Latest Past Events

Tudor Baetu (Bristol), “Pain in Psychology, Biology and Medicine: Implications for Eliminativist and Physicalist Accounts “

LAK 2.06, The Lakatos Building London School of Economics, London

Abstract. An analysis of arguments for pain eliminativism reveals two significant points of divergence between assumptions underlying scientific research on pain and assumptions typically endorsed by physicalist accounts. The first concerns the status of the term ‘pain’, which is an operationalized description of a phenomenon, rather than an explanatory construct. The second concerns an explicit […]

Heather Dyke (LSE), “Experience of Passage in a Static World”

LAK 2.06, The Lakatos Building London School of Economics, London

Abstract. The view that experience seems to tell us directly that time flows has long been accepted by both A-theorists and B-theorists in the philosophy of time. A-theorists take it as a powerful endorsement of their position, sometimes using it explicitly in an argument for their view, and other times more implicitly, as a kind of […]

Karim Thébault (Bristol), “Cosmic Singularity Resolution via Quantum Evolution”

LAK 2.06, The Lakatos Building London School of Economics, London

Abstract: Classical models of the universe generically feature a big bang singularity. That is, when we consider progressively earlier and earlier times, physical quantities stop behaving in a reasonable way. A particular problem is that physical quantities related to the curvature of spacetime become divergent. A long standing hope is that a theory of quantum […]

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