Saturday, 18 September 2021

Day 5 (Am i regretting this numbering system yet?)

 Time to do some reviewing of the week, before i sign out and into parent mode till monday. 

Did i meet my goals? Did it turn out as i planned? Do i need to make some changes for next week?

Ha, i'm sometimes sniffy about business-style evaluation systems, but that two-line exercise just revealed my first rookie error. I didn't set any goals last week! At least, i only set them for one day, and they were pretty vague. I should probably set some writing goals, as in actual numbers of words written each week. except i don't think i'm ready for that yet. I'm the kind of person who can spew out words numbering in 4 or even 5 digits in a day without particularly trying. In fact, it takes a concerted effort not to. Because its often useless - they're either random tangents or repetitions of things i already wrote. I do it when i'm avoiding the more taxing labour of actually *thinking*.

What i did do last week was make progress on some more specific goals. I sent off a review, read a couple papers that were on my list, attended a bunch of awesome talks at EPSA, and got my talk for next week mostly into shape. Oh and i started blogging and updated my website. That's not horrible going for a week. *but* its very hard to measure the extent to which any of it furthered my book. 

Here is an attempt at some plausible goals for next week though:

  • Today: Reread James Di Frisco's excellent paper on Sortals, projectibility and selection.
  • Tuesday and Wednesday: work on my talk in the mornings, then attend the workshop for the rest of the day
  • Then by the end of the week i should capitalise on everything being fresh in my mind, and get a first draft of the whole metaphysics chapter finished.
ok go!

Friday, 17 September 2021

Workshop: Metaphysics of biological individuality

 Dear All,

 

There will be an online workshop (Zoom) on Metaphysics of Biological Individuality on Monday 20th and Tuesday 21st of September 2021, from 13:30 to 16h30 each afternoon (UK time). This workshop is hosted by the Sorbonne University and the CNRS. All are welcome to attend, and no registration is required. 

 

Monday 20th September (UK time)

13:30 – 15:00: Samir Okasha (University of Bristol): "On the very idea of biological individuality"
15:00 – 15:05: (Short break)
15:05 – 16:35: Will Morgan (University of Sheffield) "Biological individuality and the foetus problem"

Tuesday 21st September (UK time)

13:30 – 15:00: Ellen Clarke (University of Leeds) "On the need to keep hold of biological individuals"
15:00 – 15:05: (Short break)
15:05 – 16:35: James DiFrisco (KU Leuven) "The individuation of biological characters"

 For the zoom links, please email  martens.johannes@free.fr

Wednesday, 15 September 2021

Day 2 Group selection for Maynard Smith and Sober


 

So yesterday went really well. To my surprise, i did everything i'd planned!  My brain was working, i made some good headway on the talk.

Today - meh. I often find that a good, smart day is followed by a dip. And i didn't even get drunk! I just woke up and couldn't face going back to the notes i'd finished the evening before. It's not the end of the world because i was in and out of EPSA talks and meetings today anyway. 

But then this book arrived in the post and has saved me. It's a book that's kind of hard to get hold of. At least, libraries rarely have it,  and pdfs don't seem to circulate online, so i had to stump up and buy it. Which is another reason why scholars without much cash - say early career folk who pay for a lot of childcare - are disadvantaged in academia. But i don't have eye-watering childcare costs anymore, so worldofbooks got my money.

It was so worth it! For a random edited collection from 1987, its pretty widely-cited, and now i can see why.  Chapter 5 'How to Model Evolution' by John Maynard Smith, and the ensuing back and forth he has with Elliott Sober, is gold.

I think i can build one of my chapters around it (not the one i was meant to be working on, but hey)  so i'm going to put my initial thoughts about it down here.

Tuesday, 14 September 2021

Day 1. (or approx 548 if we're counting since i actually *started* the project)

 I've got a relatively long day at my disposal today - 9.30 till 5 - because my kids do after school club on tuesdays. Mondays are short - 9.30 till 3 - and wednesdays to fridays are long, because my ex picks the kids up on those days at the moment. In theory its a pretty good weekly schedule for writing, because i've got a short day on monday to ease myself back into thinking after a weekend of pritsticking and wiping things, and the days gradually get longer till by the end of the week i can go on full on crazed-immersion and pull all nighters, just in time to be a weird starey robot for my kids on saturday.

In practice, of course, there are all manner of obstacles in the path of extended concentration. This week is EPSA, the meeting of the European Philosophy of Science Association, in Turin. I'm not presenting, but since i'm on the steering committee i will definitely attend some talks and meetings, virtually.  I also have a deadline coming up on a paper i'm supposed to referee. And next week i'm presenting (virtually) at a meeting in Paris. Happily, there is some overlap between the topic of those two.

So, the plan for today is to write my referee's report (i already read the paper yesterday - i like to sleep on it before i write my report, if i can), read a second  paper on a similar topic, and then start assembling some thoughts that will double as (i) content for my talk next week and (ii) the basis for chapter 7 of my book - on metaphysical problems associated with biological individuality.

Ok, go!

How to finish a book (?)

 It's 9.24 on a tuesday morning. I've just got back from the school run, fed the cats and unloaded the dishwasher so i could make myself a coffee. And i'm acting on an idea i had while falling asleep last night.

Last spring i was lucky enough to be awarded a semester of research leave, by the Leverhulme Trust. It's to complete a book project that i began the spring before last, when my sabbatical was interrupted by you-know-what. The title is 'The Units of Life: Kinds of individuals in biology'. I managed to get two chapters and a proper book proposal finished in the car crash formerly known as 2020. On the one hand, this was cool, as it enabled me to get a contract with OUP and a Leverhulme Award to actually finish it. On the other hand, this leaves 6 chapters still to go, and now that people have paid me money i actually have to do it (whose idea was this?! why did i only ask for a semester of leave? why is the school holiday so long waaaaaaaaaaa etc.)

The kids went back to school last week, so i've finally got a suitable amount of bandwidth to get down to writing in earnest. and i'm pretty petrified 😬

I've also been thinking for ages that i want to try to get back to blogging a bit. It's not so much the done thing any more, compared to when i first started blogging in 2013. Most former bloggers have moved on to tiktok or become influencers by now, but i'm waaaaay too old and daggy for those. 

So i've hit upon the idea of using this platform as a sort of veruccas-n-all diary of what it's like to be a 40 year old academic with two young children, trying to complete a book manuscript in four months. At worst it will be a boring displacement activity. At best it will serve me as a commitment device and way to mull ideas over. It might even make someone chuckle, and maybe someone senior will even read it and spot some terrible error i'm making in time to save me from it!

So the plan is to log on every  few days to make a note of what i'm planning to do, what got in my way and what miserable level of sanity i'm currently operating at.

Good luck reader!

Monday, 18 January 2021

HPS in 20: Essay competition winners

In November 2020 we announced an essay competition, in which year 12 and 13 A-Level students were invited to send us 800-word essays telling us which of our 20 objects is the most important, and why.

We received a wonderful array of impressively scholarly essays on different topics, and I am now delighted to announce our winners!

In first place, Aarushi Malik, from King Edward VI Camp Hill School in Birmingham, sent us a stylishly written case for the Stethoscope. She showed an excellent grasp of the complex materials of the lecture while going beyond them to draw an optimistic and timely lesson about the progress of science and medicine. Aarushi nets £100.

Sara Hamdani, from Xaverian College in Manchester, and Ruby Cline, from Chiswick School in West London, are our two prize-winning runners-up, and will be awarded £50 each. Sara wrote an imaginative, well researched, and wonderfully written essay on how, from Plato to Freud, the horse-and-rider figurine has symbolized human attempts to use reason to understand the often irrational human mind. Ruby submitted a very thoughtful and well researched essay on the Biblical herbarium as a clue to major themes in the sociology of religion and of popular science in Victorian Britain.

You can read all three essays on the centre's blog!

Congratulations to all our winners, and many thanks to everyone who submitted an essay. We were delighted by the level of enthusiasm on display, and feel confident that HPS has a very rosy future and will be in good hands.

Thursday, 14 January 2021

HPS Matters

 The Leeds Centre for History and Philosophy of Science has a sensational spring seminar schedule.

HPS Matters

Shining a spotlight on research that showcases how history and philosophy of science can illuminate issues of current and real-world importance in our everyday lives.

Wednesdays, 3.15-5 GMT

All talks will be live streamed over TEAMS. Email the centre director at e.clarke@leeds.ac.uk to get the link and join the debate!

 27 January 2021: Laura Franklin-Hall (NYU): Genders as Historical Explanatory Kinds

10 February 2021: Alexander Franklin (KCL): Social Construction, Physical Construction, and Emergence

24 February 2021: Edward Jones-Imhotep (UToronto): Birth of a Notation: Charting Human and Machine Failure at the Dawn of the Jazz Age

10 March 2021: Jill Kirby (Sussex): Stress – the plague of modern life?

24 March 2021: Liz Chatterjee (Chicago): Late Acceleration: Indian Electricity and Planetary History

28 April 2021: Steven Shapin (Harvard): Hard vs soft science: What is at stake?

12 May 2021: Michael Stuart (Geneva): NASA's Minipublics: How NASA Uses Imagination to Shape the American Space Imaginary.

19 May 2021: Haixin Dang (Leeds): Social Epistemology of Science

Friday, 18 December 2020

Leverhulme 'Extinction Studies' DTP

Good news: Leverhulme Doctoral Training Programme in Extinction Studies funded at University of Leeds.

I am delighted to announce that I am part of a new Leverhulme-funded Doctoral Training Programme (DTP) in Extinction Studies that will commence with a first intake of graduate students in September/October 2021.

The cross-disciplinary programme headed up by Graham Huggan and Stefan Skrimshire spans 4 faculties at the University of Leeds and will focus on all aspects of extinction, from social/humanitarian problems, to the decline of biodiversity (past and present) and cultural extinction.

The Leverhulme Trust have provided funds of £1.35 million to fund 15 PhD studentships across 3 years with a further 4 studentships being funded by each faculty involved (total 19 studentships). These are fully funded at home student rates for fees, research allowance and stipend (i.e. salary costs).

The programme along with applications details and deadlines will be announced very soon.

I am keen to hear from students who wish to work at the interface of philosophy and ecology, to think about the meanings of core concepts such as 'human', 'ecosystem', 'nature', 'species', and what implications our understanding of these concepts have for conservation work and for environmental ethics. 

If this is an area you are interested in and you have ideas about potential projects, please contact me at e.clarke@leeds.ac.uk 

Monday, 16 November 2020

HPS in 20 objects: Essay competition!

Calling all year 13 science students (and those who teach them):

The Leeds Centre for History and Philosophy of Science is excited to announce an essay competition, open to UK 6th form students. The winning essay will score a £100 prize. 

To enter, just visit our online exhibition 'HPS in 20 objects' and tell us, in 800 words, 'Which of our '20 objects' is the most important, and why?'

All entrants will receive a certificate and the chance to have their work featured on our website. The deadline is 5pm on monday 21st December, and winners will be announced in early January, before the UCAS deadline. More details can be found in the exhibition itself.

Please share the news!

Friday, 18 September 2020

University of Leeds History & Philosophy of Science Seminar Series (online), Semester 1 2020-21.

 

UNIVERSITY OF LEEDS

 History & Philosophy of Science Seminar Series

 Semester 1, 2020-21

Wednesdays, 3.15-5pm UK time

                                             All talks will be live streamed over TEAMS.

Email Dr Ellen Clarke e.clarke@leeds.ac.uk  to get the link.

 

14 OCTOBER 2020

Ruben Verwaal (Durham): ‘Fluid Deafness: Earwax and Hardness of Hearing in Early Modern Science’


 28 OCTOBER 2020

Hayley Clatterbuck (Wisconsin-Madison): ‘Darwin's causal argument against creationism’


 11 NOVEMBER 2020

Pierre-Olivier Méthot (Université Laval):

‘Beyond Foucault’s Grip: Making Sense of François Jacob’s The Logic of Life’


 25 NOVEMBER 2020

Lena Zuchowski (Bristol): ‘What Kind of Models are Deep Learning Algorithms?’

 

9 DECEMBER 2020

Jimena Canales (Illinois): ‘Science and the History of Non-Existent Things’

 

Abstracts below

 --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

14 OCTOBER 2020

Ruben Verwaal (Durham): ‘Fluid Deafness: Earwax and Hardness of Hearing in Early Modern Science’

Abstract: This talk discusses hearing disability in early modern science and presents Enlightenment medicine as part of a profound shift in thinking about deafness. Scholars have already described changes in the social status of the deaf in eighteenth-century Europe, pointing at clerics’ sympathy for the deaf and philosophers’ fascination with gestures as the origin of language. Yet few historians have examined the growing interest in deafness by physicians. From the seventeenth century onwards, natural philosophers and physicians researched varieties in ear wax, discovered fluids in the Eustachian Tube and cochlea, and developed new theories about the propagation of sound waves via so-called fluid airs. This paper proposes that the renewed focus on the fluids brought about a new understanding of auditory perception, which reconstructed hearing and deafness not in terms of a dichotomy, but in terms of a grading scale.

 28 OCTOBER 2020

Hayley Clatterbuck (Wisconsin-Madison): ‘Darwin's causal argument against creationism’

Abstract: In the Origin of Species, Darwin vacillates between two incompatible lines of attack on special creationism. At times, he argues that functionless traits are evidence against special creation, as we would expect a designer to create traits that are useful for their possessors. At other times, Darwin argues that special creationism is explanatorily vacuous, for any possible observation is compatible with some putative intention of the designer. However, in later works, Darwin turns to an argument against creationism—and indeed, against the possibility of design in nature more generally—that he finds much more compelling. He argues that the variations which arise are random with respect to fitness and hence there is no designer. I will examine why Darwin found this argument much more compelling than the ones in the Origin and will suggest that it is because it can be made from general causal principles alone, rather than having to reason about the intentions or capacities of a creator. I will use tools from today’s causal modeling frameworks to examine whether and why this argument from random variation succeeds.

 11 NOVEMBER 2020

Pierre-Olivier Méthot (Université Laval): ‘Beyond Foucault’s Grip: Making Sense of François Jacob’s The Logic of Life’

Abstract: With a few notable exceptions, commentators have systematically observed striking similarities between French geneticist François Jacob’s The Logic of Life – A History of Heredity (1970) and Michel Foucault’s The Order of Things (1966) and The Archaeology of Knowledge (1969). There are grounds for thinking that Jacob was indeed influenced by the work of his colleague at the Collège de France: rejecting a linear view, Jacob proposed a discontinuous framework whereby each historical period is delineated by profound transformations in the nature of biological knowledge itself. He further attended to the “various stages of knowledge” he identified and how they enabled the study of new “objects” in biology, thanks not only to the development of instruments but to new ways of looking at the organism. Unsurprisingly, Foucault praised The Logic of Life as “the most remarkable history of biology ever written” and even used it as a confirmation of his own archaeological approach. This Foucauldian reading, although pervasive, is far too simple and is at best incomplete, however. But if Foucault isn’t the main intellectual source behind Jacob’s best-selling book, then who is? And why did Jacob – a Nobel Prize winner – suddenly turned into a historian of biology? In this talk, I advance a new narrative in order to make sense of The Logic of Life. Drawing on archival material from the Institut Pasteur in Paris, I will argue that the book is best characterized as a response to Jacques Monod’s biological vision of scientific growth. According to Monod, ideas in science follow a logic of mutation and selection, a view rejected by Jacob on the grounds that it takes evolutionary principles beyond their rightful domain. This crucial difference between Jacob and Monod, I will show, can shed new light on the opposition between “history of ideas” and “history of objects”. I will further argue that Jacob’s change in laboratory organism in the late 1960s was an important impetus in writing the book. Only in loosening Foucault’s grip and in situating The Logic of Life within its own cultural context can we hope to critically assess the promises and the limitations of Jacob’s historiographical legacy.

25 NOVEMBER 2020

Lena Zuchowski (Bristol): ‘What Kind of Models are Deep Learning Algorithms?’

Abstract: I will introduce a novel conceptual framework for the analysis of scientific modelling. The framework will be used to distinguish and comparatively analyse three different ways of model construction: vertical from covering theory and empirical knowledge about a given target system; horizontal through the systematic variation or transfer of existing models; and diagonal through a combination of vertical and horizontal construction steps. I will then apply this framework to analyse the construction of Deep Learning Algorithms and will argue that they can be interpreted as the automated, vertical, bottom-up construction of a sequence of scientific models. Furthermore, I will maintain that the practice of transfer learning can be interpreted as horizontal model construction.

 9 DECEMBER 2020

Jimena Canales (Illinois): ‘Science and the History of Non-Existent Things’

Abstract: What does not or does not yet exist plays a predominant role in science and technology. Discovery, either when considered as a process of uncovering or of creation, involves the bringing into existence of the new. As scientists search for answers and solutions, they are often confronted with problems and paradoxes that seem to escape from the realm of reason. The cause of such mischief is often anthropomorphized, called a demon, and given the last name of famous scientists, such as Descartes, Laplace, and Maxwell. The antechamber of discovery is not, as is frequently thought, an inscrutable “private art” marked by punctual “Eureka!” moments. It is a rich cultural, social, economic and political space filled with imaginary perpetrators with recognizable characteristics that have remained fairly constant throughout many centuries.  A study of the half-empty glass of scientific research reveals certain patterns in the search terms that drive discovery.