Apparently some short girl called Clarke dreamt up the idea of
linking inheritance and cooperation for the focus of a conference.
An audio file of my introductory talk can be found here. Here is (roughly) what I had to say in my defence:
Tuesday, 21 July 2015
Inheritance and cooperation, June 25/25 2015
Well that was one awesome meeting, if I do say so myself. We came from all corners of the globe (Oxford, Cambridge, Exeter, France, Switzerland, Finland, California and even Australia), from all hierarchical levels (from UG to Emeritus) and from at least five disciplines (Philosophy, Biology, Computer Science, Psychology and Anthropology). We came, we talked, we shared, and it was good. The sandwiches left a bit to be desired and the rainstorm on departure was sub-optimal. But you can't have everything.
I learnt a ton, and I'm going to write a series of posts describing the talks in their order of appearance, followed by a final attempt at synthesis. I'll also be posting links to audio files so you can listen to the talks and responses for yourselves.
Comments and feedback will be more than welcome!
I was delighted to watch graduate students, doing their first ever public speaking, give clear and incisive
commentaries to the main talks. My prestigious and eloquent speakers were lively
and gracious when the enthusiastic and sometimes unrelenting debate flowed in
after their talks. And break times were full of silo-busting chatter….Are
philosophers more argumentative than biologists? Why are so many
anthropologists hostile to evolutionary approaches? Do models beat informal
arguments every time?
I learnt a ton, and I'm going to write a series of posts describing the talks in their order of appearance, followed by a final attempt at synthesis. I'll also be posting links to audio files so you can listen to the talks and responses for yourselves.
Comments and feedback will be more than welcome!
Tuesday, 16 June 2015
Inheritance and cooperation program
All talks take place in LR23 at Balliol College, Oxford
Thursday 25th
June
09.45am – 10.15am
|
Welcome coffee
|
10.15am – 11.00am
|
Dr Ellen Clarke (Philosophy,
Oxford): Introduction to inheritance and cooperation.
|
11.00am – 12.30pm
|
Prof. Heikki Helanterä (Zoology, Helsinki): ‘Superorganisms as model systems.’
|
Dr Tobias Uller (Zoology, Oxford/Lund): Response
|
|
12.30pm – 2.00pm
|
Lunch (Hall)
|
2.00pm - 3.30pm
|
Dr Francesca Merlin (Philosophy,
Paris): ‘Limited extended
inheritance.’
|
Matthew Clarke (BPhil Philosophy, Oxford): Response
|
|
3.30pm – 4.00pm
|
Coffee
|
4.00pm – 5.30pm
|
Dr Simon Powers (Zoology, Lausanne): ‘What
drove the last major evolutionary transition to large-scale human societies?’
|
Jessica Laimann (BPhil Philosophy, Oxford): Response
|
|
Friday 26th
June
9.00am – 10.30am
|
Dr Rachael Brown (Philosophy,
Macquarie): ‘Generating benefit: Social
learning and the other cooperation problem.’
|
Prof. Cecilia Heyes (Psychology, Oxford): Response
|
|
10.30am - 11.00am
|
Coffee
|
11.00am -12.30pm
|
Dr Jonathan Birch (Philosophy,
LSE): ‘Time and relatedness in microbes
and humans.’
|
Michael Bentley (DPhil Zoology, Oxford): Response
|
|
12.30pm – 2.00pm
|
Lunch (Hall)
|
2.00pm – 3.30pm
|
Prof. Peter J Richerson (Biology,
UC Davis):
|
Dr John Odling-Smee (Anthropology, Oxford): Response
|
|
3.30pm - 4.30pm
|
Roundtable discussion with coffee
|
Monday, 11 May 2015
Morality as Cooperation
Dr Oliver Scott Curry from Oxford's Institute of Cognitive and Evolutionary Anthropology came and gave a really interesting talk to my reading group last week. Curry defends the claim that morality is best understood as being all about cooperation.
Here is a video of the talk.(The audio is rather low I'm afraid, but should be okay for headphones.)
The thesis was that morality is a set of instincts, customs, preferences and behaviours unified by their common function of facilitating for-the-good-of-the-group, cooperative behaviour. The morals themselves are best revealed by empirical techniques including ethnographic survey, Curry claimed, and the functions of the morals are best elucidated using game theory. When we survey moral attitudes and behaviours, we will see that we tend to consider as moral only those acts which are best for the group.
Here is a video of the talk.(The audio is rather low I'm afraid, but should be okay for headphones.)
The thesis was that morality is a set of instincts, customs, preferences and behaviours unified by their common function of facilitating for-the-good-of-the-group, cooperative behaviour. The morals themselves are best revealed by empirical techniques including ethnographic survey, Curry claimed, and the functions of the morals are best elucidated using game theory. When we survey moral attitudes and behaviours, we will see that we tend to consider as moral only those acts which are best for the group.
Monday, 4 May 2015
Toddler on tour
Well, I can't imagine this sounding anything but irritating BUT we just came home from a hot, exotic, holiday-of-a-lifetime, and I need to shout about it before the effects fade along with my tan.
Tuesday, 21 April 2015
Friday, 27 March 2015
Conference Announcement
Inheritance and Cooperation
June 25th & 26th, Balliol College Oxford
Heredity is understood to be a core ingredient of evolution
by natural selection, and is standardly thought of as mediated by the passing
of genes from parents to their offspring. Genetic inheritance underpins the
theory of kin selection, which stands as a leading explanation for the
evolution of cooperation. Organisms can be selected to help their relatives,
because those relatives inherited some of the same genes from the common
ancestor. We say that helping relatives then boosts the organism's indirect
fitness. However, cooperation takes place in many scenarios in which there is
no recourse to explanation in terms of indirect fitness benefits, because the
participants lack a common genetic inheritance: between species; between
unrelated humans; between genes; to name a few.
We are becomingly increasingly aware of the action of
systems of inheritance that are not genetic. Organisms inherit, for example,
epigenetic marks, niches, symbionts, culture. We are learning more and more
about non-standard genetic inheritance systems such as lateral gene transfer,
meiotic driver genes and transposable elements.
What happens to our ability to explain the occurrence of
cooperation if we expand our conception of inheritance? Might we throw light on
the possibility of cooperation between partners that fail to share a common
genetic inheritance? Can other inheritance systems play an analogous
explanatory role to that played by genes in kin selection theory? Are all
inheritance systems equal, in this sense, or do they vary in ways that
systematically affect their influence upon cooperation?
The aim of this conference is to pull together people who
research different sorts of inheritance systems, or explore the impact of those
systems on cooperation, to see if anything general can be extracted about the
ways in which inheritance influences cooperation.
Confirmed speakers:
Francesca Merlin (Philosophy, Paris)
Heikki Helanterä (Biology, Helsinki)
Rachael Brown (Philosophy, Macquarie)
Simon Powers (Biology, Lausanne)
Maria Kronfeldner (Philosophy, Bielefeld)
Tobias Uller (Biology, Lund/Oxford)
Jonathan Birch (Philosophy, LSE)
Monday, 16 March 2015
Well this is depressing......
Over at Daily Nous there is a discussion taking place about the ethics and etiquette of using parenting duties as an excuse to duck out of certain academic duties,
Wednesday, 18 February 2015
Evolution of a mama
Yesterday I sat in the sunshine having a picnic with my nearly two year old. Today I'm sitting in the sun alone, at university parks, reading about philosophy of microbiology. On days like these, when the sun is shining and my night wasn't disturbed, and nobody is ill and all my deadlines are more than 24 hours away, I feel like I'm winning, like I'm having it all. Unfortunately, for every day like this I have about a months worth of frazzled, perma-late, failing to keep up.
Monday, 9 February 2015
Exciting news
We're moving to Leeds! I've accepted a permanent position as Lecturer in Philosophy, to start September 2016.
We have a little while then to tie-up loose ends in Oxford, to fantasize about snow-topped moors and research toddler-friendly hang-outs. I expect Leeds has changed since my days as an undergraduate there, though possibly not as much as I have. The department's faculty are the warmest, nicest bunch of superstellar philosophy heroes you'll ever meet. There is one question that can't be answered for several years to come, however........is the bear going to develop a Northern accent?!!?! There is only one way to find out..................
We have a little while then to tie-up loose ends in Oxford, to fantasize about snow-topped moors and research toddler-friendly hang-outs. I expect Leeds has changed since my days as an undergraduate there, though possibly not as much as I have. The department's faculty are the warmest, nicest bunch of superstellar philosophy heroes you'll ever meet. There is one question that can't be answered for several years to come, however........is the bear going to develop a Northern accent?!!?! There is only one way to find out..................
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