Seminar cercetare DFT „Cuvintele: entități abstracte la îndemâna vorbitorilor şi pentru uzul lingviștilor?”
Comunicarea acesteia este parte dintr-un ciclu de conferințe asociat programului masteral „Analytic Philosophy”. Toate aceste evenimente sunt deschise studenților în filosofie, științele exacte, digital humanities, științele comunicării, și multe altele. Detaliile programului sunt disponibile aici: https://filosofie.unibuc.ro/
Colegul nostru, prof. univ. dr. Constantin Stoenescu, susține o prezentare la Karl Popper and 21st Century Philosophy of Science Conference (HK, 2024)
Karl Popper (1902-1994) is regarded as one of the most influential philosophers of science of the twentieth century. He famously proposed that falsifiability is the genuine virtue of science and the criterion of the scientific status of a theory. Based on this, he developed a systematic account of scientific method and scientific development, namely, falsificationism. In addition, Popper played an important role in promoting the historical turn in twentieth century philosophy of science. The debate over the nature and development of science between him and Thomas Kuhn dominated and sparked many discussions in the late 1960s philosophy of science. Moreover, Popper wrote on a variety of topics, including evolutionary biology, methodological individualism, and probability. However, Popper’s legacy on contemporary philosophy of science is surprisingly thin. Although his writings are still a must-read in any introductory philosophy of science course, there is no lively Popperian philosophy of science. His falsificationism is not viewed as a plausible account of scientific development. Nor is his solution to the problem of induction regarded as a successful or promising move. This conference aims to revisit and explore Popper’s legacy for twenty-first century philosophy of science.
The topics to be discussed include but are not limited to:
- Popper and induction
- Popper and evolutionary biology
- Popper and evolutionary epistemology
- Popper and objectivity
- Popper and probability
- Popper and scientific change
- Popper and the demarcation problem
- Popper and the methodological holism/individualism debate
- Popper and verisimilitude
For more information please visit the conference webpage https://www.shanyafeng.com/karl-popper-and-21st-century-philosophy-of-science-conference-hk-2024.html
Colegul nostru, lect. univ. dr. Andrei Mărăşoiu, susține o prezentare la CRESA cu titlul „Neutralism defended”
‘In reformulating her programme about how to best understand or elucidate mathematical axioms in her book, Defending the Axioms, Penelope Maddy articulates a view called „neutralism”, similar in purport to views held by Rudolf Carnap and Arthur Fine, and which seems to best fit with her second philosophy and naturalism in the foundations of mathematics. As I construe it, neutralism is a programmatic deflationism about the relevance to the foundations of mathematics of metaphysical statements. One objection to neutralism might be that the foundational crisis in the 1900’s and the ensuing axiomatizations of set theory are rife with metaphysical concern, both with whether sets exist and with what the nature of sets might be. Consider, for example, Skolem’s discussion of the Axiom of Choice, and his distinction between real sets and objects we may choose to call „sets” in light of a theory of them. I argue that neutralism survives this objection. Granted, genuine, first-philosophical, metaphysical concern with what sets are clearly cannot be dismissed in some historical episodes. But that concession falls short of showing a principled basis for always turning first-philosophical. How some foundational problems are framed (e.g. in the foundational crisis of the 1900’s) might at first be metaphysically perplexing. As time goes by, orthodoxy (ZFC) sets in practice and alternative set theories begin to be explored in an experimental and tolerant spirit. New reasons for endorsing orthodoxy emerge (e.g. the iterative hierarchy as an intuitive picture), and practice begins once more to unfold in agreement with more pragmatic, and less ontologically inflated, descriptions. If metaphysical concerns come and go, neutralist views are on firm footing: they can just wait it out. To say this particular objection falls short is, by my lights, no final defense of neutralism as true. Indeed, I see deflationism about truth as consonant with neutralism about sets.’
Seminar cercetare DFT „Dependence and Diversity in Echo Chambers”
„In this talk I take an epistemological look at echo chambers, i.e. social environments that are highly homogeneous with respect to their inhabitants’ viewpoints in a domain. In public reception, echo chambers are held responsible for all sorts of problematic developments, most notably the polarization of some democracies and the radicalization of certain social groups, for example so-called conspiracy theorists. Jennifer Lackey has recently argued that pace their bad reputation, echo chambers per se are epistemically unproblematic: they neither exhibit the problematic dependency of viewpoints standardly ascribed to them, nor is a diversity of viewpoints per se an epistemic asset. I argue that Lackey’s arguments fail. Echo chambers are per se epistemically problematic, and this is due – in part – to problems arising from a high level of dependence and a lack of epistemic diversity.”
2024 Oxford-Bucharest Workshop in Practical Ethics
Pe 24 mai 2024, Oxford Uehiro Centre for Practical Ethics, în parteneriat cu Centrul de Cercetare în Etică Aplicată (CCEA) al Facultății de Filosofie din cadrul Universității din București, organizează o nouă ediție a workshopurilor bilaterale Bucharest-Oxford Workshop în Practical Ethics. Evenimentul reunește profesori și cercetători ai celor două centre de cercetare. Evenimentul din acest an marchează 10 ani de parteneriat între Universitatea din Oxford și Universitatea din București.
Vorbitorii din acest an sunt:
Mircea Dumitru: Parfit on identity and the separateness of persons
Mihaela Constantinescu: Responsibility gaps & LLMs – an organization focused approach
Anda Zahiu: Extending the realm of rights: posthoumous interests and digital persons
Dorina Patrunsu: Are AI technologies transhumanist? The problem of the „false apocalypse” and some intellectual confusions
Emilian Mihailov: Could Kant have been an effective altruist?
Cristina Voinea & Constantin Vică: The Dilemma of Desire: AI, VR, and Transgressive Fantasies
Lisa Forsberg: Difficulty, Achievement, and Perfectionist Value
Orsolya Friedrich & Samuel Pedziwiatr: Virtual reality in interactions between humans and machines
Brian Earp: Weight change and personal identity
Rebecca Brown & Katrien Devolder: Semaglutide for weight loss and the ethics of quick fixes





