PBK Fire Pit & Smores
Come together to socialize with PBK affiliated faculty, staff, and students.
Thursday, October 23, 2025 – Dejope Fire Pit – time TBD
Information Sessions
We invite you to attend an information session to learn more about Phi Beta Kappa, its membership requirements, and activities.
Date and Time: October 28, 2025 from 5:30 – 6:30 PM
This session is for any high achieving sophomores, juniors, and seniors in the College of Letters & Science.
Presenters include:
- Jeanne M. Schueller, PBK President, faculty in German
- Monica Grant, PBK Vice President, faculty in Sociology
- PBK Undergraduate Fellows: Kayla Chang, Rayane Prado Nunes, and Ronan Piontek
PBK is also hosting an information session for invited members on Tuesday, January 13 from 5:00-6:00 pm. This information session will take place virtually. Please register here.
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Student Speakers
Student speakers address members and guests at the celebratory banquet. Remarks are usually 10 – 15 minutes in length. Interested new members submit an outline to the chapter. Student speakers are selected by the officers and fellows.
Year | Student Speaker |
---|---|
2025 | Lily Hamacher |
2024 | Jinwan Park |
2023 | Claire Kuehn |
2021 | Brooke Wilczewski |
2019 | Windy Wu & Gwyneth DeLap |
2018 | Jess Higgins |
2017 | Jamie Dawson |
2017 | Yuka Shiotani |
2016 | Jonathan McHugh |
2015 | Donya Khadem |
2014 | Ethan Kay |
2013 | Kirsten Moran |
2012 | Ryan Denu |
2011 | Steven Olikara |
2010 | Edward Wallace |
2009 | Michael Regner |
2008 | Gillian Leatherberry |
2007 | Emma Condon |
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Past Anniversary Celebrations
2024 Anniversary Celebration
Celebrating the Wisconsin Alpha Chapter’s 125th birthday with a discussion led by Professors Steve Nadler and Larry Shapiro: When Bad Thinking Happens to Good People: How Philosophy Can Save Us from Ourselves. Friday, February 2, 2:30-3:45pm at Pyle Conference Center, Room 226. All members welcome! Free to student members; If so inclined, provide a GIFT that supports undergraduate students who are unable to pay required fees. RSVP here.
UW-Madison philosophers Steven Nadler and Lawrence Shapiro consider how large masses of people can embrace crazy, even dangerous ideas and how this bad thinking drives bad acting, inspiring exceptionally bad behavior. Nadler and Shapiro offer a way forward: the best antidote for bad thinking and acting is the wisdom, insights, and practical skills of philosophy.
Join us for an engaging talk through the basic principles of logic, argument, evidence, and probability; demonstrating how we can more readily spot and avoid flawed arguments and unreliable information; determine whether evidence supports or contradicts an idea; distinguish between merely believing something and knowing it; and much more.
Their recently published book, When Bad Thinking Happens to Good People, explores why philosophy’s millennia-old advice about how to lead a good, rational, and examined life is essential for escaping our current predicament.
Nadler is the William H. Hay II Professor of Philosophy at the University of Wisconsin–Madison, where he is the director of the Institute for Research in the Humanities. His books include “Think Least of Death: Spinoza on How to Live and How to Die” and (with Ben Nadler) “Heretics!: The Wondrous and Dangerous Beginnings of Modern Philosophy” (both Princeton University Press).
Shapiro is the Berent Enç Professor of Philosophy at the University of Wisconsin–Madison. His books include “Zen and the Art of Running: The Path to Making Peace with Your Pace” and “The Miracle Myth: Why Belief in the Resurrection and the Supernatural Is Unjustified.”
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Past PBK Lectures
March 23, 2023, 5:30-6:30
H.F. DeLuca Forum at the Discovery Building
330 N. Orchard Street
Kathryn Lofton
Lex Hixon Professor of Religious Studies and American Studies
Professor of History and Divinity, Yale University
Sponsored by the UW-Madison Religious Studies Program, Phi Beta Kappa, and co-sponsored by the Center for the Humanities, we are excited to announce Kathryn Lofton is delivering the Phi Beta Kappa Visiting Scholar Lecture on Celebrity, Politics, Power. Lofton will be discussing celebrity to think about political power, through the lens of Religious Studies to celebrity narratives in popular culture.
PBK Visiting Scholar, Corey Robin
Clarence Thomas’s Radical Race Politics and the Future of the Supreme Court
Thursday, April 24th, 5:00 p.m.
Elvehjem Building
Corey Robin is Distinguished Professor of Political Science at Brooklyn College and the CUNY Graduate Center. He is the author of The Enigma of Clarence Thomas, The Reactionary Mind, and Fear.