Aristides Baltas

Aristides Baltas
Αριστείδης Μπαλτάς
Minister of Culture and Sports
Assumed office
23 September 2015
Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras
Preceded by Frosso Kiaou as Minister of Culture, Education and Religious Affairs
Minister of Culture, Education and Religious Affairs
In office
27 January  28 August 2015
Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras
Preceded by Andreas Loverdos as Minister of Education and Religious Affairs
Konstantinos Tasoulas as Minister of Culture and Sport
Succeeded by Frosso Kiaou
Personal details
Born (1943-02-09) 9 February 1943
Corfu, Greece
Political party Coalition of the Radical Left
Alma mater National Technical University of Athens
University of Paris XI
Profession Philosopher of science

Aristides Baltas (Greek: Αριστείδης Μπαλτάς; born 9 February 1943) is a philosopher of science and physicist who is the Minister of Culture and Sports of Greece. He previously served as the Minister of Culture, Education and Religious Affairs in the cabinet of Alexis Tsipras from 27 January to 28 August 2015.

He is currently the Emeritus Professor of Philosophy of Science at the National Technical University of Athens and President of the Nicos Poulantzas Institute.[1]In the Greek legislative election, September 2015, he was elected MP for the Attica constituency with Syriza.

Education and academic career

Baltas trained in electrical and mechanical engineering at the National Technical University of Athens (NTUA) from 1962 to 1967 before going on to complete a doctorate in theoretical physics at University of Paris XI in 1971. In 1982, he returned to NTUA to become a lecturer at the Department of Physics.[1] From 1984 to 1985 he was a visiting fellow at the Center for Philosophy of Science of the University of Pittsburgh, a capacity he later resumed in 2005–6.[2] He was appointed assistant professor of philosophy and methodology of physics at NTUA in 1984, then associate professor of the philosophy of science in 1992 and professor in 2002.[1]

Baltas' research has dealt particularly with the epistemology of Louis Althusser, and more generally with the relationship between philosophy of science and epistemology and between analytic and continental philosophy.[1][2] His work encompasses the fields of physics, mathematics, psychoanalysis, and historical materialism.[3] Other philosophers studied by Baltas include Ludwig Wittgenstein, Friedrich Nietzsche, Baruch Spinoza, Jacques Derrida, John McDowell, and Walter Benjamin.[1]

Awards

In 2002, Baltas was awarded the National Prize for Nonfiction for his book Objects and Aspects of Self (Αντικείμενα και όψεις εαυτού).[4] In December 2010, he received the Xanthopoulos–Pneumatikos Award for Excellence in Academic Teaching.[5]

Political career

A founding member of the Coalition of the Radical Left (SYRIZA), in 2012 Baltas was a coordinating member of its policy planning committee.[6] Following Syriza's victory in the Greek legislative election of January 2015, Baltas was appointed as Minister of Culture, Education and Religious Affairs in the Tsipras Cabinet. Soon after entering office, Baltas stated that beyond the immediate objectives of relieving the humanitarian crisis in Greek schools and resolving the problem of "eternal students" who are forced to suspend their studies in order to find work to sustain themselves, his long-term goals as minister would be to restore the independence of secondary education from higher education, to abolish pan-Hellenic examinations, and to support free access to higher education.[7]

Books in English

References

Political offices
Preceded by
Frosso Kiaou
as Minister of Culture, Education and Religious Affairs
Minister of Culture and Sports
since 23 September 2015
Incumbent
Preceded by
Andreas Loverdos
as Minister of Education and Religious Affairs
Minister of Culture, Education and Religious Affairs
27 January – 28 August 2015
Succeeded by
Frosso Kiaou
Preceded by
Konstantinos Tasoulas
as Minister of Culture and Sport
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