Due to the overwhelming demand for the
“Foundations of mind" thread, the general science themes as described on the "Cosmos and history" website are being held over for s follow-up conference to take place in Ireland in 2015
10-45 tea/coffee
Panel 1 for Mar 6
Preliminary schedule for conference
“Foundations of mind; cognition and consciousness”
Sproul room, international house, UC
Berkeley 6-7 Mar 2014
Registration details for “Foundations of mind" are at http://foundationsofmind.org/
Other themes may be found at http://cssi32.blogspot.com/2013/10/first-call-for-papers-normal-0-21.html
It also includes details of *Free* on-line courses in consciousness studies and cognitive science for suitably qualified applicants
Registration details for “Foundations of mind" are at http://foundationsofmind.org/
Other themes may be found at http://cssi32.blogspot.com/2013/10/first-call-for-papers-normal-0-21.html
It also includes details of *Free* on-line courses in consciousness studies and cognitive science for suitably qualified applicants
Proposed papers/posters presenters
should send a 500-word abstract to eireann@yahoo.com by Feb 7 2014. We already have offers to publish the
proceedings both from a peer-reviewed journal and an academic book
publisher.
31 January - please note new panel with Len Talmy on symbols, thought and attention
31 January - please note new panel with Len Talmy on symbols, thought and attention
Confirmed plenary speakers/panellists
include
Stuart Kauffman (U Vermont)
Terry Deacon (UC Berkeley)
Henry Stapp (LBNL, UC Berkeley)
Ed Vul (UCSD)
Jacob Needleman (SFSU)
Jerome Feldman (ICSI, UC Berkeley)
Tom Griffiths (UC Berkeley)
Robert Campbell (Clemson U)
Mike Cole (UCSD)
José Acacio
de Barros (SFSU/Stanford)
Mike Cole ( UCSD)
Christian de Quincey (JFK)
Sean O Nuallain (UoI)
Fr. Robert Spitzer (Magis institute)
Tony Bell (UC Berkeley)
Len Talmy (U Buffalo)
Len Talmy (U Buffalo)
Conference chair; Sean O Nuallain (UoI)
Submissions/suggestions for panellists
to eireann@yahoo.com
Abstracts max 500 words, please
Deadline is Feb 7 2014
"Note new deadline*
Abstracts max 500 words, please
Deadline is Feb 7 2014
"Note new deadline*
Thursday 6 March; schedule
8-30 am registration
9am Jacob Needleman and Robert
Spitzer will give 30-minute keynotes, followed by a discussion
It is now accepted
that the Abrahamic religions, focused as they are on community
solidarity based on the sacred and with it the supernatural, are
inappropriate for environmental preservation even without their
licensing of exploitation of the earth. Yet spiritual expressions
based on emphasizing the unity of subject and object, self and
environment, fail to give an adequate account of acts of mind that
stress this difference. The ideal would be a spiritual system wherein
both the extraordinarily unlikely nature of life and earth as well as
the moral imperative to protect it would emerge as consequences from
its ontology and metaphysics. Does such a system exist or can
it be created?
10-45 tea/coffee
Panel 1 for Mar 6
In general, each panellist will speak
for 15 minutes; then the panel as a whole will discuss the issues for
30 minutes before opening matters up to the audience
11 am - 1pm Panel 1 Linearity,
psychologism, and voodoo correlations
Speakers/panellists; Ed Vul (UCSD), Tom
Griffiths (UC Berkeley, session chair), Tony Bell (UC Berkeley) Sean O Nuallain
(UoI)
Gottlieb Frege famously excoriated the
attempt to reduce logico-mathematical reasoning to a description of
the psychological processes underpinning it as “ psychologism”.
But, the response goes, these logico-mathematical entities are indeed
processed in the brain, so surely it is neither quixotic nor formally
incorrect to seek an appropriate psychological explanation for them.
One such candidate explanation is a faculty psychology based on
assignment of these faculties to the cerebral locations that fmri has
been celebrated for finding.
Neo-Fregeans might have two responses.
In the first place, the fmri results perhaps evince premature closure
in their statistical analysis. Secondly, fmri's localizations are
scalar entities in a cerebral system clearly capable of operating
with vectors and even higher-order tensors .In fact, neo-Fregeans
might argue, fmri implicitly makes extraordinary claims about the
nature of scientific explanation, claims that are hard to justify.
Where does all this leave us?
Lunch
Panel 2 for Mar 6
2-3-45pm Cognitive science and
neuroscience
Speakers/panellists; Jerome Feldman
(ICSI, Berkeley), Robert Campbell (Clemson), Ed Vul. Mike Cole (
UCSD), Terry Deacon (UC Berkeley)
Science is a reductionist
enterprise - we look for explanations of phenomena at more basic
levels. This does not entail "eliminative reduction" where
only the lowest level has explanatory power. Theory, modelling, and
experiment at multiple levels is important and these should be
consistent. For Cognitive Science, the ancient formulation of
knowledge as truth may be a serious barrier to understanding the
mapping of thought to neurobiology and beyond.
3-45 tea/coffee
3-45 tea/coffee
4pm Keynote; Stanley Klein
5pm Submitted papers/posters
7pm Concert of celtic jazz
to celebrate women's day; free for conference attendees
Mar 7, 2014, 2nd
floor, International house, UC Berkeley
Friday's schedule
Keynote speakers Henry Stapp (LBNL),
Tony Bell (UC Berkeley). Stuart Kauffman
9-30 Stuart Kauffman: Answering
Descartes; beyond Turing
Respondent and session chair; Terrence Deacon
10-45 am break
11am Submitted papers and
posters
noon Break
1pm Keynote; Tony Bell
2 pm Panel 2 Quantum
mind and is critics
Discussants: Henry Stapp, José
Acacio de Barros (session chair), Stanley Klein Carlos Montemayor and others
The Quantum mind
hypothesis essentially states that quantum effects are causative in
will and cognitions, leading to an assertion of free will. It is no
longer in doubt that there is a deep mystery associated with
information, the mind, and reality, a mystery that results in
paradoxical findings with observer status in quantum mechanics. It
may be the case that our current concept of information is too
coarse-grained; it may also be the case that conscious will is
actually causative in the cosmos. Recently, the standard objections
to Quantum mind on the basis of decoherence in biological systems
have been refuted by discoveries that photosynthesis involves
quantum superposition. Likewise, cognition shows effects
readily explicable by quantum formalisms. However, these
effects may also be looked at in terms of neural systems as harmonic
oscillators; or is this objection even relevant?
3-45pm Break
4pm
5-45 final discussion
6pm close
Symbols, thought and attention
Chair: Len Talmy
Moderator ; Ellen Thompson
Two burgeoning trends in 21st
century cognitive science appear at first sight to pull in opposite
directions. One is the re-emergence of Whorfian linguistic
determinism; another is the insistence that bilingualism can retard
the development of prion diseases like Alzheimer's. One might assume
that the same holds for music and other symbolic systems. Yet a
commonality is arguably to be found in the concept of attention; can
it be the case that operating between two linguistic codes forces
improved cerebral function simply because of the monitoring
necessary? If so, surely it is appropriate to survey immigrants using
languages like English which seem at first sight the same on both
sides of the Atlantic?
5-45 final discussion
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