colloquium via Zoom!
Ludo SCHOENMAKERS (KLI), 2025-10-23 15:00 (CET). Please join our colloquium via Zoom!
In a recent review for a special issue of the European Journal of Neuroscience, Isabella Sarto-Jackson (KLI Executive Manager & Group Leader Evolution of Cognition) highlights the role of philosophy in advancing our understanding of evolutionary biology, especially with the concepts of genes and traits. Isabella advocates that a similar conceptual analysis in neuroscience using a philosophical framework could bring new insights on how genes, environment, and time interact in shaping the human mind. (Click on title to read more.)
In a recent review for a special issue of the European Journal of Neuroscience, Isabella Sarto-Jackson (KLI Executive Manager & Group Leader Evolution of Cognition) highlights the role of philosophy in advancing our understanding of evolutionary biology, especially with the concepts of genes and traits. Isabella advocates that a similar conceptual analysis in neuroscience using a philosophical framework could bring new insights on how genes, environment, and time interact in shaping the human mind. (Click on title to read more.)
In a recent review paper published in the Quarterly Review of Biology, KLI postdoctoral fellow Silvia Basanta, along with Mihaela Pavlicev, explores endocrinological aspects contributing to the evolution of long gestation length in placental mammals. The authors show how numerous independently evolved traits affect gestation length in different lineages. (Click on title to read more.)
In a recent review paper published in the Quarterly Review of Biology, KLI postdoctoral fellow Silvia Basanta, along with Mihaela Pavlicev, explores endocrinological aspects contributing to the evolution of long gestation length in placental mammals. The authors show how numerous independently evolved traits affect gestation length in different lineages. (Click on title to read more.)
Read the editors’ summary of the latest issue 20 (3), with free reading links for all the articles. In this issue we revisit Niels Bohr`s 1932 public lecture “Light and Life” where he discusses the implications of quantum mechanics for biological questions; explore the role of phenotypic plasticity as an evolutionary factor; learn of the incorporation of evolutionary theory in American archaeology; discuss the debate over whether organisms evolve towards greater complexity, with a possible quantitative assessment based on life history strategies. This issue also has a review essay on the book Evolution Evolving. (Click on title to read more.)
Read the editors’ summary of the latest issue 20 (3), with free reading links for all the articles. In this issue we revisit Niels Bohr`s 1932 public lecture “Light and Life” where he discusses the implications of quantum mechanics for biological questions; explore the role of phenotypic plasticity as an evolutionary factor; learn of the incorporation of evolutionary theory in American archaeology; discuss the debate over whether organisms evolve towards greater complexity, with a possible quantitative assessment based on life history strategies. This issue also has a review essay on the book Evolution Evolving. (Click on title to read more.)
A team of evolutionary biologists and theoreticians, including KLI Group Leader for Philosophy Cristina Villegas, and KLI External Faculty members Benedikt Hallgrímsson and Laura Nuño de la Rosa, and led by Christophe Pélabon, has recently published a review article on the notion of evolvability in the journal BioScience. This review article intends to bring the notion of evolvability closer to biologists of all disciplines by summarizing the main progresses made in evolvability research since its emergence in the 1990s, as well as by pointing towards the most salient open lines of evolutionary research that touch upon it. (Click on title to read more.)
A team of evolutionary biologists and theoreticians, including KLI Group Leader for Philosophy Cristina Villegas, and KLI External Faculty members Benedikt Hallgrímsson and Laura Nuño de la Rosa, and led by Christophe Pélabon, has recently published a review article on the notion of evolvability in the journal BioScience. This review article intends to bring the notion of evolvability closer to biologists of all disciplines by summarizing the main progresses made in evolvability research since its emergence in the 1990s, as well as by pointing towards the most salient open lines of evolutionary research that touch upon it. (Click on title to read more.)
We are happy to welcome our new Visiting Fellow Ronald Planer to the KLI. Ronald is currently a Lecturer in the School of Liberal Arts at the University of Wollongong, Australia. He will be with us at the KLI from 1st Oct to 23rd Dec 2025. (Click on title to read more.)
We are happy to welcome our new Visiting Fellow Ronald Planer to the KLI. Ronald is currently a Lecturer in the School of Liberal Arts at the University of Wollongong, Australia. He will be with us at the KLI from 1st Oct to 23rd Dec 2025. (Click on title to read more.)
We are very happy to welcome our new Writing-up Fellow Liberty Severs. Liberty is a philosopher and cognitive scientist, currently pursuing her PhD degree from the University of Lisbon. Her research interest lies in understanding the concept of agency and how it can be studied across diverse systems, from unicellular organisms to humans and artificial agents. (Click on title to read more.)
We are very happy to welcome our new Writing-up Fellow Liberty Severs. Liberty is a philosopher and cognitive scientist, currently pursuing her PhD degree from the University of Lisbon. Her research interest lies in understanding the concept of agency and how it can be studied across diverse systems, from unicellular organisms to humans and artificial agents. (Click on title to read more.)
Richard COCKETT (Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton) October 14, 2025, 15:00 (CET). Please join our colloquium via Zoom!
Richard COCKETT (Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton) October 14, 2025, 15:00 (CET). Please join our colloquium via Zoom!
In a new study, published in Nature Ecology and Evolution, co-lead authors Daniel Stadtmauer (KLI alumnus) and Silvia Basanta (KLI Postdoc Fellow), along with colleagues from the University of Vienna, Yale University, and the University of Nevada, Las Vegas, investigate cell signalling networks in the fetal-maternal interface, and reveal new insights into our current understanding of the co-evolution of fetal and maternal cell types to facilitate pregnancy. (Click on title to read more.)
In a new study, published in Nature Ecology and Evolution, co-lead authors Daniel Stadtmauer (KLI alumnus) and Silvia Basanta (KLI Postdoc Fellow), along with colleagues from the University of Vienna, Yale University, and the University of Nevada, Las Vegas, investigate cell signalling networks in the fetal-maternal interface, and reveal new insights into our current understanding of the co-evolution of fetal and maternal cell types to facilitate pregnancy. (Click on title to read more.)
Save the dates! Join us at our Fall-Winter 2025-2026 KLI Colloquium series. This season we have nine great colloquia lined up: Richard Gawne (Nevada State Museum), Richard Cockett (The Economist), Ludo Schoenmakers (KLI), Ronald Planer (University of Wollongong), Thomas Hansen (University of Oslo), Cristina Villegas (KLI), Enrico Petracca (KLI), Patricia Beldade (Lisbon University), and Jan Baedke (Ruhr University Bochum).
You can join either in person at the KLI or online via Zoom.
Save the dates! Join us at our Fall-Winter 2025-2026 KLI Colloquium series. This season we have nine great colloquia lined up: Richard Gawne (Nevada State Museum), Richard Cockett (The Economist), Ludo Schoenmakers (KLI), Ronald Planer (University of Wollongong), Thomas Hansen (University of Oslo), Cristina Villegas (KLI), Enrico Petracca (KLI), Patricia Beldade (Lisbon University), and Jan Baedke (Ruhr University Bochum).
You can join either in person at the KLI or online via Zoom.
Elis Jones (former KLI Postdoc Fellow), along with Jose A. Cañada (University of Helsinki) and Sabina Leonelli (Technical University of Munich) have jointly contributed to editing a special issue for the journal History and Philosophy of the Life Sciences, titled: ‘Values at Sea.’ This special issue comprises six original papers spanning diverse aspects of the study marine systems, highlighting the role of the blue humanities, especially in the face of ecological crisis. (Click on title to read more.)
Elis Jones (former KLI Postdoc Fellow), along with Jose A. Cañada (University of Helsinki) and Sabina Leonelli (Technical University of Munich) have jointly contributed to editing a special issue for the journal History and Philosophy of the Life Sciences, titled: ‘Values at Sea.’ This special issue comprises six original papers spanning diverse aspects of the study marine systems, highlighting the role of the blue humanities, especially in the face of ecological crisis. (Click on title to read more.)