Mon. 09 | Tue. 10 | |
09:00
10:00
11:00
12:00
13:00
14:00
15:00
16:00
17:00
18:00
19:00
|
9:00 - 9:15 (15min)
Welcome and introduction
9:15 - 10:15 (1h)
Causal Mosaic: a philosophical theory and a transdisciplinary collaborative approach (Keynote 1)
Federica Russo
10:15 - 10:45 (30min)
Coffee Break
10:45 - 13:15 (2h30)
Philosophy of Formal Sciences, Philosophy of Mathematics, and Philosophy of AI
› Logic, reasoning and normativity – a bridge too far?
- Michal Hladky, Université de Genève = University of Geneva
10:45-11:15 (30min)
› Representational link uncertainty in deep neural network models
- Karaca Koray, University of Twente, Philosophy Department
11:15-11:45 (30min)
› The Root of Algocratic Illegitimacy
- Mikhail Volkov, MCMP, LMU Munich
11:45-12:15 (30min)
› Understanding the output of black box AI models: interpretable and explainable AI are not the only games in town
- Lilia Gurova, New Bulgarian University
12:15-12:45 (30min)
› Visual thinking and intuition in the construction of structures. The methodological perspectives in the mathematical practice of Cantor and Dedekind.
- Karolina Tytko, UPJPII in Kraków
12:45-13:15 (30min)
10:45 - 13:15 (2h30)
Philosophy of Physical Sciences
› Is progress realism realist enough?
- Maria Panagiotatou, National and Kapodistrian University of Athens
10:45-11:15 (30min)
› Absolute time
- Jan Czerniawski, Jagiellonian University
11:15-11:45 (30min)
› The Hole Argument without the notion of isomorphism
- Joanna Luc, Jagiellonian University
12:15-12:45 (30min)
› Teleparallel underdetermination of gravity theories: is there a torsion/curvature-split?
- Ruward Mulder, University of Cambridge [UK]
12:45-13:15 (30min)
10:45 - 13:15 (2h30)
General Philosophy of Science
› Mary Shepherd on the New Riddle of Induction
- Marius Backmann, University of Bayreuth
10:45-11:15 (30min)
› John Stuart Mill, scientific freedom, and vulnerable truths
- Maria Kronfeldner, Central European University (Vienna)
11:15-11:45 (30min)
› Diversity of opinion and consensus on truth
- Mark Hallap, UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO
11:45-12:15 (30min)
› Diversity equals ability in binary decision problems
- Hein Duijf, Universiteit Utrecht / Utrecht University [Utrecht]
12:15-12:45 (30min)
› Kant´s Metachemistry
- Klaus Ruthenberg, Coburg University of Applied Sciences and Arts
12:45-13:15 (30min)
10:45 - 13:15 (2h30)
Philosophy of Social Sciences and Cognitive Sciences
› Back by popular demand, ontology. Productive tensions between anthropological and philosophical approaches to ontology
- Julia Turska, Wageningen University and Research, Knowledge, Technology and Innovation Chair Group
10:45-11:15 (30min)
› Causality, potential outcomes, and the policy process
- Luis Mireles-Flores, University of Helsinki (TINT)
11:15-11:45 (30min)
› What are causal relations in the economy? A defense of evidential pluralism
- Mariusz Maziarz, Institute of Philosophy, Jagiellonian University [Krakow]
11:45-12:15 (30min)
› Complexities of economic expertise
- Teemu Lari, University of Helsinki
12:15-12:45 (30min)
13:15 - 15:00 (1h45)
Lunch
15:00 - 16:30 (1h30)
Philosophy of Social Sciences and Cognitive Sciences
› On the Non-neutrality of Philosophy of Economics for both Philosophy and Economics (Celebrating the 10th Anniversary of the Polish Philosophy of Economics Network)
- Aleksander Ostapiuk, Aleksander Ostapiuk, Wroclaw University of Economics and Business
15:00-16:30 (1h30)
15:00 - 16:30 (1h30)
General Philosophy of Science
› Social Epistemologies of Science
- Matteo De Benedetto, Ruhr University Bochum = Ruhr-Universität Bochum - Inkeri Koskinen, Helsingin yliopisto = Helsingfors universitet = University of Helsinki - Vincenzo Politi, Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona - Borut Trpin, Ludwig Maximilian University [Munich] = Ludwig Maximilians Universität München - Martin Justin, University of Ljubljana - Sophie Veigl, University of Vienna [Vienna]
15:00-16:30 (1h30)
15:00 - 16:30 (1h30)
General Philosophy of Science
› Philosophy of the Historical Sciences
- Aviezer Tucker, Ostravská univerzita / University of Ostrava
15:00-16:30 (1h30)
16:30 - 17:00 (30min)
Coffee break
17:00 - 19:00 (2h)
Philosophy of Biological and Medical Sciences
› Three ways of understanding Homeostatic Property Clusters in the philosophy of psychiatry
- Ewa Grzeszczak, Uniwersytet Jagielloński w Krakowie = Jagiellonian University
17:00-17:30 (30min)
› Objectivity and Variety in the Definition of Mental Disorder
- Laura Delgado-Verges, Universidad Nacional de Educación a Distancia - María Jiménez-Buedo, Universidad Nacional de Educación a Distancia
17:30-18:00 (30min)
› Theory avoidance, Goodhart's law, and the biomedical model of mental disorder
- Adam Linson, Open University
18:00-18:30 (30min)
17:00 - 19:00 (2h)
Philosophy of Social Sciences and Cognitive Sciences
› A framework for the feminist anthropology of science
- Aleksandra Knežević, Institute for Philosophy and Social Theory, University of Belgrade [Belgrade]
17:00-17:30 (30min)
› Defining computational mechanistic explanations (in cognitive neuroscience)
- Matej Kohar, Technical University of Berlin / Technische Universität Berlin
17:30-18:00 (30min)
› On Constitutive Explanation in the Social Sciences
- Joonatan Nõgisto, Tallinn University School of Governance, Law and Society
18:00-18:30 (30min)
› A Defence of Peer Review
- Kenneth Bradley Wray, Aarhus University [Aarhus]
18:30-19:00 (30min)
17:00 - 19:00 (2h)
General Philosophy of Science
› Formalising extrapolation
- Alexander Gebharter, Marche Polytechnic University
17:00-17:30 (30min)
› Scientific understanding and thought collectives
- Marek Pokropski, University of Warsaw
17:30-18:00 (30min)
› Understanding as Perspective Taking in the Context of Artificial Intelligence (AI)
- Richard David-Rus, Richard David-Rus, Institute of Anthropology Francisc I Rainer, Romanian Academy
18:00-18:30 (30min)
› Hermeneutical gaps in the scientific society
- Christoph Merdes, Jagiellonian University
18:30-19:00 (30min)
17:00 - 19:00 (2h)
General Philosophy of Science
› Probability and inference in Fritz London's phenomenological approach to philosophy of science
- Dawid Kasprowicz, RWTH Aachen University
17:00-17:30 (30min)
› Variability of the category academic discipline
- Monika Walczak, John Paul II Catholic University of Lublin
17:30-18:00 (30min)
› Reasoning on an Inconsistent basis: The Case of Scientific Theories
- Michalis Christou, University of Linz - Johannes Kepler Universität Linz
18:00-18:30 (30min)
› Truth and its Approximations: A Dynamic Relationship
- Costanza Coloni, University of Cambridge [UK]
18:30-19:00 (30min)
|
9:00 - 10:00 (1h)
Epistemic trustworthiness and the value-free ideal of science (Keynote 2)
Kristina Rolin
10:00 - 10:30 (30min)
Coffee break
10:30 - 13:00 (2h30)
General Philosophy of Science
› Framework Confirmation as Newtonian Abduction
- Erik Curiel, Universität Bonn = University of Bonn, Black Hole Initiative, Harvard University
10:30-11:00 (30min)
› Downward Causation and Thick Causation
- Kaamesh Singam, Indian Institute of Technology [Kanpur]
11:00-11:30 (30min)
› Defining pseudoscience
- Mateusz Kotowski, Wroclaw University of Science and Technology
11:30-12:00 (30min)
› Issues with selective realism's definition of essentiality
- Chryssi Malouchou, University of Edinburgh
12:00-12:30 (30min)
› The Downward Paths to Structural Realism: An Internal Inconsistency and a Reconciliation Proposal
- Kosmas Brousalis, National and Kapodistrian University of Athens
12:30-13:00 (30min)
10:30 - 13:00 (2h30)
General Philosophy of Science
› Wholehearted structural metaphysical emergence
- Hamed Tabatabaei Ghomi, King‘s College London
10:30-11:00 (30min)
› Strategic Science Skepticism and the Epistemology of (Dis)agreement
- Alexander Reutlinger, LMU Münich
11:00-11:30 (30min)
› The logical structure of analogies between artifacts and biology, and epistemic circularity: implications for scientific practice
- José Antonio Pérez-Escobar, University of Geneva
11:30-12:00 (30min)
› The tasks of a philosophy of the humanities
- Anton CRISAN, Babes-Bolyai University [Cluj-Napoca]
12:00-12:30 (30min)
› Tracking norms
- Przemysław Nowakowski, Institute of Philosophy and Sociology, Polish Academy of Sciences
12:30-13:00 (30min)
10:30 - 13:00 (2h30)
Philosophy of Biological and Medical Sciences
› Disentangling tolerance in immunology
- Martin Zach, Institute of Philosophy of the Czech Academy of Sciences
10:30-11:00 (30min)
› Reflections on the structure of the evolutionary hierarchy: The evolutionary hierarchy is not nested
- Javier Suarez, University of Oviedo
11:00-11:30 (30min)
› Interactive disease kinds
- Henrik Røed Sherling, University of Cambridge
12:00-12:30 (30min)
› Pre-clinical and phase I clinical trials: bioethical analysis of the underlying injustice
- Katarzyna Żebrowska, Uniwersytet Jagielloński
12:30-13:00 (30min)
10:30 - 13:00 (2h30)
Philosophy of Social Sciences and Cognitive Sciences
› Evolution, Lineages and Kinds: on the requirements of evolutionary social constructivism
- Jakob Ortmann, Department of History and Philosophy of Science, University of Cambridge
10:30-11:00 (30min)
› Beyond the soundscape: acoustic affordances in the reproduction of developmental niches
- Luis Alejandro Villanueva, CCTB, University of Würzburg (Germany)
11:00-11:30 (30min)
› Meaningful affordances in autism
- Janko Nešić, Research Associate
11:30-12:00 (30min)
› Memory metaphors in science and in folk psychology
- Marina Trakas, Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas [Buenos Aires]
12:00-12:30 (30min)
› How to advance the debate on the personal and subpersonal?
- Marko Jurjako, University of Rijeka
12:30-13:00 (30min)
13:00 - 14:30 (1h30)
Lunch
14:30 - 16:00 (1h30)
Philosophy of Biological and Medical Sciences
14:30 - 16:00 (1h30)
General Philosophy of Science
› Normative Kinds: Values and Classificatory Decisions in Science and Policymaking
- Raffaella Campaner, University of Bologna - Davide Serpico, University of Milan - Francesco Guala, University of Milan - Martina Bacaro, University of Bologna - Jonathan Sholl, University of Bordeaux
14:30-16:00 (1h30)
14:30 - 16:00 (1h30)
Philosophy of Social Sciences and Cognitive Sciences
› Supervenience Does Not Work on Many Levels. An Alternative Argument for Fundamental Autonomy of Special Sciences Informed by Computational Complexity
- A. Theodore Izmaylov, Independent scholar
14:30-15:00 (30min)
› Stuck in the Middle With You: How-Plausibly Explanations of Syntax Processing in Computational Linguistics
- Vanja Subotić, University of Belgrade - Institute of Philosophy at the Faculty of Philosophy
15:00-15:30 (30min)
› What are consumer sentiment indicators a measure of?
- Sarkia Matti, University of Helsinki
15:30-16:00 (30min)
14:30 - 16:00 (1h30)
General Philosophy of Science
› Exploring Michael Polanyi's Relevance in the Contemporary Debate on Social Engagement of Science
- Juozas Kasputis, Széchenyi István University
14:30-15:00 (30min)
› Embracing the Science or Denying the Facts: A Microphenomenological Exploration of Misinformation Phenotypes.
- Paweł Gwiaździński, University of the National Education Commission in Cracow, Jagiellonian University Medical College
15:00-15:30 (30min)
› Academic Discussions on Human Enhancement Meet Science: A Quantitative Analysis
- Tomasz Żuradzki, Institute of Philosophy & Interdisciplinary Centre for Ethics, Jagiellonian University in Kraków
15:30-16:00 (30min)
16:00 - 16:30 (30min)
Coffee break
16:30 - 18:15 (1h45)
(Dis)Trust in Public Health
Plenary Session: Faik Kurtulmus, Silvia Caprioglio Panizza, Jay Zameska
18:15 - 19:10 (55min)
Closing remarks and the EENPS General Assembly
Magdalena Malecka
|