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Popper Seminar Videos

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  • Popper Seminar Videos
Popper Seminar Videos 1 June 2018 Ewan Rodgers
  • Patricia Rich (Bayreuth): “Knowledge in Real-World Contexts: Not Glamorous, but Indispensable”

Patricia Rich (Bayreuth): “Knowledge in Real-World Contexts: Not Glamorous, but Indispensable”

  • 15 March 2022
  • Jessica Keiser (Leeds): “Linguistic Conventions and Language Change”

Jessica Keiser (Leeds): “Linguistic Conventions and Language Change”

  • 8 February 2022
  • Giacomo Giannini (LSE): “Relational Troubles: Structuralist Worries for an epistemology of powers-based modality.”

Giacomo Giannini (LSE): “Relational Troubles: Structuralist Worries for an epistemology of powers-based modality.”

  • 9 November 2021
  • Susanna Siegel (Harvard): “The phenomenal public”

Susanna Siegel (Harvard): “The phenomenal public”

  • 26 October 2021
  • Alexander Bird (Cambridge): “Against Empiricism”

Alexander Bird (Cambridge): “Against Empiricism”

  • 30 March 2021
  • Kate Vredenburgh (LSE): “Causal explanation and revealed preferences”

Kate Vredenburgh (LSE): “Causal explanation and revealed preferences”

  • 16 March 2021
  • Ella Whiteley (LSE): “Harmful Salience Structures”

Ella Whiteley (LSE): “Harmful Salience Structures”

  • 2 March 2021
  • Ulrich Meyer (Colgate): “Topology and Action at a Distance”

Ulrich Meyer (Colgate): “Topology and Action at a Distance”

  • 16 February 2021
  • Michael Diamond-Hunter (LSE): “The limits of accuracy for retrospective descriptions of racial groups”

Michael Diamond-Hunter (LSE): “The limits of accuracy for retrospective descriptions of racial groups”

  • 17 November 2020
  • Marius Backmann (LSE): “Time for Freedom”

Marius Backmann (LSE): “Time for Freedom”

  • 27 October 2020
  • Ali Boyle (Cambridge): “Don’t Ask: Classification in Comparative Cognitive Science”

Ali Boyle (Cambridge): “Don’t Ask: Classification in Comparative Cognitive Science”

  • 12 May 2020
  • Lewis Ross (LSE): “Statistics, Epistemic Gaps, and Legal Risk”

Lewis Ross (LSE): “Statistics, Epistemic Gaps, and Legal Risk”

  • 19 November 2019
  • Fernand Gobet (LSE): “Automatic generation of scientific theories using genetic programming”

Fernand Gobet (LSE): “Automatic generation of scientific theories using genetic programming”

  • 29 October 2019
  • Liam Kofi Bright (LSE): “The Scientists Qua Scientist Makes No Assertion”

Liam Kofi Bright (LSE): “The Scientists Qua Scientist Makes No Assertion”

  • 15 January 2019
  • Catrin Campbell Moore (Bristol): “Imprecise probabilities and undermining scenarios”

Catrin Campbell Moore (Bristol): “Imprecise probabilities and undermining scenarios”

  • 6 November 2018
  • John D. Norton (Pittsburgh): “The Infinite Lottery”

John D. Norton (Pittsburgh): “The Infinite Lottery”

  • 24 April 2018
  • Anna Alexandrova (Cambridge): “Defining Mental Health”

Anna Alexandrova (Cambridge): “Defining Mental Health”

  • 20 February 2018
  • Jeff McMahan (Oxford): “Might We Benefit Animals by Eating Them?”

Jeff McMahan (Oxford): “Might We Benefit Animals by Eating Them?”

  • 30 May 2017
  • Hasok Chang (Cambridge): “If you can spray phlogiston, is it real? A pragmatist conception of reality”

Hasok Chang (Cambridge): “If you can spray phlogiston, is it real? A pragmatist conception of reality”

  • 17 May 2017
  • Stephan Leuenberger (Glasgow): “Scrutability and the Problem of Cross-Family Quantification”

Stephan Leuenberger (Glasgow): “Scrutability and the Problem of Cross-Family Quantification”

  • 7 March 2017
  • Campbell Brown (LSE): “Priority vs. Equality: What’s the Difference?”

Campbell Brown (LSE): “Priority vs. Equality: What’s the Difference?”

  • 21 February 2017
  • Miklós Rédei (LSE): “Properties of Bayesian learning based on conditional expectation as a conditioning device”

Miklós Rédei (LSE): “Properties of Bayesian learning based on conditional expectation as a conditioning device”

  • 25 October 2016
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Forthcoming Events

  1. Clara Bradley (UCL): ‘The Relationship Between Lagrangian and Hamiltonian Mechanics: The Irregular Case.’

    13 May, 2:00 pm – 3:30 pm
  2. Mark D’Souza (UCL): ‘The Criminal Blameworthiness of Negligence: Guidance and Choices’

    13 May, 4:30 pm – 6:00 pm
  3. Choice Group Seminar by Katie Steele (The Australian National University)

    14 May, 4:30 pm – 6:00 pm
  4. Philip Thonemann (CPNSS): ‘Defending the Value-Free Ideal for Science’

    15 May, 12:00 pm – 1:30 pm
  5. Margarida Hermida (King’s College London): ‘Philosophy of Quantum Biology’

    19 May, 4:00 pm – 5:30 pm

View All Events

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