Event date | June 30, 2025 - July 02, 2025 |
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Submission deadline | January 31, 2025 |
Location | Switzerland |
Host(s) | University of Bern |
Event website/information | For more info, please contact Mahdi Khalili (mahdi.khalili@unibe.ch) |
Call for Abstract Submissions to the Conference:
Meta-Level Reflections on the Scientific Realism Debate
Conference Date and Place: 30 June – 2 July 2025 at the University of Bern, Switzerland
Organized by Matthias Egg, Mahdi Khalili, and Frederick Britt
Confirmed speakers: Sandy Boucher, Anjan Chakravartty, Curtis Forbes, Leah Henderson, Stathis Psillos, Kyle Stanford, and Peter Vickers
We invite submissions for talks that align with the conference theme (see below), with particular encouragement for early career researchers and members of underrepresented groups to apply. Submissions should include an abstract of 500 to 800 words and should be submitted via email to Mahdi Khalili (mahdi.khalili@unibe.ch) by 31 January 2025. Notification of results will be sent in March 2025.
We plan to offer travel grants for selected applications by researchers who cannot obtain funding from their home institution. Details on how to apply for travel grants will be provided once papers have been accepted.
In this conference, we will take a step back and reconsider the nature, value, and means of the debate. Indeed, there have been clear signs of a particularist as well as a pragmatic turn for some time. Particularists, on the one hand, might endorse the proliferation of case studies while arguing that philosophical considerations must yield to scientific evidence for or against any specific claims under consideration. Pragmatists, on the other hand, might embrace the proliferation of philosophical accounts while arguing that they will ultimately rest on opposing stances rather than solid evidence of any kind. This raises further questions as to whether there might be any grounds to adopt one stance over another. There are those who advocate voluntarism in this respect, but many would rather see practical implications for research, science policy, science communication, or the social role of science being explored and taken into account accordingly.
How promising are these developments? To address this, our conference will bring together scholars who are particularly interested in exploring:
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The importance and limitations of using case studies in the realism debate.
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The need (or needlessness) to justify the adoption of a certain stance in the debate.
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The usefulness of the debate for science, science policy, or society at large.
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Other approaches to rendering the debate more fruitful.
Suggested Readings:
Boucher, Sandy C. & Forbes, Curtis, 2024. “The pragmatic turn in the scientific realism debate”, in: Synthese 203/4. 1-23.
Brousalis, Kosmas & Psillos, Stathis, 2023. “Learning to Live with a Circle: Reflective Equilibrium and the Received View of the Scientific Realism Debate”, in: Global Philosophy 33/5. 1-21.
Chakravartty, Anjan, 2017. Scientific Ontology. Integrating Naturalized Metaphysics and Voluntarist Epistemology, New York: Oxford University Press.
Egg, Matthias, 2024. “Stances and Doctrines in Scientific Metaphysics”, in: Scientific Theories and Philosophical Stances. Themes from van Fraassen, Berlin/Boston: de Gruyter. 181-192.
Forbes, Curtis, 2017. “A pragmatic, existentialist approach to the scientific realism debate”, in: Synthese 194/9. 3327-3346.
Henderson, Leah, 2018. “Global versus local arguments for realism”, in: Juha Saatsi (ed.), The Routledge Handbook of Scientific Realism, London: Routledge.151-163.
Psillos, Stathis, 2011. “Choosing the realist framework”, in: Synthese 180/2. 301-316.
Stanford, P. Kyle, 2021. “Realism, Instrumentalism, Particularism: A Middle Path Forward in the Scientific Realism Debate”, in: Timothy D. Lyons / Peter Vickers (eds.), Contemporary Scientific Realism: The Challenge From the History of Science, New York: Oxford University Press. 216-238.
Vickers, Peter, 2023. Identifying Future-Proof Science, Oxford: Oxford University Press.