Philosophy of Experiment

Establishing the Nordic Network for Philosophy of Physics

South Pole Telescope in Winter with southern lights.

South Pole Telescope. Photo: Brad Benson.

As part of Establishing the Nordic Network for Philosophy of Physics, a workshop on Philosophy of Experiment will be hosted at Stockholm University.

Empirical constraints are essential in scientific theory development and assessment, with experiment being the quintessential arbiter of science. However, in much of cutting-edge theoretical physics (especially high-energy physics, astrophysics and cosmology), conclusive experiments are hard to come by. The analysis of experimental results and the assessment of their epistemic significance has often come to rely on a multi-layered embedding in wider conceptual reasoning.  

Alongside traditional experiments in the laboratory setting, physics and cosmology also rely on astrophysical observations, which are essentially historical data, in constraining and testing their theories. More recently, analogue experiments—e.g., fluid models of `black holes’ built in the laboratory—have risen as possible means of confirming a theory. These bear an apparent similarity to simulation, and to material models.  

The workshop will aim at exploring different forms of experiment, empirical guides, and "quasi-empirical" guides in light of their relationship to theoretical virtues, non-empirical confirmation, and mathematical constraints (as developed in the previous two workshops in the series). 

Example questions include:

  • What are the relations between these different means of producing constraints on our theories?
  • How do they help us in determining the truth-content of physical theories?
  • What are their different roles in theory construction and confirmation, and what roles should they play?
  • What can we learn about the use of non-empirical guides and constraints by exploring the use of empirical and "quasi-empirical" ones?

Speakers

  • Florian Boge (U. Dortmund)

  • Jamee Elder (Harvard U.)

  • Giora Hon (U. Haifa)

  • Milena Ivanova (Cambridge U.)

  • Slobodan Perovic (U. Belgrade)

  • Kent Staley (St Louis U.)

  • Hugo Baeuchemin (CERN & Tufts U.)

  • Ahmed Sarwar (U. Wuppertal)

  • Enno Fischer (U. Bochum)

  • James Mattingly (U. Georgetown)

  • Till Grüne-Yanoff (KTH Stockholm)

  • Dana Matthiessen (Minnesota C. for Phil.Sci.)

  • Nora Mills Boyd (Siena Coll.)

  • Collin Rice (U. Colorado)

Program

Download the program here

 

Participation

The workshop is open to all, and will also be streamed live on Zoom. Please contact the organisers for the Zoom link.

Published June 9, 2023 1:05 AM - Last modified Oct. 29, 2023 4:49 PM