Professor Susan Haack recently delivered a lecture virtually, for a conference in Brazil, which was hosted by the Federal University of Paraná. The lecture was titled “The Expert Witness: Lessons from the U.S. Experience.”
Haack has written a dozen books including Philosophy of Logics, Deviant Logic, Fuzzy Logic: Beyond the Formalism, Manifesto of a Passionate Moderate, Defending Science—Within Reason, Pragmatism, Old and New, Putting Philosophy to Work, Evidence Matters: Science, Proof, and Truth in the Law, and Scientism and its Discontents; and she has also published around 240 articles—not to mention an even larger number of reprints, translations, abridgments, excerpts, etc.—in a wide variety of fora.
Her work has appeared in 18 languages in 36 countries, and has been the subject of four volumes of essays—Susan Haack: A Lady of Distinctions (2007), Susan Haack: Reintegrating Philosophy (2016), a special issue of Estudios filosóficos(2018), and a wonderful Festschrift, Philosophy, the World, Life and the Law (2020). (Another volume of essays on her work is now in preparation.) Haack has given more than 700 external lectures all around the world—in 30 countries so far.
She has received awards for excellence in teaching, in research, and in writing. In 2011, she was awarded the degree of Doctor Honoris Causa by Petri Andreis University, and in 2016, the Ulysses Medal (its highest honor) from University College, Dublin. In 2020, she received the Premio internacional de cultura jurídica from the University of Girona.