Friday, January 4, 2019
Submission Deadline Postponed
Many thanks to those of you who have already sent in your submissions for this conference! The conference submission deadline for papers and posters has been extended to January 17th (at midnight) to give more time to those that wanted to submit but were delayed or unable to meet the previous deadline.
Wednesday, September 26, 2018
CALL FOR PAPERS
3rd IU Graduate Student Conference on the History and Philosophy of Science
and Medicine
29th and 30th
March, 2019
Indiana University
Bloomington
Dept. of History and
Philosophy of Science and Medicine
Submission
Deadline: January 1st, 2019
The Indiana University
Department of History and Philosophy of Science and Medicine and HPS Graduate
Students Association are calling for submissions from graduate students working
on topics relating to the history and/or philosophy of science for its third
graduate student conference in the spring of 2019. Submissions are welcome on a
breadth of historical or philosophical topics in the sciences. This conference
is intended to be an opportunity for graduate students to share their work,
make connections, and receive feedback from peers and faculty in a congenial
environment. The anticipated schedule is for 30 minute student presentations,
followed by a 10 minute response by a student commentator, and 15-20 minutes
for follow-up questions and discussion. There will also be a poster session
reception intended to facilitate discussion, particularly suited to works in
their early stages of progress, ideas on new methodologies or tools in HPS, or
novel ways of extending HPS into the public sphere.
Submissions: Please submit papers or extended outlines suitable for a 30 minute talk,
or an abstract or description (~250 words) of a topic for a poster. Dual
submissions for talks and posters (on related or unrelated topics) are allowed.
Email submissions to iuhpsconf@gmail.com
on or before January 1st. Acceptances will be sent out in early February.
All graduate students are welcome to attend. If you are planning to
attend and would be interested in commenting, please email us with areas of interest
by January 1st, and, depending on availability, we will send you an appropriate
paper to comment on as soon as acceptances are issued.
Conference Time & Place: March- 29-30 (half-day Friday and full-day Saturday),
2019, on the Indiana University campus in Bloomington.
Speaker: We are pleased to have Kristen
K. Intemann from Montana State Unievrsity as our keynote speaker
and featured faculty guest for the conference. Dr. Intemann’s research and teaching
interests focus on feminist theory, values and science, and research ethics,
particularly in relation to science and philosophy of science. Also, she
has published on issues related to objectivity, bias, and diversity in
science. Visit the following website for additional information: http://www.montana.edu/history/people/kristen_intemann.html
Lodging and Logistics: Funding is not available to cover
travel expenses, but we will facilitate lodging for student presenters with
graduate student hosts here in town on a first-come, first-served basis.
Hotels in Bloomington are also quite reasonably priced, and we’ll be glad to
provide recommendations for those who wish to make their own arrangements. For
questions or further details, please contact us at iuhpsconf@gmail.com or see our website at http://iuhpsgraduateconference.blogspot.com.
Thursday, March 22, 2018
Keynote Speaker: Anjan Chakravartty
Reasoned Scientific Disagreement and Permissive Rationality
Abstract:
Even among those whom we might regard as epistemic peers, scientists often disagree. Some philosophers hold that given some evidence and assuming epistemic peerage, there is only one rational option regarding what scientists should believe. Thus, either there is significant irrationality in scientific practice, or the uniqueness thesis is false. I distinguish two cases for thinking about this: relatively transient disagreement (RTD) and relatively stable disagreement (RSD). I suggest that in cases of RTD, disagreement is often better characterized in terms of things like contrary hopes, best bets, and heuristic commitments than in terms of contrary beliefs per se. In cases of RSD, I suggest that disagreement does not generally take the form of contrary beliefs but rather juxtapositions of belief and agnosticism, which are indicative of underlying commitments that are not themselves propositional or evidential but that are nonetheless rational. The upshot is the falseness of the uniqueness thesis and a moderately permissive conception of rationality appropriate to scientific disagreement.
Abstract:
Even among those whom we might regard as epistemic peers, scientists often disagree. Some philosophers hold that given some evidence and assuming epistemic peerage, there is only one rational option regarding what scientists should believe. Thus, either there is significant irrationality in scientific practice, or the uniqueness thesis is false. I distinguish two cases for thinking about this: relatively transient disagreement (RTD) and relatively stable disagreement (RSD). I suggest that in cases of RTD, disagreement is often better characterized in terms of things like contrary hopes, best bets, and heuristic commitments than in terms of contrary beliefs per se. In cases of RSD, I suggest that disagreement does not generally take the form of contrary beliefs but rather juxtapositions of belief and agnosticism, which are indicative of underlying commitments that are not themselves propositional or evidential but that are nonetheless rational. The upshot is the falseness of the uniqueness thesis and a moderately permissive conception of rationality appropriate to scientific disagreement.
Time: 4:30 – 6:00 pm
Location: Social Science Research Center, Woodburn Hall
Wednesday, March 7, 2018
HPS Graduate Conference Preliminary Program
Thanks to all for their submissions! We're glad to announce the preliminary program for the upcoming conference.
Friday, March 23th
1:00 – 3:50 pm Graduate Student Talks
Location: Room 143, Geology Building
Talks are 30-minutes in length, followed by commentary and Q&A time, with a short break before the following talk.
1:00 pm, Samuel Fajerstein, Indiana University
A Microprocess of Stalinization, 1928-1930: The Transformation of Puti sel'skogo khoziaistva and the 'Army of Soviet Agronomists'
Commentator: Evan Arnet
2:00 pm, Joseph Baxley, University of Notre Dame
Commentator: Evan Arnet
2:00 pm, Joseph Baxley, University of Notre Dame
A New Look at the Anonymous Parisian Master's Guide in Ripoll 109
Commentator: Meagan Allen
Commentator: Meagan Allen
3:00 pm, JP Gamboa, University of Pittsburgh
Pain and Emotion upon Decerebration: Sherrington as a Historical Outlier
Commentator: Luma Melo
Commentator: Luma Melo
4:30 – 6:00 pm Keynote Speech by Anjan Chakravartty
Location: Social Science Research Center, Woodburn Hall
6:30 – 8:00 pm Reception and Discussion/Poster Session
Location: Social Science Research Center, Woodburn Hall
Saturday, March 24th
8:00 am Light Breakfast Fare
Location: Social Science Research Center, Woodburn Hall
9:00 - 11:50 am Graduate Student Talks
Location: Social Science Research Center, Woodburn Hall
Talks are 30-minutes in length, followed by commentary and Q&A time, with a short break before the following talk.
9:00 am, Patrick Tiffany, Indiana University
Do Athenians Dream of Poisoned Water: Water, Wells, and The Great Plague of Athens
Commentator: Brenton Wells
Commentator: Brenton Wells
10:00 am, Joshua Barthuly, University of Notre Dame
Dispositional Essentialism Laws and Structural Complexity
Commentator: Ali Mirza
11:00 am, Mousa Mohammadian, University of Notre Dame
From Peirce’s Abduction to Lipton’s Inference to the Best Explanation: How Two Historical Developments Fill the Gap
Commentator: Ryan O’Loughlin
Commentator: Ryan O’Loughlin
12:00 noon – 2:00 pm Lunch Break (lunch on own)
2:00 – 4:50 pm Graduate Student Talks
Location: Social Science Research Center, Woodburn Hall
Talks are 30-minutes in length, followed by commentary and Q&A time, with a short break before the following talk.
2:00 pm, Qiu Lin, Duke University
The Epistemic Status of False Assumptions in Scientific Idealization
Commentator: Becca Jackson, Ryan O’Loughlin
Commentator: Becca Jackson, Ryan O’Loughlin
3:00 pm, Teresa Jackson, Indiana University
A Closer Look at the "Ghosts" of the Sex Workers in the USPHS Conducted Guatemalan Syphilis Experiments
Commentator: Chris ChoGlueck
Commentator: Chris ChoGlueck
4:00 pm, Samuel Hall, University of Notre Dame
Fixing Evidence and the Problems of Underdetermination
Commentator: Justin Slattery
Commentator: Justin Slattery
Tuesday, January 2, 2018
DEADLINE EXTENDED TO JANUARY 15TH, 2018
Many thanks to those of you who have already sent in your submissions for this conference! The conference submission deadline for papers and posters has been extended to January 15th (at midnight) to give more time to those that wanted to submit but were delayed or unable to meet the previous deadline.
Sunday, September 17, 2017
CALL FOR PAPERS
2nd IU Graduate Student Conference
on the History and Philosophy
of Science and Medicine
March 23-24, 2018
Indiana University Bloomington
Dept. of History and Philosophy of
Science and Medicine
Submission
Deadline: January 1st, 2018
The Indiana University Department of History and Philosophy of Science
and Medicine and HPS Graduate Students Association are calling for submissions
from graduate students working on topics relating to the history and/or philosophy
of science for its second graduate student conference in the spring of 2017.
Submissions are welcome on a breadth of historical or philosophical topics in
the sciences. This conference is intended to be an opportunity for graduate
students to share their work, make connections, and receive feedback from peers
and faculty in a congenial environment. The anticipated schedule is for 30 minute
student presentations, followed by a 10 minute response by a student
commentator, and 15-20 minutes for follow-up questions and discussion. There
will also be a poster session reception intended to facilitate discussion,
particularly suited to works in their early stages of progress, ideas on new
methodologies or tools in HPS, or novel ways of extending HPS into the public
sphere.
Submissions: Please submit papers or extended outlines
suitable for a 30 minute talk, or an abstract or description (~250 words) of a
topic for a poster. Dual submissions for talks and posters (on related or
unrelated topics) are allowed. Email submissions to iuhpsconf@gmail.com on or before January 15th, 2018. Acceptance notifications
will be sent out in early February.
All graduate students are welcome to attend. If you are planning to
attend and would be interested in commenting, please email us with areas of interest
by January 1st, and, depending on availability, we will send you an appropriate
paper to comment on as soon as acceptances are issued.
Conference Time & Place: March 23-24 (half-day Friday
and full-day Saturday), 2018, on the Indiana University campus in Bloomington.
Speaker: We are
pleased to have Anjan Chakravartty as our keynote speaker and featured faculty
guest for the conference. Dr. Chakravartty is Professor of Philosophy, and
Director of the John H. Reilly Center for Science, Technology, and Values at
the University of Notre Dame. His research focuses on central issues
in the philosophy of science (the metaphysics and epistemology of science), including
topics in the philosophy of physics and biology. Much of this work revolves
around debates concerning scientific realism (such as versions of entity
realism and structural realism) and antirealism (especially some versions of
empiricism), as well as the nature of dispositions, causation, laws of nature,
and natural kinds. Visit his
personal website for additional information: https://anjanchakravartty.com
Lodging and Logistics: Funding
is not available to cover travel expenses, but we will facilitate lodging for
student presenters with graduate student hosts here in town on a first-come,
first-served basis. Hotels in Bloomington are also quite reasonably priced,
and we’ll be glad to provide recommendations for those who wish to make their
own arrangements. For questions or further details, please contact us at iuhpsconf@gmail.com or see our website
at http://iuhpsgraduateconference.blogspot.com.
Friday, March 4, 2016
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