Minnesota Center for Philosophy of Science

Minnesota Center for Philosophy of Science © 2010 Regents of the University of Minnesota, an equal opportunity educator and employer. Maintained

The mission of the Minnesota Center for Philosophy of Science (MCPS) is to promote excellence in research and training in philosophy of science and related empirical studies of science. It was founded in 1953 by Herbert Feigl, a member of the famous “Vienna Circle” and the first to immigrate to North America. Feigl was well known for his “intellectual hospitality” and MCPS quickly became the gathe

ring place for leading proponents of logical empiricism. The establishment of MCPS went hand in hand with the establishment of logical empiricism as the dominant philosophy of scientific knowledge. The Center is no longer committed to a single perspective and now seeks to promote a plurality of views about science and from a multiplicity of perspectives including historical and social scientific as well as philosophical. The Center is both an international center of research and a local center that brings together scholars from multiple departments, colleges, and universities in our geographical region. It sponsors a variety of activities including multiple discussion groups, colloquia, and special events such as the annual science studies colloquium. It also brings together researchers from around the world through its visiting fellow program and its conferences, and conducts collaborative research projects through topical workshops, the major results of which are published in Minnesota Studies in the Philosophy of Science. Current volumes in this series can be purchased through the University of Minnesota Press. The Center provides the administrative support for the Graduate Minor in Studies of Science and Technology (SST) and also the Conceptual Foundations of Evolutionary Biology Graduate Group. It works collaboratively with a number of groups at the University including the History of Science, Technology, and Medicine Graduate Program (HSTM), the Department of Philosophy (Phil), and the Theorizing Early Modern Studies Research Collaborative (TEMS).

The Center Discussion Group will meet this Friday, October 11 to discuss "Causation with a Human Face: Normative Theory ...
10/08/2024

The Center Discussion Group will meet this Friday, October 11 to discuss "Causation with a Human Face: Normative Theory and Descriptive Psychology", 2021, by J. F. Woodward, New York: Oxford University Press.
This week's reading: Chapter 2 (pp 61-114)

The Biological Interest Group will meet, Friday, October 11, 10:15am in 737 Heller Hall and online to discuss Ross, L.N....
10/08/2024

The Biological Interest Group will meet, Friday, October 11, 10:15am in 737 Heller Hall and online to discuss Ross, L.N. "Cascade versus Mechanism: The Diversity of Causal Structure in Science". British Journal for Philosophy of Science. https://doi.org/10.1086/723623
Author Lauren Ross, UC Irvine, will be visiting.

The British Journal for the Philosophy of ScienceJust Accepted Previous articleNext article FreeCascade versus Mechanism: The Diversity of Causal Structure in ScienceLauren N. RossLauren N. Ross Search for more articles by this author PDFPDF PLUS Add to favoritesDownload CitationTrack CitationsPermi...

10/08/2024

MCPS Colloquium
Friday, October 11, 2024, 3:35 pm
216 Pillsbury Drive, room 125 (formerly Nicholson Hall)

Types of Causation in the Life Sciences

Lauren Ross
Logic and Philosophy of Science, University of California, Irvine

All welcome

This semester, EMIG is reading Catherine Wilson’s Kant and the Naturalistic Turn of 18th Century Philosophy (Oxford: Oxf...
10/01/2024

This semester, EMIG is reading Catherine Wilson’s Kant and the Naturalistic Turn of 18th Century Philosophy (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2022) The meeting on Friday October 4, 1:30pm CDT will focus on Chapters 3 and 4 (pp. 68–109).
For more information:

What are we reading? Find out by exploring our research groups on conceptual aspects of different sciences.

10/01/2024

The Biological Interest Group will meet, Friday, October 4, 10:15am in 737 Heller Hall and online to discussSchneider, T. 2024. The Microbiome Function in a Host Organism: A Medical Puzzle or an Essential Ecological Environment? Biological Theory 19:44–55

New semester, first meeting this Friday.The Biological Interest Group will meet, Friday, September 6, 10:15am in 737 Hel...
09/03/2024

New semester, first meeting this Friday.
The Biological Interest Group will meet, Friday, September 6, 10:15am in 737 Heller Hall and online to discuss Robinson, D.G., et al. 2024. "Mother trees, altruistic fungi, and the perils of plant personification." Trends in Plant Science 29:20-31.
For more details: https://cla.umn.edu/.../researc.../biological-interest-group

04/16/2024

This Physics Interests Group will meet online and in parson this Friday, April 19, at 1:30pm to discuss the Oxford Handbook of the History of Quantum Interpretations. 2022. Chapter 35. The reception of the Forman thesis in modernity and postmodernity, Paul Forman
For more details see

EMIG will conclude reading Spinoza’s "Principles of Cartesian Philosophy" 1998. Baruch Spinoza, Translated by Samuel Shi...
04/16/2024

EMIG will conclude reading Spinoza’s "Principles of Cartesian Philosophy" 1998. Baruch Spinoza, Translated by Samuel Shirley. Cambridge, MA: Hackett Publishing pp. 86–91 (Part 3) at its meeting on Friday April 19, 1:30pm CDT.
For more information: http://mcps.umn.edu/groups/earlyModern.html

The Center Discussion Group will meet this Friday, April 12 to discuss  Chapter 8: The inferentialist view of natural ki...
04/09/2024

The Center Discussion Group will meet this Friday, April 12 to discuss Chapter 8: The inferentialist view of natural kinds (pp. 249-272) in "Perspectival Realism" 2022. by Michela Massimi, New York: Oxford University Press.
More:

Information about the Center Discussion Group

The Biological Interest Group will discuss Benning, J.W., J. Carlson, R.G. Shaw, and A. Harpak (manuscript) Confounding ...
04/09/2024

The Biological Interest Group will discuss
Benning, J.W., J. Carlson, R.G. Shaw, and A. Harpak (manuscript) Confounding Fuels Hereditarian Fallacies.
at this week's meeting, Friday, April 12, 10:15am in 737 Heller Hall and online.

For more details:

Information about the Biological Interest Group

EMIG will continue reading Spinoza’s "Principles of Cartesian Philosophy" 1998. Baruch Spinoza, Translated by Samuel Shi...
03/26/2024

EMIG will continue reading Spinoza’s "Principles of Cartesian Philosophy" 1998. Baruch Spinoza, Translated by Samuel Shirley. Cambridge, MA: Hackett Publishing pp. 45–69 (Part 2, through proposition 18) at its meeting on Friday March 29, 1:30pm CDT. This will be an online meeting.
For more information: http://mcps.umn.edu/groups/earlyModern.html

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