From jdoboszewski at gmail.com Mon Oct 2 21:03:20 2023 From: jdoboszewski at gmail.com (Juliusz Doboszewski) Date: Mon, 2 Oct 2023 21:03:20 +0200 Subject: [PhilPhys] Bonn History and Philosophy of Physics research seminar in the winter term 2023/24 Message-ID: Dear all, [with apologies for cross-posting] The Lichtenberg Group for History and Philosophy of Physics at the University of Bonn [ https://www.history-and-philosophy-of-physics.com/ ] invites everyone to the Bonn History and Philosophy of Physics Research Seminar. The schedule for the winter term includes the following speakers: --- 10 October, Dennis Lehmkuhl & Juliusz Doboszewski, organizational meeting and HPP overview, format: in-person only 17 October, Michel Janssen (University of Minnesota): Drawing the line between kinematics and dynamics in special relativity and in quantum mechanics, format: hybrid 24 October, Alexander Reutlinger (Munich Center for Mathematical Philosophy): Articulating Invariantism. Revisiting the Counterfactual Independence Account of Scientific Objectivity, format: in-person only 31 October, José MM Senovilla (University of the Basque Country - UPV/EHU), title & format TBA 14 November, workshop on Oppenheimer, Heisenberg, and the birth of nuclear weapons, format: TBA 21 November, Michael te Vrugt (DAMTP, Centre for Mathematical Sciences, University of Cambridge), Coarse-graining in cosmology, format: hybrid 28 November, Antonis Antoniou (Lichtenberg group, University of Bonn), Laws and Initial Conditions in Cosmology, format TBA 5 December, Paul Hoyningen-Huene (Leibniz Universität Hannover, Institute of Philosophy, Professor emeritus & Universität Zürich, Department of Economics, Lecturer), How do abstract economic models explain?, format: hybrid 19 December, Nurida Boddenberg (Lichtenberg group, University of Bonn), Operationalism = Realism, format: hybrid 9 January, Florian Boge (TU Dortmund), Deep Learning Robustness for Scientific Discovery: The Case of Anomaly Detection in High Energy Physics [Joint work with Michael Krämer, ThHEP, Aachen, & Christian Zeitnitz, ExpHEP, Wuppertal], format: hybrid 16 January, Caspar Jacobs (Leiden University), A Philosophical Introduction to Hidden Symmetries, format: hybrid 23 January, Jamie Shaw (Leibniz University Hannover), Funding People, not Projects? A Critical Evaluation, format: TBA 30 January, speaker TBA --- The seminar takes place on Tuesdays, 14:15-15:45 local Bonn time, in seminar room 1.070 of the Institute of Philosophy (in the main university building), also known as “the big seminar room”; everyone is always welcome to join in person. Many of our talks will be in hybrid format; in that case, joining us via Zoom will be possible. Zoom links and weekly reminders will be announced via hpp at listen.uni-bonn.de. Subscribing to this list is possible here: https://listen.uni-bonn.de/wws/info/hpp . The most up to date schedule and the abstracts can be found on: https://www.history-and-philosophy-of-physics.com/events.html all the best, Juliusz Doboszewski -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From center4philsci at gmail.com Tue Oct 3 21:05:51 2023 From: center4philsci at gmail.com (Chantel Snodgrass) Date: Tue, 3 Oct 2023 15:05:51 -0400 Subject: [PhilPhys] Accepting applications for Fellows and Postdoctoral Fellows for 2024-2025 Academic Year at the University of Pittsburgh Message-ID: <8A794081-552D-4757-8FF4-E3573CE81EC2@hxcore.ol> An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From jbuffink at umn.edu Mon Oct 9 23:43:02 2023 From: jbuffink at umn.edu (Jos Uffink) Date: Mon, 9 Oct 2023 23:43:02 +0200 Subject: [PhilPhys] Reminder: Call for nominations for the Hanneke Janssen Memorial Prize 2023 (with deadline October 16) In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: Dear all, > > The Jury would like to issue a call for nominations for the > 2023 Hanneke Janssen Memorial Prize which is awarded annually by the > Radboud University in Nijmegen for the best work in History and/or > Philosophy of Modern Physics, done by a student as a requirement for a > Masters Thesis. The prize carries a 2000 euro award. Nominations for this > Prize need to be submitted by a supervisor of the nominee before October > 16, 2023. > > We would also like to issue a special encouragement for the nomination of > candidates from underrepresented groups. > > > For more details I refer to the attached stipulations. > > > Sincerely, > > The Jury, > > > > Jos Uffink (chair, University of Minnesota) > > Guido Bacciagaluppi (Utrecht University) > > Klaas Landsman (Radboud University, Nijmegen) > > Christoph Lehner (Institute for Quantum Optics and Quantum > Information, Vienna) > > Francesca Vidotto (Western University, Ontario) > > > > The Hanneke Janssen Memorial Prize (HJMP) was founded in 2010, to > commemorate the life and work of Hanneke Janssen who died in a traffic > accident in 2009, just after she had received her Master’s Degree (cum > laude) on a thesis in History and Philosophy of Physics. > > Previous winners of the HJMP are: > > > 2022 Sanne Vergouwen > > 2021 Jingyi Wu > > 2020 Emilia Margoni > > 2019 Grace Field > > 2018 Ruward Mulder > > 2017 Omid Charrakh > > 2016 James Read > > 2015 Joshua R. Hunt > > 2014 Benjamin Feintzeig > > 2013 Neil Dewar > > 2012 Martin Jähnert > > 2010 Ronnie Hermens > >> >>> -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: Stipulations2023 .pdf Type: application/pdf Size: 114675 bytes Desc: not available URL: From center4philsci at gmail.com Thu Oct 12 18:34:27 2023 From: center4philsci at gmail.com (Chantel Snodgrass) Date: Thu, 12 Oct 2023 12:34:27 -0400 Subject: [PhilPhys] Call for Papers - Revitalizing Science and Values - Deadline November 15 In-Reply-To: <236FA316-778A-486A-BA23-F19609EDB6EF@hxcore.ol> References: <236FA316-778A-486A-BA23-F19609EDB6EF@hxcore.ol> Message-ID: <492E3B07-6A95-4B27-A16B-6D6A310B4D8A@hxcore.ol> An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From vchasova at unistra.fr Fri Oct 13 16:38:20 2023 From: vchasova at unistra.fr (Valeriya Chasova) Date: Fri, 13 Oct 2023 16:38:20 +0200 (CEST) Subject: [PhilPhys] Seven symmetry videos now available Message-ID: <37618024.16407298.1697207900918.JavaMail.zimbra@unistra.fr> Dear all, On 01/06/2023 I organised an online workshop on symmetries in philosophy of science and physics, featuring 6 speakers, respondents and further discussions. The workshop videos were recorded with the help of one of the speakers Jill North and edited by the director of my Belgian institution CEFISES Charles Pence. Thanks to everybody for their contributions! The results were put at the CEFISES Youtube channel and can be seen more precisely at https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLWR7G_yfhrzHT_YmFx2fnY4szilfzFvfd Here are also separate links per slot: > Jill North, "On the Idea of Perspicuous Representations (and Symmetries)" - Respondent: Sebastian De Haro - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PgM3hLaDqFg > Alison Fernandes, "How to Explain the Direction of Time" - Respondent: Cristian López - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yf6SRcoeRqQ > David Baker, "The Epiphenomena Argument for Symmetry-to-Reality Inference" - Respondent: David Wallace - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qpK7tsbrt94 > David Wallace, "Observability, Redundancy and Modality for Dynamical Symmetry Transformations" - Respondent: Valeriya Chasova - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZgJvOLlUej8 > Valeriya Chasova, "Observable Diffeomorphisms (or, How to Limit the Hole Argument and Extend Direct Empirical Status)" - Respondent: John Dougherty - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=we4MqHyjzR8 > JB Manchak (joint work with Thomas Barrett, Hans Halvorson, and Jim Weatherall), "A Hierarchy of Spacetime Symmetries: Holes to Heraclitus" - Respondent: Bryan Roberts - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A8ZHyjTFuDc For my workshop talk there was also a continuation on 09/06/2023 at an OLOFOS seminar of the CEFISES (in-person but streamed online via the CEFISES Youtube channel) . Thanks to the CEFISES and to my French institution AHP-PReST for funding my visit, to Alexandre Guay for organising the seminar, and to Charles Pence for recording the video and some of the sound and for adding the rest! Here is our result: > Valeriya Chasova, “‘Is Faraday in the Same Boat as Galileo?’, or Symmetry and Contextuality” - Respondent: Alexandre Guay - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k1xCM8D03DM The latest versions of the abstracts of all the 7 talks are below. I hope you will enjoy all the videos! Best wishes, Valeriya Chasova https://valeriyachasova.xyz/ === Symmetry workshop abstracts Jill North, "On the Idea of Perspicuous Representations (and Symmetries)" There are in general many different ways of representing something. Some of these ways can be better or more perspicuous than others. I argue that perspicuous representations are such not for pragmatic or subjective reasons, but for objective, intrinsic ones. For example, one way for a representation to be more perspicuous is for it to more directly represent the symmetries of the entity being represented. One consequence I will discuss: there is an interesting sense in which representations or theoretical formulations differing (only) in their level of perspicuity can be regarded as inequivalent. Alison Fernandes, "How to Explain the Direction of Time" Reichenbach explains the direction of time and other temporal asymmetries using entropy and ‘branch structure’. There is a direction of time because our universe is currently on a long entropic upgrade, and subsystems branch off and become quasi-isolated. This direction is manifest to us in a range of features, including an asymmetry of records. Reichenbach’s explanation of the record asymmetry has been criticised for its reliance on entropy. More generally, Reichenbach’s approach has been neglected in favour of those that appeal to a particular low entropy initial state (the Past Hypothesis). I argue that this neglect is unwarranted. Reichenbach’s approach has important advantages: it correctly identifies the difference-maker that accounts for temporal asymmetries, it considers the conditions required for asymmetries to be manifest, and it identifies a local inferential mechanism that applies towards the past and not towards the future. While Reichenbach’s account needs to be supplemented in various ways, it provides a better starting point than alternatives for understanding the necessary conditions for a direction of time and its manifestation. David Baker, "The Epiphenomena Argument for Symmetry-to-Reality Inference" A new argument is given for the thesis that only symmetry-invariant physical quantities are real. Non-invariant quantities are dynamically epiphenomenal in that they have no effect on the evolution of invariant quantities, and it is a significant theoretical vice to posit epiphenomenal quantities. This view fits within the more general "redundancy" approach to symmetry and equivalence; I answer objections to that approach raised by Dasgupta. David Wallace, "Observability, Redundancy and Modality for Dynamical Symmetry Transformations" I provide a fairly systematic analysis of when quantities that are variant under a dynamical symmetry transformation should be regarded as unobservable, or redundant, or unreal; of when models related by a dynamical symmetry transformation represent the same state of affairs; and of when mathematical structure that is variant under a dynamical symmetry transformation should be regarded as surplus. In most of these cases the answer is 'it depends': depends, that is, on the details of the symmetry in question. A central feature of the analysis is that in order to draw any of these conclusions for a dynamical symmetry it needs to be understood in terms of its possible extensions to other physical systems, in particular to measurement devices. (A connection of this to subsystem-recursivity is also briefly discussed.) Valeriya Chasova, "Observable Diffeomorphisms (or, How to Limit the Hole Argument and Extend Direct Empirical Status)" According to the hole argument, theoretical diffeomorphism symmetries are superfluous. According to some studies of direct empirical status (DES), they are not. I reconcile the two by showing that they apply to different kinds of symmetries. I tell which kinds these are more precisely, construct using them the first ever explicit demonstration of DES for theoretical diffeomorphism symmetries, and explain how to go beyond these kinds to further contexts yielding DES. My analysis amounts to a rather radical revision of traditional views on the ontology of theoretical symmetries and on DES. JB Manchak (joint work with Thomas Barrett, Hans Halvorson, and Jim Weatherall), "A Hierarchy of Spacetime Symmetries: Holes to Heraclitus" We present a hierarchy of symmetry conditions within the context of general relativity. The weakest condition captures a sense in which spacetime is free of symmetry "holes" of a certain type. All standard models of general relativity satisfy the condition but we show that violations can occur if the Hausdorff assumption is dropped. On the other extreme, the strongest condition of the hierarchy is satisfied whenever a model is completely devoid of symmetries. In these "Heraclitus spacetimes," no pair of distinct points can be mapped (even locally) into one another. We prove that such spacetimes exist and show a sense in which Heraclitus spacetimes are completely determined by their local properties. We close with a brief comment on the extendibility properties of the various symmetry conditions. OLOFOS seminar abstract Valeriya Chasova, “‘Is Faraday in the Same Boat as Galileo?’, or Symmetry and Contextuality” Healey (2009) argued that Galileo’s ship and Faraday’s cage empirical symmetries are dysanalogous, because direct empirical status (DES) of the corresponding theoretical symmetries arises in the former case but not in the latter. Greaves and Wallace (2014) objected that DES arises in either case, but took the dysanalogy to persist in that the latter but not the former case involves changes of the environment. I show that whether DES arises and whether the environment changes are both contextual. Moreover, on the way I resolve a much more general question of how to read off the ontological potential of theoretical symmetries from their formal properties in a wide number of cases. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From center4philsci at gmail.com Mon Oct 16 22:16:27 2023 From: center4philsci at gmail.com (Chantel Snodgrass) Date: Mon, 16 Oct 2023 16:16:27 -0400 Subject: [PhilPhys] Accepting Applications for Visiting Fellowship - Fall and/or Spring 2024 - 2025 Academic Year - Deadline December 10th Message-ID: <373896EA-0360-46E1-85B5-F18E0D5B8FF5@hxcore.ol> hopos-g at vt.edu" , "philos-l at listserv.liv.ac.uk" Content-Transfer-Encoding: quoted-printable Content-Type: text/html; charset="utf-8"

Location: Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania

Start Date: 9/1/2024

Job Description:=C2=A0 Visiting Fellow= at the Center for Philosophy of Science, University of Pittsburgh

 

The Center for Philosophy of Science i= nvites applications for a visiting fellowship during the fall and/or spring= term of the 2024-2025 academic year.

Visiting Fellowships enable philosophers of science to spend = a fall and/or spring academic term working in the Center for Philosophy of = Science on a project in philosophy of science that they nominate. Ten Visit= ing Fellowships are offered each year. Most Fellows stay for a semester, al= though some stay for a whole year.

Visiting Fellows must have a doctoral degree. It is expected tha= t the doctorate will be in philosophy, in history and philosophy of science= , or that the applicant has an established position in the professional com= munity of philosophy of science. We particularly welcome submissions from m= embers of underrepresented groups.

The Center expects a Visiting Fellow=E2=80=99s research to be su= pported by his or her own university, or by a foundation or governmental ag= ency. The monthly stipend ($2,500/month) is intended to defray extra costs = of dislocation.

Visiting= Fellows have no formal duties. They are expected to reside in Pittsburgh, = to undertake research full time in an office in the Center for Philosophy o= f Science, and to participate in the life of the Center by attending and gi= ving talks, contributing to discussion groups, etc.

Applications are due by December 10th, 2023<= /b>, and must be submitted electronically on the University of Pittsburgh j= obs portal. Appy Here: Job Description - Faculty Scholar Visiting (23006889= ) (taleo.net) Further information and specific requirements can be found he= re: Program Overview - The Center for Philosophy of Science (pitt.edu)

<= p class=3DMsoNormal style=3D'line-height:150%'>Please make sure to read tho= roughly.

Required Docume= nts:

=C2=B7 A cover lett= er that indicates a Visiting Fellowship is sought and describes: the period= of proposed residence in the Center; any previous Fellowships at the Cente= r; the source and amount of likely funding; and an indication of need for s= upplementary funds.

=C2= =B7 Description of project to be undertaken during residence (500-1000 word= s)

=C2=B7 Curriculum Vit= ae

=C2=B7 Sample of your= written work

=C2=B7 Let= ters of reference from three knowledgeable scholars. We recommend letters w= hose content is blinded to the applicant. Email all letters directly to pit= tcntr at pitt.edu.

 

= From center4philsci at gmail.com Mon Oct 16 22:26:18 2023 From: center4philsci at gmail.com (Chantel Snodgrass) Date: Mon, 16 Oct 2023 16:26:18 -0400 Subject: [PhilPhys] Accepting Applications for Visiting Fellowship - Fall and/or Spring 2024 - 2025 Academic Year - Deadline December 10th In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: <925A4F6F-3804-4ECB-944A-7F506173B6B9@hxcore.ol> An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From antonio.vassallo1977 at gmail.com Thu Oct 19 12:13:27 2023 From: antonio.vassallo1977 at gmail.com (Antonio Vassallo) Date: Thu, 19 Oct 2023 12:13:27 +0200 Subject: [PhilPhys] Lisbon-Warsaw Reading Group in the Philosophy of Physics (online) - Eddy Keming Chen Message-ID: (With apologies for cross-posting) In the next reading group meeting, Eddy Keming Chen (University of California San Diego) will join us to discuss his paper “The Wentaculus: Density Matrix Realism Meets the Arrow of Time” (abstract below). The meeting will be online on Zoom on 7 November (17:00-19:00 CET). If you are not a reading group member, you can sign up here . The reading group is jointly organized by the LanCog group at the University of Lisbon and the Philosophy of Physics group at the Warsaw University of Technology. You can address any query to Antonio Vassallo (antonio.vassallo at pw.edu.pl) The organizers, Andrea Oldofredi Davide Romano Antonio Vassallo Abstract: Two of the most difficult problems in the foundations of physics are (1) what gives rise to the arrow of time and (2) what the ontology of quantum mechanics is. They are difficult because the fundamental dynamical laws of physics do not privilege an arrow of time, and the quantum-mechanical wave function describes a high-dimensional reality that is radically different from our ordinary experiences. In this paper, I characterize and elaborate on the ''Wentaculus'' theory, a new approach to time's arrow in a quantum universe that offers a unified solution to both problems. Central to the Wentaculus are (i) Density Matrix Realism, the idea that the quantum state of the universe is objective but can be impure, and (ii) the Initial Projection Hypothesis, a new law of nature that selects a unique initial quantum state. On the Wentaculus, the quantum state of the universe is sufficiently simple to be a law, and the arrow of time can be traced back to an exact boundary condition. It removes the intrinsic vagueness of the Past Hypothesis, eliminates the Statistical Postulate, provides a higher degree of theoretical unity, and contains a natural realization of ''strong determinism.'' I end by responding to four recent objections. In a companion paper, I elaborate on Density Matrix Realism. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From center4philsci at gmail.com Tue Oct 24 16:21:19 2023 From: center4philsci at gmail.com (Chantel Snodgrass) Date: Tue, 24 Oct 2023 10:21:19 -0400 Subject: [PhilPhys] Lunch Time Talks: Lev Vaidman 10/31 and Henry Schiller 11/3 In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From philip.goyal at gmail.com Thu Oct 26 15:47:31 2023 From: philip.goyal at gmail.com (Philip Goyal) Date: Thu, 26 Oct 2023 09:47:31 -0400 Subject: [PhilPhys] =?utf-8?q?The_Quantum_Reconstruction_Program_and_Beyon?= =?utf-8?q?d=E2=80=94Conference_Videos?= Message-ID: <252A305D-5295-4882-924E-84E43E83DD39@gmail.com> Dear All, The talk videos for the "Quantum Reconstruction Program and Beyond" conference (co-organized by Philipp Berghofer and myself, and held in Graz in early August this year), are now available at: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLwREx7Z8un5At01EIjuRCB0eBSYic2U3z The individual talks are listed below (clicking a title will take you to the respective video). 1. Quantum Reconstruction and Beyond (Philipp Berghofer) 2. Quantum Reconstruction and Beyond (Philip Goyal) 3. Picturing Interpretations of Quantum Physics (Hamza Waseem) 4. Quantum Uncertainty as a Fundamental Limit to Nature's Predictability (Johannes Fankhauser) 5. Complementary Identities from an Informational Reconstruction (Philipp Höhn) 6. A New Information Theoretic Approach to Understanding Quantum Mechanics (David Ellerman) 7. Reconstructing the de Broglie Wave (Dan Shanahan) 8. The Measurement Problem is a Feature, Not a Bug (Michael Cuffaro) 9. Explanation in Reconstruction of Quantum Theory (Jessica Oddan) 10. Quantum vs Classical Emergence in the Informational Framework (Lucy Mason) 11. The Meaning of Reconstructed Quantum Mechanics (Iulian Toader) 12. A Quantum Theory with Non Collapsing Measurements (Stefan Weigert) 13. The Structure of Quantum Questions (Yang Yu) 14. Reconstructions of Physical Theories as Transcendental Arguments (Michel Bitbol) 15. Transcendental Approaches to QM—Lessons from Bohr and Bitbol (Harald Wiltsche) 16. On the Role of SIC Structures in the Quantum Inferential Process (Michele Dall'Arno) 17. From the Quantum Formalism to QBism and back to the Quantum Formalism (Ruediger Schack) 18. Deconstructing Dynamics in QBism (John De Brota) 19. How Quantum in QBism (Matthew Weiss) 20. Quantum Theory from Simple Principles, Spacetime... (Markus Müller) We hope you find them useful! Best, Philip ========================================== Philip Goyal Assoc. Professor of Information Physics Department of Physics University at Albany (SUNY) Albany, NY 12222, USA. https://www.philipgoyal.org https://www.albany.edu/physics/pgoyal.shtml ========================================== -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From vincent.ardourel at gmail.com Fri Oct 27 11:25:06 2023 From: vincent.ardourel at gmail.com (Vincent Ardourel) Date: Fri, 27 Oct 2023 11:25:06 +0200 Subject: [PhilPhys] Workshop "Discrete and Precision in Physics", November 8-10 IHPST (Paris) Message-ID: Workshop "Discrete and Precision in Physics" 8-10 November, IHPST, Paris (France) This three-day workshop brings together philosophers of science and physicists, on discreteness and precision in physics (classical physics, quantum mechanics, and quantum field theories). You will find the program below and more information on this website . The workshop will be in-person. Admission is free, but registration is mandatory as places are limited. To attend the workshop, please contact vincent.ardourel at univ-paris1.fr indicating the half-days you will be there (or the entire conference). The organizers: Vincent Ardourel and Mike Miller ******************************************* *Programme* *Wednesday 8* 14:00-14:10 Welcome and Introduction *Session: Quantum mechanics, indeterminacy, and indeterminism* 14:10-15:10 "Indeterminism in physics and intuitionistic mathematics" - Nicolas Gisin (Geneva) 15:10-16:10 "Potential realism: A realistic and indeterministic physics based on propensities" - Flavio del Santo (Geneva) 16:10-16:30 Coffee break 16:30-17:30 "Precision and quantum mechanical indeterminacy" - Patrick Fraser and Michael Miller (Toronto) *Thursday 9* *Session: Discrete in Quantum Field Theory* 9:15-10:15 “An explanatory framework for the Standard Model” - Yanis Pianko (IHPST) 10:15-11:15 “Infinite scale skepticism” - James Fraser (Wuppertal) 11:15-11:30 Coffee break 11:30-12:30 "Why go discrete? Lessons from the early history of lattice quantum field theory" - Sébastien Rivat (LMU Munich) 12:30-14:00 Lunch *Session: Rethinking Infinity* 2:00 p.m.-3:00 p.m. “Countabilism” (online) – Jessica Wilson (Toronto) *Session: Discrete in quantum field theory (continued)* 15:00-16:00 "The continuum limit in Lattice QCD - what it means and why we need it" - Nico Formanek (Stuttgart) 16:00-16:30 Coffee break 16:30-17:30 “Lee’s discrete quantum field theory” - Étienne Ligout and Vincent Ardourel (IHPST) *Friday 10* *Session: Discrete time and continuous time* 9:15-10:15 “Merely dense time in the representational theory of measurement” - Marissa Bennett and Michael Miller (Toronto) 10:15-11:15 “On the Aristotelian foundations of time” - Tom Pashby (Chicago) 11:15-11:30 Coffee break 11:30-12:30 “Is spacetime discrete?” - Pierre Martin-Dussaud (Penn State) 12:30-14:00 Lunch *Session: Probability and possibility* 14:00 - 15:00 "Measurement problem in cosmology: infinitesimal probability to the rescue?" - Sylvia Wenmackers (KU Leuven) 15:00 - 16:00 "Lebesgue Necessity" - Holly Andersen (Simon Fraser) 16:00 - 16:15 Conclusion ************************************** -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From katherine.brading at duke.edu Fri Nov 3 16:43:28 2023 From: katherine.brading at duke.edu (Katherine Brading) Date: Fri, 3 Nov 2023 15:43:28 +0000 Subject: [PhilPhys] =?utf-8?q?Winners_announced=3A_2023_Du_Ch=C3=A2telet_P?= =?utf-8?q?rize_in_Philosophy_of_Physics?= Message-ID: The winners of the 2023 Du Châtelet Prize in Philosophy of Physics are: Marta Bielinska and Caspar Jacobs for their paper “A Philosophical Introduction to Hidden Symmetries in Physics” Congratulations Marta and Caspar! Marta’s and Caspar’s paper investigates examples of so-called “hidden symmetries”, widely used in physics, arguing that such symmetries pose new challenges for philosophical accounts of symmetries and for “symmetry-to-reality” inferences. Marta is currently a doctoral student at the University of Oxford. Before this, she completed, also at the University of Oxford, the MSc in Mathematical and Theoretical Physics (2022) with a dissertation on hidden symmetries, and the BPhil in Philosophy (2021) with a dissertation on spacetime orientability. In addition to her work on foundations of spacetime, she is also interested in philosophical accounts of laws of nature and scientific practice, as well as contemporary ontology. Caspar is currently a university lecturer at Leiden University. He defended his DPhil at the University of Oxford in 2021 with a dissertation on the interpretation of symmetries in physics. In addition to his work on symmetries, Caspar is also interested in the metaphysics of quantities and early modern history and philosophy of science, especially the work of Du Châtelet. The topic of this year’s prize was Laws and symmetries in the practice of physics. This year marks the 40th anniversary of the publication of Nancy Cartwright’s highly influential book, How the Laws of Physics Lie. In honor of this, we invited submissions addressing the ways laws and symmetries are deployed in the practice of doing physics: in experiment, in theory, and in the interplay between them. The scope was intended to be broad, encompassing the variety of theoretical, practical, and explanatory roles that laws and symmetries play in physics. The committee was: * Elena Castellani, Professor in Philosophy of Science, University of Florence * Nina Emery, Associate Professor of Philosophy, Mount Holyoke College * Bas van Fraassen, Distinguished Professor of Philosophy, San Francisco State University, and McCosh Professor of Philosophy, Emeritus, Princeton University * Marc Lange, Theda Perdue Distinguished Professor of Philosophy, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill with input from Nancy Cartwright. A big thank you to the committee for all their work, and to all those who submitted such superb papers. The Du Châtelet Prize in Philosophy of Physics is supported by Duke University in collaboration with Studies in History and Philosophy of Science. Workshop A workshop honoring this year’s prize winner, and including talks by members of the committee, will be held at Duke University on November 30th – December 1st, 2023. Registration for the workshop is now open. Please register by November 16th. For more information about the prize and the associated workshop, please contact Katherine Brading (katherine.brading at duke.edu). About the prize The Du Châtelet Prize in Philosophy of Physics celebrates excellence in philosophy of physics and promotes breadth across the field both historically and philosophically. Each year, a prize committee of senior scholars in the field invites submissions on a particular topic. The prize winner receives feedback and support from the committee, and the paper is considered for publication in Studies. The goals of the prize are to support young scholars working in philosophy of physics, to strengthen the historical and philosophical breadth of the field, and to promote some of the very best work being done by students and junior scholars. 2022 Winner: Ovidiu Babeș “Mixed Mathematics and Metaphysical Physics: Descartes and the Mechanics of the Flow of Water” Topic: “Descartes’s Metaphysical Physics”, in honor of the 30th anniversary of Dan Garber’s highly influential book of that title. Committee: Roger Ariew, Dan Garber, Dana Jalobeanu, Alison Peterman, and Sophie Roux 2021 Winners: Jamee Elder “The ‘Direct Detection’ of Gravitational Waves” and Miguel Ohnesorge “Pluralizing Measurement: Physical Geodesy's Measurement Problem and its Resolution” Studies in History and Philosophy of Science 96, 51–67. 2022. Topic: Measurement practices in the physical sciences: correlation, calibration and stabilization Committee: Alisa Bokulich, Hasok Chang, Daniel Mitchell, and Wendy Parker 2020 Winner: Joshua Eisenthal “Hertz’s Mechanics and a unitary notion of force”, Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 90 226-234. 2021. Topic: Mathematics as a tool of conceptual innovation in physical theory and/or experiment, 1780-1890. Committee: Katherine Brading, Janet Folina, Doreen Fraser, Lydia Patton and Sheldon Smith 2019 Winner: Adwait Parker “Newton on Active and Passive Quantities of Matter”, Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 84 1-11. 2020. Topic: “How the parts of matter act on one another, as that issue stood at any time in the period 1680-1780” Committee: Katherine Brading, Mary Domski, Andrew Janiak, Chris Smeenk, George Smith ________________________________ Dr. Katherine Brading Professor and Chair, Department of Philosophy Director, Program in History and Philosophy of Science, Technology and Medicine Duke University 201 West Duke Building, Campus Box 90743 Durham, NC 27708 www.kbrading.org -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From center4philsci at gmail.com Tue Nov 14 22:38:26 2023 From: center4philsci at gmail.com (Chantel Snodgrass) Date: Tue, 14 Nov 2023 16:38:26 -0500 Subject: [PhilPhys] CALL FOR PROPOSALS DEADLINE EXTENSION: NOVERMBER 30 - Revitalizing Science and Values In-Reply-To: <4CCEC787-9AB4-44F1-A675-A4B94B6A5F0C@hxcore.ol> References: <4CCEC787-9AB4-44F1-A675-A4B94B6A5F0C@hxcore.ol> Message-ID: An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From P.E.Vermaas at tudelft.nl Wed Nov 15 15:15:06 2023 From: P.E.Vermaas at tudelft.nl (Pieter Vermaas) Date: Wed, 15 Nov 2023 14:15:06 +0000 Subject: [PhilPhys] =?iso-8859-1?q?Vacancy_for_2=BD_year_postdoctoral_rese?= =?iso-8859-1?q?archer_ethics_of_quantum_technologies?= Message-ID: Dear colleagues, We have at TU Delft, the Netherlands, a vacancy for a 2½ year postdoctoral researcher in the field of ethics of quantum technologies: https://www.tudelft.nl/over-tu-delft/werken-bij-tu-delft/vacatures/details?jobId=15032&jobTitle=Postdoc%20in%20the%20Ethical%20Impact%20of%20Technology%20on%20Society%20 Application deadline: January 7, 2024 This position is in the philosophy of quantum technologies group of Pieter Vermaas, Department of Ethics & Philosophy of Technology at TU Delft Section Ethics/Philosophy of Technology, VTI - TPM Faculty, TU Delft, and related to the ELSA research tracks part of the national Dutch Quantum Delta project on quantum technologies Home | Quantum Delta NL and to the Horizon project OpenSuperQ+ A Quantum Computer for Europe | OpenSuperQPlus. Kind regards, Pieter Vermaas p.e.vermaas at tudelft.nl -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From center4philsci at gmail.com Fri Nov 17 23:21:33 2023 From: center4philsci at gmail.com (Chantel Snodgrass) Date: Fri, 17 Nov 2023 17:21:33 -0500 Subject: [PhilPhys] =?utf-8?q?Lunch_Time_Talks_-_11/28_Margherita_Harris?= =?utf-8?q?=2C_11/30_Rapha=C3=ABl_Alexander_Scholl=2C_and_12/1_Dan_Nichols?= =?utf-8?q?on?= In-Reply-To: <8474CF03-C70E-46E8-ABE4-F4197327529F@hxcore.ol> References: <8474CF03-C70E-46E8-ABE4-F4197327529F@hxcore.ol> Message-ID: An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From center4philsci at gmail.com Wed Nov 22 19:13:14 2023 From: center4philsci at gmail.com (Center for Phil Sci) Date: Wed, 22 Nov 2023 13:13:14 -0500 Subject: [PhilPhys] Lunch Time Talks - 11/28 Margherita Harris, 11/30 Raphael Scholl, and 12/1 Dan Nicholson In-Reply-To: References: <8474CF03-C70E-46E8-ABE4-F4197327529F@hxcore.ol> Message-ID: The Center for Philosophy of Science at the University of Pittsburgh invites you to join us for our Lunch Time Talks. Attend in person, Room 1117 on the 11th floor of the Cathedral of Learning at the University of Pittsburgh or visit our live stream on YouTube at https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCrRp47ZMXD7NXO3a9Gyh2sg. *LTT: Margherita Harris * Tuesday, November 28th @ 12:00 pm - 1:30 pm EST *Title: Some Conceptual Problems in the IPCC Uncertainty Framework and Where to Go from Here* Abstract: Studies of climate change are afflicted by deep uncertainty, the communication of which is made more challenging still by the studies’ immediate policy implications. The world of policy-making has its demands: uncertain information should be communicated in a simple, consistent and relevant manner. To address this, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) uncertainty guide provides both a confidence and a likelihood metric for IPCC authors to characterize uncertainty in their findings. Unfortunately, as I will try to convince you in the first part of my talk, the relationship between these two metrics is far from clear and this ambiguity has worrying implications for how IPCC authors handle uncertainties and the quality of the information provided in IPCC reports. The aim of the second part of my talk is to critically reflect on what an adequate IPCC uncertainty framework could look like. I will begin by assessing two strikingly different proposals for a new IPCC uncertainty framework (Winsberg’s (2018) and Bradley et al.’s (2017)). After arguing that both proposals are conceptually problematic for distinct and yet related reasons, I will offer my own tentative proposal for a better IPCC uncertainty framework. *LTT – Raphael Scholl * Thursday, November 30th @ 12:00 pm - 1:00 pm EST *Title: Empirical tests of infectious disease models* Abstract: Epidemiologists have been developing mathematical and computational models to predict the course of epidemics since at least the 1920s. In this talk I will consider how these models were tested empirically, especially in the decades leading up to the Covid-19 pandemic. Tests relied either on data from actual epidemics (such as influenza or ebola) or on synthetic data that were themselves generated by infectious disease models. The questions under investigation included whether the models were capable of predicting the rate at which new cases would occur, the time and case numbers at which the epidemic would peak, and the overall duration of the epidemic. I will focus on two methodological issues raised by such empirical tests of infectious disease models. First, which aspects of infectious disease dynamics were these models intended to represent? Second, what sort of confirmation did the models receive from tests of (mere) predictive accuracy? I will situate my results within an adequacy-for-purpose view of model evaluation. *LTT – Dan Nicholson * Friday, December 1st @ 12:00 pm - 1:00 pm EST *Title: The New Physics Behind the Old Biology and the Old Physics Behind the New Biology: A Tale of Two Revolutions (in Three Acts)* Abstract: In this talk I tell the story of the physics-biology dialectic in the twentieth century. It is a tale of two revolutions: one that seemed inevitable but which never came to pass, and another that unfolded spectacularly but in a manner radically different from the way intended by those who triggered it. The first of these intellectual revolutions has been almost completely forgotten, while the second stands today as the most transformative event of twentieth-century biology. The first is the failed organicist revolution that throughout the interwar years seemed imminent and inescapable. The second is the triumphant molecular revolution that transformed biology in the second half of the twentieth century. Despite appearing very different, these two historical episodes are intimately connected, and neither can be fully understood in isolation from the other, or so I will argue. I tell this tale in three acts, opening with a prelude that provides a starting point for my analysis, and closing with a coda that adds a twenty-first century update to my tale. I end by drawing lessons for the historian, for the philosopher, and for the scientist. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From mauro.dorato at gmail.com Thu Nov 23 13:25:01 2023 From: mauro.dorato at gmail.com (Mauro Dorato) Date: Thu, 23 Nov 2023 13:25:01 +0100 Subject: [PhilPhys] 12 months research position at the Department of Philosophy, Communication and Performing Arts of The University of Roma Tre Message-ID: apologies for cross-posting 12 months post-doc position at the Department of Philosophy, Communication and Performing Arts of The University of Roma Tre within the PRIN project *The Philosophical Reception of Quantum Theory in France and German-speaking countries between 1925 and 1945: Conceptual Implications for the Contemporary Debate.* for candidates with expertise in 1) philosophy of physics 2) philosophy and metaphysics of quantum mechanics 3) history of the reception of relativity and quantum mechanics *between 1925 and 1945: * deadline for the application *22/12/2023 * The application form can be found at this link https://filosofiacomunicazionespettacolo.uniroma3.it/dipartimento/bandi-e-concorsi/bandi-per-assegni-di-ricerca/bandi-per-assegni-di-ricerca-2023/ -- Mauro Dorato Full Professor of Philosophy of Science Department of Philosophy, Communication and Media Studies, room 220 Università degli Studi Roma Tre, Via Ostiense 234, 00146 Rome, Italy, tel +39 0657338354, fax +39 06 57.33.83.40 Quaeris' inquit 'quid profecerim? amicus esse mihi coepi.' Multum profecit: numquam erit solus. Scito esse hunc amicum omnibus. (liber 1, epistula 6; "Humanas actiones non ridere, non lugere, neque detestari, sed intelligere" (Spinoza) https://uniroma3-segreterie.gomp.it/Docenti/Anagrafica/SchedaAnagrafica.aspx ORCID iD: 0000-0002-8313-6362 -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From mauro.dorato at gmail.com Thu Nov 23 18:10:25 2023 From: mauro.dorato at gmail.com (Mauro Dorato) Date: Thu, 23 Nov 2023 18:10:25 +0100 Subject: [PhilPhys] wrong date for the deadline ! Message-ID: The correct date for the application deadline relative to the previously advertised 12 months post-doc position in philosophy of physics at the Department of Philosophy, Communication and Performing Arts of The University of Roma Tre is noon CET *12/12/2023 *and not 22/12/2023 as previously reported. The the application link below obviously reports the correct date https://filosofiacomunicazionespettacolo.uniroma3.it/dipartimento/bandi-e-concorsi/bandi-per-assegni-di-ricerca/bandi-per-assegni-di-ricerca-2023/ apologies again! MD -- Mauro Dorato Full Professor of Philosophy of Science Department of Philosophy, Communication and Media Studies, room 220 Università degli Studi Roma Tre, Via Ostiense 234, 00146 Rome, Italy, tel +39 0657338354, fax +39 06 57.33.83.40 Quaeris' inquit 'quid profecerim? amicus esse mihi coepi.' Multum profecit: numquam erit solus. Scito esse hunc amicum omnibus. (liber 1, epistula 6; "Humanas actiones non ridere, non lugere, neque detestari, sed intelligere" (Spinoza) https://uniroma3-segreterie.gomp.it/Docenti/Anagrafica/SchedaAnagrafica.aspx ORCID iD: 0000-0002-8313-6362 -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From center4philsci at gmail.com Thu Nov 30 19:37:30 2023 From: center4philsci at gmail.com (Chantel Snodgrass) Date: Thu, 30 Nov 2023 13:37:30 -0500 Subject: [PhilPhys] Lunch Time Talk - 12/1 Dan Nicholson - The New Physics Behind the Old Biology and the Old Physics Behind the New Biology: A Tale of Two Revolutions (in Three Acts) In-Reply-To: References: <8474CF03-C70E-46E8-ABE4-F4197327529F@hxcore.ol> , , Message-ID: <8A3BF94A-4266-4C14-B7ED-2AFAEC4D4C4C@hxcore.ol> An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From mauro.dorato at gmail.com Sun Dec 3 12:05:42 2023 From: mauro.dorato at gmail.com (Mauro Dorato) Date: Sun, 3 Dec 2023 12:05:42 +0100 Subject: [PhilPhys] one-year post-doc at Roma Tre Deadline 11/12/2023 Message-ID: apologies for cross-posting 12 months post-doc position at the Department of Philosophy, Communication and Performing Arts of The University of Roma Tre within the PRIN project *The Philosophical Reception of Quantum Theory in France and German-speaking countries between 1925 and 1945: Conceptual Implications * *for the Contemporary Debate.* for candidates with expertise in 1) philosophy of physics 2) philosophy and metaphysics of quantum mechanics 3) history of the reception of relativity and quantum mechanics between 1925 and 1945: The application form can be found at this link. https://filosofiacomunicazionespettacolo.uniroma3.it/dipartimento/bandi-e-concorsi/bandi-per-assegni-di-ricerca/bandi-per-assegni-di-ricerca-2023/ *CONTRIBUTION REQUIRED* The candidate is expected to conduct independent research on the topics indicated in the research project and thus within the scope of the program PRIN funded and reported above, which involves precipitously a scientific collaboration with the national coordinator prof. MAURO DORATO (CUP Master F53D23004590006) and Prof. MATTEO MORGANTI but will take into account the research topics provided for by the PRIN program *GROSS ANNUAL AMOUNT OF THE CHECK* € 23.787,00 In the application form reference is made to a certified mail system used in Italy; alternative ways of submission however are available: sorry for this complication, for which our research group is no responsibler -- Mauro Dorato Full Professor of Philosophy of Science Department of Philosophy, Communication and Media Studies, room 220 Università degli Studi Roma Tre, Via Ostiense 234, 00146 Rome, Italy, tel +39 0657338354, fax +39 06 57.33.83.40 https://books.google.it/books?hl=it&lr=&id=d8mfEAAAQBAJ&oi=fnd&pg=PP1&ots=eHcdviaQaa&sig=JZBEhDm4ocgjfYqz9wAmWVTrIF8 dear all, a reminder and apologies for cross-posting 12 months post-doc position at the Department of Philosophy, Communication and Performing Arts of The University of Roma Tre within the PRIN project *The Philosophical Reception of Quantum Theory in France and German-speaking countries between 1925 and 1945: Conceptual Implications * *for the Contemporary Debate.* for candidates with expertise in 1) philosophy of physics 2) philosophy and metaphysics of quantum mechanics 3) history of the reception of relativity and quantum mechanics between 1925 and 1945: The application form can be found at this link. https://filosofiacomunicazionespettacolo.uniroma3.it/dipartimento/bandi-e-concorsi/bandi-per-assegni-di-ricerca/bandi-per-assegni-di-ricerca-2023/ *CONTRIBUTION REQUIRED* The candidate is expected to conduct independent research on the topics indicated in the research project and thus within the scope of the program PRIN funded and reported above, which involves precipitously a scientific collaboration with the national coordinator prof. MAURO DORATO (CUP Master F53D23004590006) and Prof. MATTEO MORGANTI but will take into account the research topics provided for by the PRIN program *GROSS ANNUAL AMOUNT OF THE CHECK* € 23.787,00 Preferably, the application ought to be sent via a certified mail system; sorry for this complication, which does not depend on our research group -- Mauro Dorato Full Professor of Philosophy of Science Department of Philosophy, Communication and Media Studies, room 220 Università degli Studi Roma Tre, Via Ostiense 234, 00146 Rome, Italy, tel +39 0657338354, fax +39 06 57.33.83.40 Quaeris' inquit 'quid profecerim? amicus esse mihi coepi.' Multum profecit: numquam erit solus. Scito esse hunc amicum omnibus. (liber 1, epistula 6; "Humanas actiones non ridere, non lugere, neque detestari, sed intelligere" (Spinoza) https://uniroma3-segreterie.gomp.it/Docenti/Anagrafica/SchedaAnagrafica.aspx ORCID iD: 0000-0002-8313-6362 -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From center4philsci at gmail.com Tue Dec 5 21:24:08 2023 From: center4philsci at gmail.com (Chantel Snodgrass) Date: Tue, 5 Dec 2023 15:24:08 -0500 Subject: [PhilPhys] Deadline December 10th - Accepting Applications for Visiting Fellowship - Fall and/or Spring 2024 - 2025 Academic Year In-Reply-To: <2E15A08F-7CE9-46C7-803B-1700BAD325DD@hxcore.ol> References: , <2E15A08F-7CE9-46C7-803B-1700BAD325DD@hxcore.ol> Message-ID: An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From jdoboszewski at gmail.com Thu Dec 7 17:04:56 2023 From: jdoboszewski at gmail.com (Juliusz Doboszewski) Date: Thu, 7 Dec 2023 17:04:56 +0100 Subject: [PhilPhys] Two Postdoc Positions (full-time) and up to 5 Visiting Fellowships in History and Philosophy of Physics at the University of Bonn Message-ID: Dear all, [with apologies for cross-posting] The University of Bonn is an international research university offering a broad range of subjects. With a 200-year history, some 35,000 students, more than 6,000 employees, and an outstanding reputation in Germany and abroad, the University of Bonn is one of the leading universities in Germany and has been awarded the status of a University of Excellence. The Lichtenberg Group for History and Philosophy of Physics at the Institute of Philosophy is seeking two postdoctoral fellows and up to five visiting fellows in History and Philosophy of Physics. The first postdoc position, which is part of the ERC "The Centre of Gravity" Project, is for three years and the second postdoc position, which is partially funded by the Volkswagen Foundation and partially by the Chair of Natural Philosophy and Philosophy of Science, is for three years with a possible extension for another three years. The visiting fellowships are for either one semester or the whole academic year. You would be joining a vibrant group for History and Philosophy of Physics in a beautiful city in the center of Europe. The details of all three types of positions can be found at https://www.history-and-philosophy-of-physics.com/jobs.html If you are interested in applying for one, two, or all three of these positions, then please send your complete application by email to gravity at uni-bonn.de by January 7, 2024. Before sending your application, please combine and convert all of your documents into one PDF file. A complete application will consist of a.) a cover letter, a curriculum vitae, a writing sample of no more than 10.000 words; and b.) three letters of reference, which must be sent by the letter writers or the placement service directly to the above email address. If you wish to apply for one of the postdoctoral positions or both, then please refer to the respective reference numbers that can be found on the web page of the Lichtenberg Group (see the above link). If you would like to be considered for one of the Heinrich Hertz visiting fellowships, then please note this in your cover letter; one file can serve for the application for all three positions. Please do not hesitate to contact Mr. Sascha Hilgert (phone +49 228 733967; hilgerts at uni-bonn.de) if you need any more information. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From jdoboszewski at gmail.com Tue Dec 12 18:15:45 2023 From: jdoboszewski at gmail.com (Juliusz Doboszewski) Date: Tue, 12 Dec 2023 18:15:45 +0100 Subject: [PhilPhys] CFA for Workshop "Quantum Gravity" at the annual DPG Meeting, Berlin, 18-22 March 2024 Message-ID: Dear all, (with apologies for cross-posting) The Working Group “Philosophy of Physics” (AGPhil) of the German Physical Society (DPG) invites submissions for its annual workshop. Contributions on any topic in philosophy of physics are welcome; the focus, however, will be on the topic of quantum gravity. The workshop takes place 18-22 March 2024 at the TU Berlin and will be part of the Annual Meeting of the DPG ( https://berlin24.dpg-tagungen.de/). The following Invited Speakers have confirmed thus far: - Alexander Blum (Max Planck Institute for the History of Science) - Karen Crowther (University of Oslo) - Erik Curiel (University of Bonn) - Johanna Erdmenger (University of Würzburg) - Klaas Landsman (Radboud University Nijmegen) -Tushar Menon (Dianoia Institute of Philosophy) - Chris Wüthrich (University of Geneva) If you would like to present a paper, please submit an abstract of about 200 words by 15 January 2023 (ignore the stated 1 December 2023 abstract submission deadline on the website), using the online-form at https://www.dpg-tagung.de/b24/submission.html?language=en. As conference fees are not trivial ( https://berlin24.dpg-tagungen.de/registrierung/tagungsgebuehren), speakers who have difficulties paying the conference fees should contact us about possible travel grants. For future updates see https://www.dpg-physik.de/vereinigungen/fachuebergreifend/ag/agphil We look forward to seeing you in Berlin! Dennis Lehmkuhl Radin Dardashti -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: