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The salary is competitive. The successful candidate will have access to research funding.
Applications from members of groups that are currently underrepresented in academic philosophy are strongly encouraged.
Starting Date
Ideally, the position would start on 1 September 2026 (and at the latest). The ideal starting date would be 1 September 2026, but an earlier start could be envisaged any time from 1 February 2026 onward.
Scientific Requirements
Candidates should hold a PhD in philosophy and demonstrate expertise in metaphysics of spacetime and causation and/or philosophy of quantum gravity. The ideal candidate possesses a background in the physics of quantum gravity, contemporary metaphysics and the philosophy of space, time, and causality. Expertise in philosophy of cosmology would be an advantage.
Language Requirements
Geneva is part of the French-speaking area of Switzerland, but for the purposes of the position only English is mandatory. Candidates must have excellent
communication skills in English.
Further Information
Candidates are encouraged to contact Baptiste Le Bihan (Baptiste...@unige.ch) for further details regarding the project and the position.
How to Apply
Applications must be submitted as a single PDF file named [your last name].pdf, starting with the CV with e-mail address on top. Applications must be sent to: baptiste...@unige.ch. Please indicate “Postdoctoral Application” in the subject line.
They should include the following items:
Application Deadline
Applications must be submitted by 15 November 2025, to ensure full consideration.
Brief Description of the Project
Does space exist over and above the objects around us? How does time differ from space? Recent scientific advances herald nothing less than a conceptual revolution regarding those questions with the stunning idea that space and time are not, fundamentally, real. This revolution comes from quantum gravity, a network of research programs in theoretical physics that aim at developing a novel and more explanatory framework for weaving together the knowledge from our current best and most fundamental physical theories: the general theory of relativity and quantum physics. Many approaches to quantum gravity imply that some properties usually considered as the hallmarks of space and time, such as spatial distances or temporal order, do not exist fundamentally and emerge from a more fundamental non-spatiotemporal structure. However, to fully understand the emergence of space and time and its philosophical implications, we must also account for the causal relations that seem to structure the natural world, and enable human beings to interact causally with their environment. Indeed, the non-fundamentality of space and time seems to stand in the way of a straightforward analysis of causal relations in terms of causes and effects, located in space and time in temporal sequences. This raises the question of how to reconceptualize causation in a non-spatiotemporal world. The project aims at articulating and evaluating various conceptions of causation compatible with a fundamentally non-spatiotemporal world.
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Prof. Baptiste Le Bihan
University of Geneva
Swiss NSF Starting Grant
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