Neurons, Mechanisms, and the Mind: The History and Philosophy of Cognitive Neuroscience

October 10, 2014 - October 12, 2014
University of Colorado at Boulder, The Committee for the History and Philosophy of Science

Boulder
United States

View the Call For Papers

Speakers:

William Bechtel
University of California, San Diego
University of Iowa
Tor Wager
University of Colorado, Boulder

Organisers:

Robert Rupert
University of Colorado, Boulder
Topher Smith
University of Colorado, Boulder

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Call for Papers: The 30th Annual Boulder Conference on the History and Philosophy of Science

Neurons, Mechanisms, and the Mind: The History and Philosophy of Cognitive Neuroscience

October 10–12, 2014, at the University of Colorado at Boulder 

Our developing understanding of the mind depends extensively on neural data collected by fMRI, EEG, and PET, among other methods, and by the analysis of the data so collected, by, for example, decoding applications of machine learning algorithms. The prominence of cognitive neuroscience among the cognitive sciences and the widespread reporting in the popular press of (interpretations of) its results stand as testaments to the power and intrigue associated with this neurally oriented approach. This conference will focus on substantive theoretical questions that arise in connection with the flourishing field of cognitive neuroscience. These might include questions about the data-collection methodologies themselves, about ways of analyzing or modeling the data collected, about relations between the so-called personal and subpersonal levels (or conscious and subconscious levels), and about the localization of cognitive functions. They might also include questions about the history and meaning of the cognitive neuroscience “revolution” and about the bearing of its results on issues of historical importance in the humanities (what is the self?), on issues in neuroethics (are we morally responsible for our subconscious thought processes?), and on issues in history and philosophy of science more broadly construed (does cognitive neuroscience discover psychological laws?).

Keynote speakers: William Bechtel (UC-San Diego), Carrie Figdor (Iowa), and Tor Wager (CU-Boulder)

CFP

Faculty should submit abstracts (maximum 1000 words) and graduate students should submit full papers. All submissions should be prepared for blind review, and should be suitable for 45-minute sessions. The deadline for submissions is July 1, 2014. Please send submissions to [email protected].

Travel stipends ($100) are available for graduate students whose submissions are accepted for presentation. 

SPONSORS

The Committee for the History and Philosophy of Science is co-sponsored by the departments of Anthropology, Chemistry and Biochemistry, Geological Sciences, History, Mathematics, Molecular, Cellular, and Developmental Biology, Philosophy, Physics, the College of Arts and Sciences, and the Center for Humanities and the Arts.

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October 1, 2014, 7:00am MST

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Custom tags:

#neuroscience, #cognitive science, #philosophy of mind, #philosophy of science