Sep
16
Fri
Cognitive Science Speaker Series @ Zoom
Sep 16 @ 1:00 pm – 3:00 pm
ALL TALKS ARE ON ZOOM, 1-3, NYC TIME
All are hosted by Rebecca Keller and Ryan McElhaney
Zoom links are all announced on the Cognitive Science email list
To subscribe to that list, email davidrosenthal1@gmail.com
Some sessions—not all—are recorded for later access

9/16: Michael A. Cohen
Psychology and Neuroscience, Amherst College
9/23: Alon Zivony
Psychological Sciences, Birkbeck College London
9/30: Steven Gross
Philosophy, Johns Hopkins University
10/7: Steven Fleming
Experimental Psychology and Neuroimaging, University College London
10/14: John Morrison
Philosophy, Barnard College and Columbia University
10/21: Michael Snodgrass
Cognition & Cognitive Neuroscience, University of Michigan
10/28: Jamal Williams
Psychology, University of California San Diego
11/4: Ian Phillips
Philosophy and Psychological and Brain Sciences, Johns Hopkins
11/11: Paweł Zięba
Institute of Philosophy, Jagiellonian University
11/18: Nicholas Shea
Philosophy, University of Oxford and University of London
The CUNY Cognitive Science Speaker Series meets weekly at the CUNY Graduate Center,
Fridays, 1-3 pm, NYC time—currently on Zoom. This file is at: http://bit.ly/cs-talks
For additional information e-mail David Rosenthal <davidrosenthal1@gmail.com>

Sep
19
Mon
Rutgers Lectures in Philosophy: Timothy Williamson @ AB-2400 [East Wing] CAC Rutgers U
Sep 19 @ 4:30 pm – 6:30 pm

Professor Williamson will give 3 lectures: September 19, 21, and 23. All will take place in AB-2400 [East Wing] from 4:30-6:30pm.

The lectures will discuss problems in the methodology of contemporary philosophy. Although philosophy without use of counterexamples would be a disaster, the way they are currently handled is naïve. In particular, it is too vulnerable to fake counterexamples generated by more or less universal human heuristics.

Lecture One: Heuristics [9/19]

Human cognition, from sense perception to abstract reflection, frequently employs heuristics, quick, easy, efficient, and imperfectly reliable ways of solving problems. To a neglected extent, philosophical problems and paradoxes from reliance on the outputs of fallible heuristics. This will be illustrated with examples involving vagueness, conditionals, belief ascription, truth and falsity, and reasons aggregation. Potential lessons for philosophical method will be discussed.

Lecture Two: Overfitting [9/21]

Overfitting is a well-recognized methodological problem in natural science, where use of models with too many degrees of freedom leads to unstable theorizing and failure to detect errors in the data. Overfitting is also a major but ill-recognized methodological problem in philosophy, exacerbated by its reliance on heuristics. General intellectual tendencies conducive to overfitting in philosophy will be discussed.

Lecture Three: Hyperintensionality [9/23]

The ‘hyperintensional revolution’ proclaims that central metaphysical distinctions cannot be captured in modal terms since they are sensitive to differences between necessary equivalents. Such hyperintensionalism fits the profile of overfitting. It is motivated by case judgments that are explicable as results of a fallible heuristic and it leads to models with too many degrees of freedom.

Sep
21
Wed
Rutgers Lectures in Philosophy: Timothy Williamson @ AB-2400 [East Wing] CAC Rutgers U
Sep 21 @ 4:30 pm – 6:30 pm

Professor Williamson will give 3 lectures: September 19, 21, and 23. All will take place in AB-2400 [East Wing] from 4:30-6:30pm.

The lectures will discuss problems in the methodology of contemporary philosophy. Although philosophy without use of counterexamples would be a disaster, the way they are currently handled is naïve. In particular, it is too vulnerable to fake counterexamples generated by more or less universal human heuristics.

Lecture One: Heuristics [9/19]

Human cognition, from sense perception to abstract reflection, frequently employs heuristics, quick, easy, efficient, and imperfectly reliable ways of solving problems. To a neglected extent, philosophical problems and paradoxes from reliance on the outputs of fallible heuristics. This will be illustrated with examples involving vagueness, conditionals, belief ascription, truth and falsity, and reasons aggregation. Potential lessons for philosophical method will be discussed.

Lecture Two: Overfitting [9/21]

Overfitting is a well-recognized methodological problem in natural science, where use of models with too many degrees of freedom leads to unstable theorizing and failure to detect errors in the data. Overfitting is also a major but ill-recognized methodological problem in philosophy, exacerbated by its reliance on heuristics. General intellectual tendencies conducive to overfitting in philosophy will be discussed.

Lecture Three: Hyperintensionality [9/23]

The ‘hyperintensional revolution’ proclaims that central metaphysical distinctions cannot be captured in modal terms since they are sensitive to differences between necessary equivalents. Such hyperintensionalism fits the profile of overfitting. It is motivated by case judgments that are explicable as results of a fallible heuristic and it leads to models with too many degrees of freedom.

Sep
23
Fri
Cognitive Science Speaker Series @ Zoom
Sep 23 @ 1:00 pm – 3:00 pm
ALL TALKS ARE ON ZOOM, 1-3, NYC TIME
All are hosted by Rebecca Keller and Ryan McElhaney
Zoom links are all announced on the Cognitive Science email list
To subscribe to that list, email davidrosenthal1@gmail.com
Some sessions—not all—are recorded for later access

9/16: Michael A. Cohen
Psychology and Neuroscience, Amherst College
9/23: Alon Zivony
Psychological Sciences, Birkbeck College London
9/30: Steven Gross
Philosophy, Johns Hopkins University
10/7: Steven Fleming
Experimental Psychology and Neuroimaging, University College London
10/14: John Morrison
Philosophy, Barnard College and Columbia University
10/21: Michael Snodgrass
Cognition & Cognitive Neuroscience, University of Michigan
10/28: Jamal Williams
Psychology, University of California San Diego
11/4: Ian Phillips
Philosophy and Psychological and Brain Sciences, Johns Hopkins
11/11: Paweł Zięba
Institute of Philosophy, Jagiellonian University
11/18: Nicholas Shea
Philosophy, University of Oxford and University of London
The CUNY Cognitive Science Speaker Series meets weekly at the CUNY Graduate Center,
Fridays, 1-3 pm, NYC time—currently on Zoom. This file is at: http://bit.ly/cs-talks
For additional information e-mail David Rosenthal <davidrosenthal1@gmail.com>

Rutgers Lectures in Philosophy: Timothy Williamson @ AB-2400 [East Wing] CAC Rutgers U
Sep 23 @ 4:30 pm – 6:30 pm

Professor Williamson will give 3 lectures: September 19, 21, and 23. All will take place in AB-2400 [East Wing] from 4:30-6:30pm.

The lectures will discuss problems in the methodology of contemporary philosophy. Although philosophy without use of counterexamples would be a disaster, the way they are currently handled is naïve. In particular, it is too vulnerable to fake counterexamples generated by more or less universal human heuristics.

Lecture One: Heuristics [9/19]

Human cognition, from sense perception to abstract reflection, frequently employs heuristics, quick, easy, efficient, and imperfectly reliable ways of solving problems. To a neglected extent, philosophical problems and paradoxes from reliance on the outputs of fallible heuristics. This will be illustrated with examples involving vagueness, conditionals, belief ascription, truth and falsity, and reasons aggregation. Potential lessons for philosophical method will be discussed.

Lecture Two: Overfitting [9/21]

Overfitting is a well-recognized methodological problem in natural science, where use of models with too many degrees of freedom leads to unstable theorizing and failure to detect errors in the data. Overfitting is also a major but ill-recognized methodological problem in philosophy, exacerbated by its reliance on heuristics. General intellectual tendencies conducive to overfitting in philosophy will be discussed.

Lecture Three: Hyperintensionality [9/23]

The ‘hyperintensional revolution’ proclaims that central metaphysical distinctions cannot be captured in modal terms since they are sensitive to differences between necessary equivalents. Such hyperintensionalism fits the profile of overfitting. It is motivated by case judgments that are explicable as results of a fallible heuristic and it leads to models with too many degrees of freedom.

Sep
30
Fri
Cognitive Science Speaker Series @ Zoom
Sep 30 @ 1:00 pm – 3:00 pm
ALL TALKS ARE ON ZOOM, 1-3, NYC TIME
All are hosted by Rebecca Keller and Ryan McElhaney
Zoom links are all announced on the Cognitive Science email list
To subscribe to that list, email davidrosenthal1@gmail.com
Some sessions—not all—are recorded for later access

9/16: Michael A. Cohen
Psychology and Neuroscience, Amherst College
9/23: Alon Zivony
Psychological Sciences, Birkbeck College London
9/30: Steven Gross
Philosophy, Johns Hopkins University
10/7: Steven Fleming
Experimental Psychology and Neuroimaging, University College London
10/14: John Morrison
Philosophy, Barnard College and Columbia University
10/21: Michael Snodgrass
Cognition & Cognitive Neuroscience, University of Michigan
10/28: Jamal Williams
Psychology, University of California San Diego
11/4: Ian Phillips
Philosophy and Psychological and Brain Sciences, Johns Hopkins
11/11: Paweł Zięba
Institute of Philosophy, Jagiellonian University
11/18: Nicholas Shea
Philosophy, University of Oxford and University of London
The CUNY Cognitive Science Speaker Series meets weekly at the CUNY Graduate Center,
Fridays, 1-3 pm, NYC time—currently on Zoom. This file is at: http://bit.ly/cs-talks
For additional information e-mail David Rosenthal <davidrosenthal1@gmail.com>

Oct
7
Fri
Cognitive Science Speaker Series @ Zoom
Oct 7 @ 1:00 pm – 3:00 pm
ALL TALKS ARE ON ZOOM, 1-3, NYC TIME
All are hosted by Rebecca Keller and Ryan McElhaney
Zoom links are all announced on the Cognitive Science email list
To subscribe to that list, email davidrosenthal1@gmail.com
Some sessions—not all—are recorded for later access

9/16: Michael A. Cohen
Psychology and Neuroscience, Amherst College
9/23: Alon Zivony
Psychological Sciences, Birkbeck College London
9/30: Steven Gross
Philosophy, Johns Hopkins University
10/7: Steven Fleming
Experimental Psychology and Neuroimaging, University College London
10/14: John Morrison
Philosophy, Barnard College and Columbia University
10/21: Michael Snodgrass
Cognition & Cognitive Neuroscience, University of Michigan
10/28: Jamal Williams
Psychology, University of California San Diego
11/4: Ian Phillips
Philosophy and Psychological and Brain Sciences, Johns Hopkins
11/11: Paweł Zięba
Institute of Philosophy, Jagiellonian University
11/18: Nicholas Shea
Philosophy, University of Oxford and University of London
The CUNY Cognitive Science Speaker Series meets weekly at the CUNY Graduate Center,
Fridays, 1-3 pm, NYC time—currently on Zoom. This file is at: http://bit.ly/cs-talks
For additional information e-mail David Rosenthal <davidrosenthal1@gmail.com>

Oct
14
Fri
Cognitive Science Speaker Series @ Zoom
Oct 14 @ 1:00 pm – 3:00 pm
ALL TALKS ARE ON ZOOM, 1-3, NYC TIME
All are hosted by Rebecca Keller and Ryan McElhaney
Zoom links are all announced on the Cognitive Science email list
To subscribe to that list, email davidrosenthal1@gmail.com
Some sessions—not all—are recorded for later access

9/16: Michael A. Cohen
Psychology and Neuroscience, Amherst College
9/23: Alon Zivony
Psychological Sciences, Birkbeck College London
9/30: Steven Gross
Philosophy, Johns Hopkins University
10/7: Steven Fleming
Experimental Psychology and Neuroimaging, University College London
10/14: John Morrison
Philosophy, Barnard College and Columbia University
10/21: Michael Snodgrass
Cognition & Cognitive Neuroscience, University of Michigan
10/28: Jamal Williams
Psychology, University of California San Diego
11/4: Ian Phillips
Philosophy and Psychological and Brain Sciences, Johns Hopkins
11/11: Paweł Zięba
Institute of Philosophy, Jagiellonian University
11/18: Nicholas Shea
Philosophy, University of Oxford and University of London
The CUNY Cognitive Science Speaker Series meets weekly at the CUNY Graduate Center,
Fridays, 1-3 pm, NYC time—currently on Zoom. This file is at: http://bit.ly/cs-talks
For additional information e-mail David Rosenthal <davidrosenthal1@gmail.com>

Oct
18
Tue
Indefinite Causal Ordering. Elise Crull (CUNY) @ Plaza View Room, 12th Flr
Oct 18 @ 4:30 pm – 6:30 pm

Presented by Metro Area Philosophers of Science

Oct
21
Fri
Cognitive Science Speaker Series @ Zoom
Oct 21 @ 1:00 pm – 3:00 pm
ALL TALKS ARE ON ZOOM, 1-3, NYC TIME
All are hosted by Rebecca Keller and Ryan McElhaney
Zoom links are all announced on the Cognitive Science email list
To subscribe to that list, email davidrosenthal1@gmail.com
Some sessions—not all—are recorded for later access

9/16: Michael A. Cohen
Psychology and Neuroscience, Amherst College
9/23: Alon Zivony
Psychological Sciences, Birkbeck College London
9/30: Steven Gross
Philosophy, Johns Hopkins University
10/7: Steven Fleming
Experimental Psychology and Neuroimaging, University College London
10/14: John Morrison
Philosophy, Barnard College and Columbia University
10/21: Michael Snodgrass
Cognition & Cognitive Neuroscience, University of Michigan
10/28: Jamal Williams
Psychology, University of California San Diego
11/4: Ian Phillips
Philosophy and Psychological and Brain Sciences, Johns Hopkins
11/11: Paweł Zięba
Institute of Philosophy, Jagiellonian University
11/18: Nicholas Shea
Philosophy, University of Oxford and University of London
The CUNY Cognitive Science Speaker Series meets weekly at the CUNY Graduate Center,
Fridays, 1-3 pm, NYC time—currently on Zoom. This file is at: http://bit.ly/cs-talks
For additional information e-mail David Rosenthal <davidrosenthal1@gmail.com>