CFP: Turning the mirror: from scientific pluralism to pluralism in HPS
More info at https://philevents.org/event/s how/74754
Turning the mirror: from scientific pluralism to pluralism in HPS
Dates: 8th-9th January 2020
Venue: Egenis, the University of Exeter, UK
Co-organisers: Alex Aylward (University of Leeds) and Adrian Currie (University of Exeter)
Various forms of scientific pluralism are widely accepted by historians
and philosophers of science, but what lessons might pluralism about
science have for the methods and practice of HPS itself?
We are seeking contributions from three to four
postgraduate/early-career participants. As the workshop includes diverse
formats, contributions may take any form, from a traditional conference
paper, to a roundtable discussion, to some other format entirely. We
aim to make some funds available to support participants’ travel to
Exeter, but will not be able to confirm funding until later in the year.
Please send proposals (max. 500 words) to both Alex (a.m.aylward@leeds.ac.uk) and Adrian (a.currie@exeter.ac.uk) by 30th September 2019.
Participants:
Agnes Bolinska (University of Cambridge, UK)
John Dupre (University of Exeter, UK)
Robin Hendry (University of Durham, UK)
Ian James Kidd (University of Nottingham, UK)
Katherina Kinzel (University of Vienna, Austria)
Jouni-Matti Kuukkanen (University of Oulu, Finland)
Sabina Leonelli (University of Exeter, UK)
Joseph D. Martin (University of Cambridge, UK)
Michela Massimi (University of Edinburgh, UK)
Staffan Müller-Wille (University of Exeter, UK)
Raphael Scholl (University of Cambridge, UK)
Kirsten Walsh (University of Exeter, UK)
Description of workshop themes:
Scientific pluralism (of various forms) is increasingly the received
view in the history and philosophy of science: it is accepted that
monist accounts of scientific kinds, scientific methods, scientific
explanation and scientific values are insufficient. Coming to this view
has involved philosophical analysis of pluralism itself. What are the
varieties of scientific pluralism, and how are they related? Is
scientific pluralism laudable, regrettable, or neither? Must pluralism
be a form of anti-realism or is it amenable to realist perspectives? Is
the existence of scientific pluralism a reflection of our scientific
methodologies, the nature of the world, or both, or neither? Though
little in the way of consensus has been achieved regarding these
questions, the respectability of scientific pluralism as both a
descriptive and prescriptive stance has been on the increase. And, at
the very least, a set of conceptual tools regarding the nature of
pluralism and how it might be understood in science has been the result.
Could the conceptual tools developed within these conversations about
the nature of science be turned upon HPS itself? In our field it is
common to encounter many differing reconstructions of the same episode
in the history of science, utilising different historiographical
frameworks, and thus emphasising different aspects of the target
phenomenon. Sometimes – as with Geoffrey Cantor and Steven Shapin’s
disagreements about the development of phrenology in nineteenth-century
Edinburgh, and the more recent discourse between Hasok Chang, Ursula
Klein and Martin Kusch regarding the ‘chemical revolution’ – differing
accounts are often explicitly presented as competing with one another.
But their being in competition seems to imply that there is a single,
true account regarding the domain at hand, or at least that pluralism
regarding our accounts of science’s history and philosophy is
importantly restricted.
In other words, whilst we are increasingly recognizing that the
scientific study of nature might inevitably result in a plurality of
theories, explanations, perspectives and methods, our attempts to
understand science itself (HPS) are often implicitly guided by a monist
ideal.
Whilst it is clear that HPS enjoys a healthy pluralism of methodologies
and approaches, it is less obvious what our attitudes should be towards
pluralism in accounts of particular episodes from the scientific past.
We hope in this workshop to tackle the above issues head-on. Questions
addressed might include (but aren’t limited to):
- What is the nature of historiographical/philosophica l pluralism in HPS? How does it come about?
- Is it a good thing? Should we cultivate pluralism? How?
- Is it a bad thing? Should we strive for monism? How?
- What are the lessons from the conversation on scientific pluralism for pluralism in studies of science?
- What lessons might be drawn from scientific perspectivism?
- How might insights from the philosophy of history inform the conversation?