Days: Wednesday, September 15th Thursday, September 16th Friday, September 17th Saturday, September 18th
View this program: with abstractssession overviewtalk overview
The current system of rewards for academic work, which connects funding assignments to metric performances, and these in turns on the capacity to attract funding, reinforces multiple Matthew effects and increases gaps across universities and scholars, both geographically (widening the North-South and West-East divides), and institutionally (expanding the distance between high ranked universities and those down in the ladder), as well as disciplinary: favouring applied fields of research over theoretical ones, and the hard sciences over “soft” sciences and humanities. The epistemic dimensions of such state of affair is to date a relatively underexplored area of research. This roundtable presents current debates around science policies, research funding allocation and the future of the university, from diverse epistemological perspectives, not only in view of improving fairness towards the underprivileged, and the efficiency of the system, but also in order to foster a new role for science and research institutions in society.
Speakers: Sabina Leonelli (Exeter), Richard Pettigrew (Bristol), Barbara Osimani (Marche Polytechnic University), Marco Ottaviani (Milan), Andrea Saltelli (Barcelona).
Discussants: Angela Liberatore (ERC), Jean-Pierre Bourguignon (ERC), Ferruccio Resta (CRUI).
https://lse.zoom.us/j/88024601292; Meeting ID: 880 2460 1292
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Abstract: In this talk, I will present a case for scientific realism about free will. I will begin by summarizing some of the main scientifically motivated challenges for free will and will then respond to them by presenting a naturalistic indispensability argument for free will. The argument supports the reality of free will as an emergent higher-level phenomenon. I will also explain why the resulting picture of free will does not conflict with the possibility that the fundamental laws of nature are deterministic.
16:00 | Understanding cancer: How can philosophy and biology contribute together? (in person) (abstract) PRESENTER: Lucie Laplane |
16:00 | Bell’s Assumptions and the Structure of Quantum Mechanics (in person) (abstract) PRESENTER: Carl Hoefer |
16:30 | Relational Quantum Mechanics and the PBR Theorem: A Peaceful Coexistence (in person) (abstract) |
17:00 | Scope and Limits of Stochastic Quantum Mechanics in the Block Universe (in person) (abstract) |
17:30 | Managing Uncertainty in Radiometric Dating (online) (abstract) |
16:00 | Biodiversity vs. Paleodiversity Measurements: the Incommensurability Problem (online) (abstract) |
16:30 | Cultural maladaptation and the inverse correlation hypothesis (in person) (abstract) |
17:00 | Intrinsic Biological Essentialism: Devitt’s New Argument (in person) (abstract) |
17:30 | Conceptual and methodological issues concerning psyhcological essentialism in the context of folk biology (in person) (abstract) |
16:00 | Why Experimental Balance is Still a Reason to Randomize (in person) (abstract) PRESENTER: Marco Martinez |
16:30 | Expert Judgment in Climate Science (in person) (abstract) PRESENTER: Mason Majszak |
17:00 | Realism, Antirealism, and Theoretical Conservatism (in person) (abstract) PRESENTER: Luca Tambolo |
17:30 | Can induction be justified on practical grounds? (online) (abstract) |
16:00 | Historical and Contemporary Climate Model Intercomparisons: Lessons for Pluralism in Modeling (online) (abstract) |
16:30 | Paths that did not cross. Why philosophy of science had no impact on science policy in the Twentieth century? (in person) (abstract) PRESENTER: Eugenio Petrovich |
17:00 | Loops, Topologies and Genidentity: Reichenbach’s Direction of Time meets Feynman’s Diagrams (in person) (abstract) |
17:30 | Wherein is the concept of disease normative? From weak normativity to value-conscious naturalism (online) (abstract) PRESENTER: Maria Cristina Amoretti |
16:00 | The Pragmatic Value of Uncertain Evidence (in person) (abstract) PRESENTER: Patryk Dziurosz-Serafinowicz |
16:30 | How to believe long conjunctions of beliefs: probability, quasi-dogmatism and contextualism (in person) (abstract) PRESENTER: Stefano Bonzio |
17:00 | Causal Attribution and Partial Liability: A Probabilistic Model (in person) (abstract) |
17:30 | Epistemically modest methodological triangulation (in person) (abstract) |
The programme is available here. The poster session will start with 3-minute oral presentations from all poster presenters. Breakout rooms will then be enabled for discussion with online poster presenters. Meanwhile, in-person poster presenters will be able to have discussions in front of their posters.
View this program: with abstractssession overviewtalk overview
09:00 | Method Transfer and Formation of a Field: Case Study of Microbial Ecology (online) (abstract) |
09:30 | Evaluating the quality of model-based regional climate information: the case of the UK Climate Projections 2018 (online) (abstract) PRESENTER: Marina Baldissera Pacchetti |
10:00 | Domain-specific explanatory norms and interdisciplinary collaboration (online) (abstract) |
09:00 | Wave Function Realism vis-à-vis Functional Reduction (in person) (abstract) |
09:30 | The Labelling Problem: Does QM require Free Logic? (in person) (abstract) |
10:00 | Leibniz’s principle, (non-)entanglement, and Pauli exclusion (in person) (abstract) |
10:30 | Indeterminate Causation: an Argument from Quantum Physics (in person) (abstract) PRESENTER: Laurie Letertre |
09:00 | Feminist Philosophy of Immunology Phase 2 – Avoiding Taxonomic Chauvinism (online) (abstract) |
09:30 | Can M. B. Williams and Alexander Rosenberg’s axiomatisation of Darwin’s theory of evolution by natural selection be grounded in quantitative and population genetics? (online) (abstract) |
10:00 | Renegotiating the organism-environment boundary (in person) (abstract) |
10:30 | Coherent Causal Control in Biological Systems (in person) (abstract) |
09:00 | Model templates and synchronized oscillators (online) (abstract) PRESENTER: Tarja Knuuttila |
09:30 | On the empirical content of deep neural networks (online) (abstract) |
10:00 | Computer simulations as epistemically consistent sources – a neither reductionist nor non-reductionist account (in person) (abstract) |
09:00 | Avoiding the hard questions (online) (abstract) |
09:30 | Ground for Ontic Structuralists (online) (abstract) |
10:00 | Ontological Dependence in Mathematical Structuralism (in person) (abstract) |
10:30 | Epistemic Scientism and the Scientific Meta-Method (in person) (abstract) PRESENTER: Petri Turunen |
09:00 | Contents of unconscious color perception (in person) (abstract) |
09:30 | The Tradeoff between Directness and Independence of Large-Scale Replication Studies in Psychology (online) (abstract) |
10:00 | Model Transfer between Physics and Cognitive Science: Information in the Free Energy Principle (online) (abstract) |
11:30 | Making behavior accessible: A framework for conceptualizing material practice in science and its relation to theoretical practice (in person) (abstract) |
12:00 | Unrealistic Models for Realistic Computations: On the Role of Idealizations in Founding Scientific Computing (in person) (abstract) |
12:30 | Replication pluralism (in person) (abstract) |
13:00 | The Potential of Machine Learning in Grant Review: Predicting Project Efficiency in Physics (in person) (abstract) PRESENTER: Vlasta Sikimic |
11:30 | Einstein Completeness as Categoricity (online) (abstract) |
12:00 | A Fiction View of Thought Experiments: Kuhn's Paradox Dissolved (online) (abstract) |
12:30 | Indistinguishability and entanglement: A new approach (online) (abstract) PRESENTER: Sebastian Fortin |
13:00 | Is the classical limit "singular"? (online) (abstract) PRESENTER: Jeremy Steeger |
11:30 | Epistemic Principles of Astrobiology (online) (abstract) PRESENTER: David Kinney |
12:00 | Genetics on the spectrum: Conceptions of continuity in neurodiversity (online) (abstract) |
12:30 | Different meaning in different sizes: ecology in size scales (online) (abstract) |
13:00 | Reframing the idea of ecological value: Lessons from coral reef research (in person) (abstract) |
11:30 | Some Models are Universal and Rare: does “universality” make a difference? (online) (abstract) |
12:00 | Taking Causal Modeling Metaphysically Seriously (in person) (abstract) |
12:30 | On Model Diversity: The CAPM (in person) (abstract) PRESENTER: Melissa Vergara Fernández |
13:00 | Causal Models and Actual Causation in the Law (in person) (abstract) |
11:30 | Values in Science, Biodiversity Research, and the Problem of Particularity (abstract) |
12:00 | Avian flu, non-proliferation laws, and the ethics of ‘dual-use research of concern’ (online) (abstract) |
12:30 | Regulating Human Germline Gene Editing: Conceptual and Practical Issues (online) (abstract) |
13:00 | How should we responsibly model social kinds? (in person) (abstract) PRESENTER: Caterina Marchionni |
11:30 | Cumulative Advantage and the Incentive to Commit Fraud in Science (online) (abstract) |
12:00 | Simples, Complexes, and Extension (online) (abstract) |
12:30 | A Fregean Model for Logicism (online) (abstract) |
13:00 | Two ways to think about (implicit) structure (in person) (abstract) |
15:00 | Metaphysical Unity of Science (online) (abstract) PRESENTER: Vanessa Seifert |
15:00 | Symposium: The Aesthetics of Scientific Experiments (online) (abstract) PRESENTER: Alice Murphy |
15:00 | Models in Particle Physics: Three Challenges to Realism (online) (abstract) PRESENTER: Florian Boge |
15:00 | Symmetries and conservation laws in history and philosophy of general relativity (online) (abstract) PRESENTER: Valeriya Chasova |
15:00 | Scientific Experts and the Pressures of Pandemic Policy Advice (in person) (abstract) PRESENTER: Mathias Frisch |
15:00 | Prospects for relativistic Collapse Theories (online) (abstract) PRESENTER: Guido Bacciagaluppi |
15:00 | Social Kinds: Science, Language, and Metaphysics (in person) (abstract) PRESENTER: Francesco Guala |
Public engagement is one of the fundamental pillars of the European programme for research and innovation /Horizon 2020/. The programme encourages engagement that not only fosters science education and dissemination, but also promotes two-way dialogues between scientists and the public in various stages of research. Creating a dialogue between different groups of societal actors is seen as crucial to attain both epistemic and social desiderata in science. However, whether this dialogue can actually help with the attainment of these desiderata is far from being a trivial matter. This paper discusses the costs, risks, and benefits of dialogical public engagement practices and proposes a strategy to analyse these argumentative practices, based on a three-tiered model of epistemic exchange. As a case study, we discuss the phenomenon of vaccine hesitancy, a clear case of failure of public engagement, and show how the proposed model can shed new light on the problem.
View this program: with abstractssession overviewtalk overview
09:00 | Patchwork concepts and operationalism (in person) (abstract) PRESENTER: Philipp Haueis |
09:30 | Explanatory Holes? Testing the Limits of the Mechanistic Framework (in person) (abstract) |
10:00 | Participation and Objectivity (online) (abstract) |
10:30 | Epistemic aims, methodological choices, and value trade-offs in modeling (online) (abstract) |
09:00 | Reliability, Informativeness and Sensitivity in dark matter observation (online) (abstract) |
09:30 | Modeling and modality in astrophysics (in person) (abstract) PRESENTER: Giulia Schettino |
10:00 | A Lie-Algebraic Stability Explanation of the Effective Application of Mathematics to Physics (online) (abstract) |
10:30 | Gauge theories from the effective perspective (online) (abstract) |
09:00 | Two accounts of extrapolation (online) (abstract) |
09:30 | Epistemic roles of similarity considerations in mouse models of cancer (online) (abstract) |
10:00 | Can a Microbiome be 'Obesogenic'? (in person) (abstract) |
10:30 | Specificity of Association in Epidemiology (online) (abstract) |
09:00 | Multiple Realization and Evolutionary Dynamics: A Fitness-Based Account (online) (abstract) PRESENTER: Diego Rios |
09:30 | Against Prohibition (Or, When Using Ordinal Scales to Compare Groups is OK) (online) (abstract) PRESENTER: Cristian Larroulet Philippi |
10:00 | A Practitioner's Guide to Pragmatic Humeanism (online) (abstract) |
09:00 | Understanding the epistemic role of measurement issues in 19th century craniology (in person) (abstract) |
09:30 | Political Representation in Science (in person) (abstract) |
10:00 | The role of research heuristics for the occurrence and handling of new research opportunities in application-oriented research (online) (abstract) |
10:30 | Why Fund Basic Research? Unpredictability and Other Enigmas (online) (abstract) PRESENTER: Jamie Shaw |
09:00 | On dynamic-mechanistic explanations in the cognitive sciences (in person) (abstract) |
09:30 | Learning as a Part of memory (online) (abstract) |
10:00 | Empirical Philosophy of Economics - Drawing Borders between Quantitative and Qualitative Methods (in person) (abstract) |
10:30 | The method of cases in economics: a challenge for naturalism? (online) (abstract) |
11:30 | What do engineers understand? The case of biological methanation (online) (abstract) PRESENTER: Michael Poznic |
12:00 | How supervised machine learning “measures” and what we can learn from it (in person) (abstract) |
12:30 | A computational approach to the philosophical discussion of model transfer (in person) (abstract) PRESENTER: Maximilian Noichl |
13:00 | Extended Virtue and Scientific Expertise (online) (abstract) |
11:30 | Limiting reduction of hydrodynamics, singular limits, and asymptotic expansions (in person) (abstract) |
12:00 | The Past as Key to the Future: The Paleoclimate as an Analogue Model for Contemporary Climate Change (online) (abstract) |
12:30 | Climate extremes as serious possibilities (in person) (abstract) |
13:00 | Against Symmetry Fundamentalism (in person) (abstract) |
11:30 | Pregnancy as Agency (online) (abstract) |
12:00 | Organisms, biological individuals, and levels of organization: An integrative framework (in person) (abstract) |
12:30 | On the meaning of biogeographical areas as natural entities and on their ontological status (in person) (abstract) PRESENTER: Artemis Korniliou |
13:00 | Organisms as persisters and overcomers (in person) (abstract) |
11:30 | A Bayesian Perspective on Severity: Risky Predictions and Specific Hypotheses (online) (abstract) PRESENTER: Noah van Dongen |
12:00 | Old Evidence, Measurement, and Accuracy (in person) (abstract) |
12:30 | Genuine Confirmation and Tacking by Conjunction (online) (abstract) PRESENTER: Gerhard Schurz |
13:00 | Interpreting Probability Claims in Climate Science (in person) (abstract) |
11:30 | Non experts: which ones would trust you? (in person) (abstract) PRESENTER: Saúl Pérez-González |
12:00 | Evaluating Interpretive Qualitative Theories (online) (abstract) |
12:30 | Defending a concrete interventionist theory of singular causation (online) (abstract) |
13:00 | Extrapolating Causal Effects - Where is Our Theory of Confidence? (online) (abstract) |
11:30 | A Battle in the Statistics Wars (online) (abstract) PRESENTER: William Peden |
12:00 | Causal Heterogeneity and Independent Components (in person) (abstract) PRESENTER: Lorenzo Casini |
12:30 | Two birds with one stone? Not when arguing for Bayesianism and Credal Veritism (online) (abstract) |
13:00 | Accuracy and Probability Kinematics (online) (abstract) |
We invite junior scholars to join us and discuss the process of publishing journal articles (from paper submission to peer-review, to the editorial handling of submissions, etc.).
BSPS Open publishes Open Access philosophy of science monographs on the basis of merit alone, and not on an author’s ability to pay a fee. Find out about how to submit and get your manuscripts published. For more information check http://www.thebsps.org/bsps-open/
This session is an opportunity to meet the editorial team of EJPS. Our speakers are Federica Russo, Phyllis Illari, Mathias Frisch and Dunja Šešelja. Federica and Phyllis, who have been the Editors-in-Chief of EJPS for the last four years, will reflect on their editorial experience. Mathias and Dunja, the new Editors-in-Chief, will introduce the new editorial team and their vision for the journal in the coming years.
15:00 | COVID-19 in the public sphere: conspiracies, exceptionalism and moral profiling (online) (abstract) PRESENTER: Lisa Bortolotti |
15:00 | Particles, Fields, or Both? (online) (abstract) PRESENTER: Charles Sebens |
15:00 | Modeling the Nerve Impulse: Philosophy of Science Meets Scientific Practice (online) (abstract) PRESENTER: Benjamin Drukarch |
15:00 | Philosophizing about the Unknown: Black Holes (in person) (abstract) PRESENTER: Erik Curiel |
15:00 | Quantum Realism: Moving Forward in Neutral (in person) (abstract) PRESENTER: James Fraser |
15:00 | Missing theory: case studies from medical and social science (online) (abstract) PRESENTER: Jan-Willem Romeijn |
Do the extensions and revisions suggested by the advocates of the Extended Evolutionary Synthesis (EES) – a current developmentally-oriented version of evolutionary theory that challenges the neo-Darwinian version that has been dominant since the 1950s – amount to progress in evolutionary biology? What, if anything, is the nature of this progress? I consider these questions within a framework that combines the systems biology approach of Conrad Waddington for investigating embryological development with the sociological approach of Ludwik Fleck for analyzing the development of scientific systems. I focus on the contribution of studies of epigenetic inheritance because the results stemming from this research program are seen as unimportant by followers of the neo-Darwinian version of evolutionary theory, while the same results are seen as crucial and progressive by biologists advocating the ESS. This case therefore highlights the context-sensitive nature of assessments of scientific progress during periods of theory change and suggests that progress is relative to the delineation of the theoretical boundaries of the scientific system and the time scale that is chosen.
View this program: with abstractssession overviewtalk overview
09:00 | Philosophy of formal models of the social organisation of science (in person) (abstract) PRESENTER: Samuli Reijula |
09:00 | The many problems of spacetime emergence (in person) (abstract) PRESENTER: Rasmus Jaksland |
09:00 | Does aging cause cancer? (in person) (abstract) PRESENTER: Maël Lemoine |
09:00 | Scientific Evidence and Expertise in the COVID-19 Pandemic and Beyond (in person) (abstract) PRESENTER: Stefano Canali |
09:00 | Idealised Modelling of Mind and Life (online) (abstract) PRESENTER: Matteo Colombo |
In There Are No Such Things As Theories (OUP 2020) I argued for a form of theory eliminativism: theories should not be regarded as abstract entities in some ‘World Three’, say, or as possessing well-defined identity conditions or, indeed, as ‘things’ in any sense whatsoever. Nevertheless, I claimed, statements such as ‘quantum theory is elegant’ can still be taken to be either true or false by adopting a framework in which the relevant scientific practices act as truth-makers. In my talk I want to push this account along a little further by exploring some possible implications for our understanding of the history of science, its relationship with the philosophy of science and of what we, as philosophers of science, are doing in our own practices.