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The Brian Michael Goldberg Memorial Award

The impact of research in Computational Modeling, Artificial
Intelligence, Machine Learning, Formal Models of Learning, and
Agent-based Simulations on the discipline of Philosophy has been
profound. Contemporary discussions of epistemology, ethics, theory of
mind, and philosophy of language have all benefited from lively,
interdisciplinary debates over the relation between computational and
formal models, and traditional philosophical questions. These debates
have found their way into scholarly publications and textbooks, as
well as into a growing number of Masters and Ph.D. theses.

In order to recognize outstanding achievements by Graduate Students in
this area of research and scholarship, the International Association
for Computing and Philosophy is proud to offer the "Brian Michael
Goldberg Memorial Award" for presentations in any category listed
above. This Award, which carries a $500 USD stipend, will be presented
each year at one of the North American Computing and Philosophy
conferences. Nominees and applicants are welcome from around the
world.

The department of philosophy at Carnegie Mellon is the sponsor of this
award and will serve as the site for submissions. The department will
establish an international committee to review applications and, in
conjunction with NA-CAP, will announce the yearly winner. Each year's
winner will be expected to make a presentation at a NA-CAP conference
as part of the Award Ceremony.

This Award was made possible by a generous gift from Dr. Gerald and
Nancy Goldberg in memory of their son, Brian Michael Goldberg. In
their words:

Brian was a twenty-two year old student who was admitted to Carnegie
Mellon University in 1991 to the doctoral program in philosophy. He
died unexpectedly before he could realize his dream of attending
Carnegie Mellon. Brian was an independent thinker who loved
competition and a good challenge. Throughout his life, he found it
exciting to enter and win contests. He loved challenging his mind,
especially by studying philosophy, mathematics and logic. He loved
challenging his creativity through photography, painting and theatre
arts. He loved challenging his body by learning such diverse sports as
wrestling, fencing and scuba diving. He loved debating and challenging
others to think in new ways and had seriously considered becoming a
university professor. To honor who he was and what he loved, this
Goldberg Memorial Award is offered to challenge and motivate other
graduate students in Brian's chosen field of study.

Past recipients

·        2009: Matteo Turilli, Oxford University: "Translating Ethical
Requirements into Software Specification"
·        2008: Chih-Chun Chen, University College London: "A Process
Interpretation of Agent-Based Simulation and Its Epistemological
Implications"
·        2007: Rory Smead, University of California, Irvine: "The
Evolution of Cooperation in the Centipede Game with Finite
Populations"
Submissions

Submissions are due on or before March 1st, 2010.

A complete submission consists of the following:

·        Presentation (length should be appropriate for a one-hour
presentation which includes time for Q&A)
·        Presentation abstract, including your name and gradute
program (200 words)
·        Email sent to [email protected] with the above two items as
attachements.
 The Subject should be "Goldberg Award yourLastName".
 The Body should consist of your full name, graduate program, and a
copy of the paper abstract.
Both documents should be in Microsoft Word or PDF format and composed
in English. Be advised that CAP discourages mere paper reading during
the presentation.

If you have any questions, please contact Mara Harrell at [email protected].
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