CfP: HPS-CAP conference - History, Philosophy & Sociology of Cosmology & Astroparticle Physics
Call for Abstracts: History, Philosophy & Sociology of Cosmology & Astroparticle Physics Conference
Submission deadline: 21 March 2022. Event details: Bonn, Germany, 29-30 June 2022 with pre-event on 28 June at 16:15.
Website: https://www.lhc-epistemologie.uni-wuppertal.de/events/hps-cap.html
The DFG-funded research unit Epistemology of the LHC is organising a two-day conference on the history, philosophy and sociology of cosmology and astroparticle physics. This event follows up on the 2019 conference in Aachen on dark matter & modified gravity, a special journal issue on the same topic, and the 2021 online workshop on the philosophy of dark matter. The conference will take place on the 29th and 30th of June 2022 in Bonn, Germany. Philosophers, physicists, historians, sociologists and other interested scholars are invited to attend.
The history of the formation of and interaction between the scientific disciplines
Cosmology, astronomy, particle physics & the scientific realism debate
Communities across CAP
Epistemology of experiments, simulation and observation
The interplay between constraints from cosmology, astronomy and particle physics
Cosmology and astronomy as historical sciences
Guiding principles within CAP (cosmological principle, anthropic principle, unification, …)
Dark matter, neutrinos and cosmic rays
Searches for “theories of everything”
Physics of scales (renormalization group methods, multi-scale modeling, inter-theory relationships, emergence and reduction)
The relationship between the humanities and CAP
We invite contributing speakers from physics and from philosophy, history and sociology of physics, as well as anyone else who may be interested, to submit an abstract of 250-500 words by the 21st of March 2022 as a pdf to Niels Martens. We intend to have selected contributing speakers by the end of April.
This workshop is organised by the project team LHC, dark matter & gravity within the interdisciplinary, DFG-funded research unit Epistemology of the LHC: Sophia Haude (University of Bonn & RWTH Aachen University), Michael Krämer (RWTH Aachen University), Dennis Lehmkuhl (University of Bonn), Niels Martens (University of Bonn & RWTH Aachen University) and Erhard Scholz (University of Wuppertal).
In case of any further questions, please contact Sophia Haude and Niels Martens.