CFP: Philosophy of Scientific Experimentation

Submission deadline: January 15, 2014

Conference date(s):
April 11, 2014 - April 12, 2014

Go to the conference's page

Conference Venue:

Center for Philosophy of Science, University of Pittsburgh
Pittsburgh, United States

Topic areas

Details

Submissions on any aspect of experiment and simulation are welcome.

Deadline: January 15, 2014
Notification By: February 15, 2014
Submission Requirement: 1000-word abstract
Submit through EasyChair: https://www.easychair.org/conferences/?conf=psx4

Accommodations: Rooms for scholars whose contributed papers are accepted will be provided for three nights.

This is the fourth conference which explores the roles of experiment in science and the reasons why one experiment legitimately plays such roles. In this conference we wish to emphasize answers to the question, "What Makes a Good Experiment?" One can distinguish between conceptually important experiments, those classified by their relation to theory; testing theory, calling for a new theory etc. and technically good experiments, those that measure a quantity of scientific interest with greater accuracy and precision than had been done previously. Both types of experiment must be methodologically good, experiments that give reasoned and valid arguments for the credibility of their results.

KEYNOTE SPEAKERS

Paula Grabowski (University of Pittsburgh)

Andrea Loettgers (University of Geneva)

Margaret Morrison (University of Toronto)

Paolo Palmieri (University of Pittsburgh)

ORGANIZING COMMITTEE

Allan Franklin, Chair (University of Colorado Boulder; [email protected])

Deborah Mayo (Virginia Tech; [email protected])

John Norton (University of Pittsburgh; [email protected])

Wendy Parker (Ohio University; Durham University; [email protected])

Slobodan Perovic (University of Belgrade; [email protected])

Samuel Schindler (Aarhus University; [email protected])

Marcel Weber (University of Geneva; [email protected])

Supporting material

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