CFP: Medical Knowledge in a Social World
Submission deadline: January 20, 2016
Topic areas
Details
Location: University of California, Irvine
Dates: March 28-29, 2016
Key Note Speakers:
Miriam Solomon: Professor of Philosophy Temple University
Richard Smith: Former Editior and Chief of the British Medical Journal
Invited talks:
Otavio Bueno (University of Miami)
Nancy Cartwright (Durham University/University of California, San Diego)
Barbara Osimani (Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich)
Jacob Stegenga (Victoria University)
Call for abstracts: In contrast to an epistemological focus on an isolated knower confronting a fixed set of evidence, social epistemology attempts to make room both for the social practices that promote knowledge and those that obscure it. The broader purview offered by social epistemology opens up opportunities for philosophers interested in medical knowledge to discuss topics such as the role of consensus conferences, continuing medical education, and industry funding. It promises to be an exciting avenue of philosophic inquiry and one that is rapidly taking shape; above all, this workshop is intended to bring together those working at this intersection in order to share our projects, learn from each other, and build a community of scholarship. Travel assistance is available for early career scholars.
Possible topics include, but are by no means limited to:
- Expert disagreement
- Pragmatic ends and medical knowledge
- The epistemic picture that emerges from social epistemology and its relation to Evidence-Based Medicine
- Agnotology and medicine
- 3rd parties (FDA, medical journals, etc.) and knowledge dissemination
- Role of the patient in medical epistemology
- The influence of funding sources on medical knowledge
- Formal models (e.g. network epistemology) and the assessment of alternative knowledge practices (e.g. distribution of funding, policy recommendations for conflicts of interest, etc.)
- Medical knowledge as group knowledge
Abstract Submission:
Please submit abstracts to easychair by January 20th, 2016.
easychair.org/conferences/?conf=mksw2016
Abstracts should be no longer than 500 words. Preference will be given to submissions that make significant contact with current medical practice and/or that draw from relevant case studies. Notification of acceptances will be sent by January 27th. The very best submissions will be invited to submit a paper length version of the talk by July 31st to appear in a special issue of Synthese.
Please direct questions to [email protected]