Dr. Rafaela Hillerbrand
Rafaela Hillerbrand, Ph.D. is James Martin Research Fellow
in Global Risk Modelling. Her research at the Future of Humanity
Institute (FHI) is about
global
catastrophic risk.
Her research interests traverse
epistemological
problems related to the interpretations of probabilities, quantitative
and qualitative modelling, foundational questions of statistical
mechanics as well as ethical questions specific for decisions under risk
or under uncertainty. The unifying question behind her research is the
improvement of current risk assessments, with a particular focus on the
unique problems of catastrophic risks.
Rafaela holds a PhD both in philosophy and in theoretical physics. Her
book on foundational issues in environmental ethics and in ethics of
technology was awarded the Lilli-Bechmann-Rahn-Preis in 2005. This year
her work on hydrodynamic turbulence was awarded the biannual Natural
Sciences prize of the Ingrid zu Solms Stiftung.
She coauthored
Heavy particles in incompressible flows: the
large Stokes number asymptotics,
On Peculiar Property of the Velocity Fluctuations in Wall-Bounded
Flows,
Stochastic suspensions of heavy particles,
Anthropogenic climate change: Scientific uncertainties and moral
dilemmas, and
Renormalized Perturbation Theory for Lagrangian Turbulence.
Also read her posts
on Practical Ethics.
Rafaela studied physics (with a minor in fluid mechanics) and
philosophy (minor in political sciences) at the Universities of
Erlangen-Nünberg (Germany) and Liverpool. She earned a Ph.D. in
Philosophy from the former in 2003 for a work on the ethics of
technology. She completed a Ph.D (2007) in Theoretical Physics at
the
University of Müster and the Observatoire de la Côte d’Azur
in Nice
(France). Her thesis was on hydrodynamic turbulence.
Read her LinkedIn
profile.