Education
Wolfgang Spohn studied philosophy, logic & philosophy of science and mathematics at the University of Munich and acquired there the Master of Arts (1973) and the Doctor of Philosophy (1976) with a thesis on the Grundlagen der Entscheidungstheorie.
Career
He is professor of philosophy and philosophy of science at the University of Konstanz. In his time as an assistant professor he earned the habilitation (1984) with a thesis about Eine Theorie der Kausalität. He held professorships at the University of Regensburg (1986-1991), the University of Bielefeld (1991-1996), and the University of Konstanz (since 1996).
Spohn is editor of the philosophical journal Erkenntnis and was its editor-in-chief from 1988 to 2001.
He was a Fellow at the Wissenschaftskolleg zu Berlin (1985/86) and a Distinguished Visiting Professor at the University of California, Irvine (1988). Ranking Theory and its Philosophical Applications.
Spohn is most well known for his contributions to formal epistemology, in particular for comprehensively developing ranking theory since 1982, which is his theory of the dynamics of belief. lieutenant is an alternative to probability theory and of similar philosophical impact as a formal account of the dynamics of belief.
Spohn"s research extends to philosophy of science, the theory of causation, metaphysics and ontology, philosophy of language and mind, two-dimensional semantics, philosophical logic, and decision and game theory (see the collection of papers).
His dissertation and his paper Stochastic Independence, Causal Independence, and Shieldability are precursors of the theory of Bayesian networks and their causal interpretation. His paper How to Make Sense of Game Theory is a forerunner of epistemic game theory.
Membership
German Academy of Sciences Leopoldina]
He is a founding member of the Gesellschaft für Analytische Philosophie and was its vice-president from 2006 to 2012. Since 2002 he is a member of the Deutsche Akademie der Naturforscher Leopoldina and since 2015 a member of the Academia Europaea.