Center for Philosophy of Science
1008 & 1117 Cathedral of Learning
University of Pittsburgh
Pittsburgh, PA USA
CALL FOR ABSTRACTS
Functional brain imaging studies try to map patterns of activation to cognitive functions, and usually rely upon functional task decomposition based on hypotheses derived from intuition and cognitive psychology. The tasks we postulate constitute a cognitive ontology. What is the epistemic status of these functional commitments? Do we have reason to believe they accurately track the fundamental building blocks of cognition? Does the idea that cognition has fundamental building blocks have merit? Is there a way to bootstrap ourselves out of mistaken theories, or are the methods of neuroimaging ill-suited to alert us to mistaken views? Can other areas of neuroscience help constrain our ontologies? What is the upshot of the issues for gaining knowledge from neuroimaging studies and for theories of scientific realism more generally?
This interdisciplinary conference will focus upon these questions and their philosophical implications, and will explore possible methods for addressing these philosophical concerns, such as data-driven discovery methods for cognitive functions. We invite scholars from philosophy and the neurosciences to submit proposals for submitted talks and encourage all participants to think broadly and outside the box about these fundamental epistemological issues in neuroscience.
Abstract submission deadline: December 15, 2019
Please submit a short abstract of 250-300 words.
Abstracts will be anonymously refereed and results communicated to authors by mid-January 2020.
Abstract submission is electronic. Please go to:
https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=cogont2019
If you do not have an EasyChair account you must create one on entering the site. After logging in, click the ‘New Submission’ link and add your abstract. You can revise your submission any number of times before the deadline.
Further inquiries may be addressed to Morgan Thompson (mot14@pitt.edu).
INVITED SPEAKERS:
Michael Anderson, Western University
Carl Craver, Washington University
Joseph McCaffrey, University of Nebraska, Omaha
Russ Poldrack, Stanford University
Jackie Sullivan, Western University
PROGRAM COMMITTEE:
Adina Roskies, Dartmouth College
Trey Boone, University of Pittsburgh
Mazviita Chirimuuta, University of Pittsburgh
Edouard Machery, University of Pittsburgh
Zina Ward, University of Pittsburgh
SPONSOR:
The Center for Philosophy of Science
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