Wolfgang Stegmüller Prize
The Wolfgang Stegmüller Prize is awarded every three years by the Society for Analytical Philosophy for outstanding work in the field of analytical philosophy. It was donated by his wife Margret Stegmüller (1941–2018) in memory of Wolfgang Stegmüller and is endowed with prize money of 12,000 euros. It is now regarded as one of the most important prizes for young scientists in philosophy. As a rule, three works are awarded.
Award winners
- Romy Jaster : Agents' Abilities
- Benjamin Kiesewetter : The Normativity of Rationality
- Tom Sterkenburg : Universal Prediction
- Vuko Andrić : The Act-Consequentialist Criterion of Rightness
- Katharina Felka : Talking about Numbers: Easy Arguments for Mathematical Realism
- Susanne Mantel : Acting for a Normative Reason: A Competence Account
- Barbara Vetter : Potentiality
- Miguel Hoeltje : Truth, Meaning and Form. An examination of the Davidson program
- Stephan Krämer : Second-Order Quantification and Ontological Commitment
- Moritz Schulz : Counterfactuals and Probability
- Tim Henning : Being a person and telling stories. A study of personal autonomy and narrative reasons
- Erasmus Mayr : Understanding Human Agency
- Thomas Sattig : The Language and Reality of Time
- Oliver Hallich : The Rationality of Morality: A Language-Analytical Foundation of Ethics
- Franz Huber : Assessing Theories, Bayes Style
- Nico Strobach : Alternatives in spacetime: A study on the philosophical application of multimodal propositional logic
- Gerhard Ernst : The problem of knowledge
- Volker Halbach : Semantics and Deflationism
- Manfred Harth : Leadership. A non-linguistic means of language
- Ulla Wessels : The good Samaritan woman. On the structure of supererogation
- Thomas Hofweber : Ontology and Objectivity
- Christian Nimtz : words, things, substitutes
- Christine Redecker : Ludwig Wittgenstein, Comments on the Basics of Mathematics II, §§ 1–22 - A critical interpretation
- Stefan Wölfl : Combined time and modal logic: Completeness results for predicate logic languages
- Christoph Fehige : A Pareto Principle for Possible People
- Karl-Georg Niebergall : On the metamathematics of non-axiomatizable theories
- Daniel Schoch : Topological Axiomatization of Methodological Concepts of Theory Development
- Bernd Buldt : Gödel's sentences
- André Chapuis : Alternative Revision Theories of Truth
- Angelika Krebs : Ethics of Nature
- Martine Nida-Rümelin : Colors and Phenomenal Knowledge