CFP: New Perspectives on Causation in the Life Sciences

Submission deadline: February 14, 2022

Conference date(s):
June 27, 2022 - June 28, 2022

Go to the conference's page

Conference Venue:

Department of Philosophy and Centre for Reasoning, University of Kent
Canterbury, United Kingdom

Topic areas

Details

Dates

27 - 28 June 2022

Venue

University of Kent, UK

Organiser

Yafeng Shan (University of Kent)

Confirmed Speakers

John Dupre (University of Exeter)

Samir Okasha (University of Bristol)

Charles Pence (Université catholique de Louvain)

Lauren Ross (University of California, Irvine)

Jutta Schickore (Indiana University, Bloomington)

James Woodward (University of Pittsburgh)

Funders

The British Academy
The Leverhulme Trust

Description

Causation is arguably one of the most controversial and persistent topics in the philosophy of the life sciences. Some (e.g. Reutlinger 2013; Anjum and Mumford 2018) have tried to develop monistic theories of causation, while others (e.g. Woodward 2010; Joffe 2013) maintain that causation in the life sciences is pluralist. It has been accepted by many (e.g. Mayr 1961; Dickins and Barton 2013) that there is a clear distinction between proximate causation and ultimate causation in evolutionary biology, whereas recently some (e.g. Francis 1990; Laland et al. 2011; Haig 2013) are highly sceptical. The significance of the notion of causation in biology has also been debated (Darden 2013). The conference aims to examine the issues relate to causation in the life sciences. The questions to be address include but are not limited to:

What is the best approach to causation in the life sciences?

Which better captures the concept of causation in the life sciences: causal pluralism or causal monism?

Is the concept of causation in the life sciences special in any sense?

Is the concept of causation in the life sciences reducible to that in the physical sciences?

Is the concept of causation in the life sciences teleological?

Is the distinction between proximate causation and ultimate causation tenable?

*For more information, please click here.

**The conference is part of the BA/Leverhulme-funded project ‘The Metaphysical Foundations of Evidential Pluralism’ (2020-2022).

Submission Guidelines  

Please submit a 500-word abstract via Easychair by 14 February 2022. All questions about submissions should be emailed to Yafeng Shan ([email protected]).

Supporting material

Add supporting material (slides, programs, etc.)