Image:Follow us on Bluesky

01 January
2025

Follow us on Bluesky

The Cambridge Philosophical Society has recently expanded its presence on social media by joining Bluesky.

Image:Department of Plant Sciences help re-create a 10th Century incense recipe

24 September
2024

Department of Plant Sciences help re-create a 10th Century incense recipe

CPS Council member Professor John Carr helps to re-create a 10th Century recipe for incense from the collection of the Parker Library at Corpus Christi College.


Image:Down House Visit

11 June
2024

Down House Visit

CPS members visit Down House, home to Charles Darwin where he wrote On the Origin of Species.

Image:Human Anatomy Centre Visit

30 May
2024

Human Anatomy Centre Visit

Society members visit the Human Anatomy Centre at the University of Cambridge

Image:Gaia: Mapping the Stars

03 April
2024

Gaia: Mapping the Stars

Dr Giorgia Busso talks about her work on the Gaia Mission at the Institute of Astronomy, Cambridge.

Image:Upcoming Research Café event on Climate Change

01 April
2024

Event

Upcoming Research Café event on Climate Change

The Research Cafe at West Hub is holding an event on Climate Change on Wenesday, 24th April 2024 with keynote by Professor Lord Martin Rees

Upcoming Events

Show All

27

10

Reflections on dementia research and ageing societies

Professor Carol Brayne CBE

  • 18:00 - 19:00 Bristol-Myers Squibb Lecture Theatre, Cambridge Michaelmas Term A.V. Hill Lecture

Dementia is a topic of considerable public interest. How empirical evidence has contributed to this societal awareness and indeed fear will be covered in this talk. It will span research from the 1980s when not much was understood about dementia up to contemporary perspectives. The focus will be on the epidemiological and public health evidence base, and how this relates to the results published from clinical and lab based research. The findings from UK and other high income countries of reduced age specific prevalence (%) will be explored, and the implications of results from brain based studies that dementia is not inevitable in the presence of ‘alzheimer’ type changes. The role of inequalities, risk varying across countries and time and our knowledge about protective factors have strengthened during recent years, and the balance of high risk with whole population approaches to reducing risk for society will be considered.

View Details

10

11

Putting the “S” into mechanics

Professor Keith Seffen

  • 18:00 - 19:00 Bristol-Myers Squibb Lecture Theatre, Cambridge Michaelmas Term

The structural mechanics of shape-changing structures: from bending armadillos, self-deploying satellites, to roll-up displays.

Most structures, e.g. buildings & bridges, are designed to be near rigid when loaded: in view of high winds or heavy traffic, their movements are barely noticeable.  Formally, they are stiff, strong and stable, in terms of their “structural mechanics” – the study of their loaded deformation.  Large movements from material weakness, overloading, or bad design, typically portend failure & eventual collapse.  Embracing large movements, i.e. deliberate changes in shape, can admit new behaviour if safe and reversible, to yield transformer-like technologies and simple explanations of biological morphology, for example.  In this talk, I will describe several structural mechanics principles for making shape-changing structures, out of ordinary materials, complete with physical demonstrations.

View Details

Publications

Discover our Journals & Books

From Darwin’s paper on evolution to the development of stem cell research, publications from the Society continue to shape the scientific landscape.

Membership

Join the Cambridge Philosophical Society

Become a Fellow of the Society and enjoy the benefits that membership brings. Membership costs £20 per year.

Join today