CFP: Emergence

Submission deadline: June 30, 2015

Conference date(s):
October 16, 2015 - October 18, 2015

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Conference Venue:

The Committee for the History and Philosophy of Science, University of Colorado, Boulder
Boulder, United States

Topic areas

Details

Description:The notion of emergence is of central interest across a variety of domains of philosophical and scientific inquiry. Emergent phenomena are phenomena that in some sense “arise” from other phenomena, on which they somehow “depend” but to which they’re also somehow “irreducible”. Putative examples are common and span physical, chemical, biological, psychological, linguistic, social, economic, and political dimensions. The notion of emergence is invoked to account for phenomena that appear to resist more familiar forms of theoretical characterization. Use of the notion in both philosophy and science has a long history. As such use has become more central and pervasive, the need for careful, systematic theorizing about it has become more pressing. Exactly what is emergence, and how is it related to such notions as grounding, explanation, supervenience, causation, and identity? Does the notion help illuminate the nature of the relevant phenomena, or does it hide a lack of understanding behind an obscure concept? The conference aims to explore these and related issues from philosophical and scientific perspectives, both historical and contemporary.

Keynote speakers:              

Jessica Wilson, Department of Philosophy, University of Toronto

Michael Hermele, Department of Physics, University of Colorado

Paul Humphreys, Department of Philosophy, University of Virginia


Submissions:

We invite submissions on any historical or contemporary topic related to scientific or philosophical issues regarding emergence. Aiming for both depth and breadth, we welcome cutting-edge work at any level of specificity or generality.

Faculty interested in presenting are invited to submit an abstract of 500-1000 words. Graduate students are invited to submit full papers of 3000-4000 words. All submissions should be prepared for blind review, and should be suitable for 30-40min sessions. Submissions are due by June 30, 2015 and should be sent as an email attachment in pdf format to the organizers, professors Carol Cleland ([email protected]) and Raul Saucedo ([email protected]).  Acceptances will be announced by August 5, 2015.

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