Chères et chers collègues,

Le séminaire de l'IHPST sur l'*épistémologie des modèles* organise une
séance spéciale le *mardi 22 juin de 14h à 17h* au cours de laquelle nous
aurons le plaisir d'écouter *Mauricio Suárez* (Universidad Complutense de
Madrid) et *Cyrille Imbert* (CNRS - Archives Poincaré).

La séance se tiendra en *visioconférence*. Voici le lien Zoom:

https://pantheonsorbonne.zoom.us/j/97915179794?pwd=MlpHelBmSWF6TENuS3hJeGZHTnhnUT09
ID de réunion : 979 1517 9794
Code secret : 209353

Voici ci-dessous les titres et résumés des communications :

*14:00 - 15:30 - Mauricio Suárez *(Universidad Complutense de Madrid)

*The Complex Nexus of Evolutionary Fitness*

*The propensity nature of evolutionary fitness has long been appreciated
and is nowadays amply discussed (Abrams, 2009, 2012; Ariew and Ernst, 2009;
Ariew and Lewontin, 2004; Beatty and Finsen, 1989; Brandon, 1978; Drouet
and Merlin, 2015; Mills and Beatty, 1979; Millstein, 2003, 2016; Pence and
Ramsey, 2013; Sober, 1984, 2001, 2013, 2019; Walsh, 2010; Walsh, Ariew,
Mahen, 2016; etc). The discussion has, however, on occasion followed long
standing conflations in the philosophy of probability between propensities,
probabilities, and frequencies. In this article, I apply a more recent
conception of propensities in modelling practice (the ‘complex nexus of
chance’, CNC) to some key issues, regarding whether and how fitness is
explanatory, and how it ought to be represented mathematically. The ensuing
complex nexus of fitness (CNF) emphasises the distinction between
biological propensities and the probability distributions over offspring
numbers that they give rise to; and how critical it is to distinguish the
possession conditions of the underlying dispositional (physical and
biological) properties from those of their probabilistic manifestations.*


*15:30 - 17:00* *Cyrille Imbert *(CNRS - Archives Poincaré)

*Watch out for ill-conceptualized maps: simulations as secondary, neutral,
heterogeneous source of knowledge*




*Whereas philosophers of science have analyzed computer simulations for
more than three decades, their epistemological status and how they relate
to other sources of knowledge remainunclear. Because simulations do not
square well with the traditional division between experimental and
theoretical activities, early analysts suggested that they occupy some
space in-between theories and experiments. Nevertheless, as Frigg and Reiss
(2009) emphasized, it is hard to make clear sense of this idea of
in-betweenness. In the present paper, I propose to pursue a methodological
stance pioneered by Mary Morgan (2000) within her investigation of "hybrid
cases." I adopt a conceptual framework in terms of epistemic sources
developed by Robert Audi in epistemology, e.g. to analyze testimony. Then,
I investigate more systematically how other sources of knowledge can feed
simulations. Because the theoretical side is not much of a problem, I focus
on how much simulations can be fed by empirical sources and present rare
and hybrid specimens to explore the epistemological space simulations may
occupy.*
*The upshot is that, as secondary sources of knowledge, simulations can be
fed almost entirely by various sources, provided that these provide the
information requested to build-up full-blown computational models. This
suggests describing simulations as a (secondary) source of knowledge that
is neutral concerning the epistemological types of information that it can
process. This also explains why particular token simulations can be so
epistemologically heterogeneous. For example, when simulations are fueled
empirically (resp. theoretically), one should conclude that they provide
derived empirical (resp. theoretical) knowledge. If this is so, trying to
locate simulations as a general type of activity somewhere on an
epistemological map is a mistake. Because simulations, as a type, are
neutral concerning their sources, token simulations can be virtually
anywhere on the multi-dimensional map of the epistemological sources that
can feed secondary sources of knowledge.*


*Organisation:*
Franck Varenne (franck.vare...@univ-rouen.fr)
Vincent Ardourel ( vincent.ardou...@univ-paris1.fr)


Au plaisir de vous voir.
Bien cordialement,

Vincent Ardourel
IHPST <https://ihpst.pantheonsorbonne.fr/> (CNRS - Université Paris 1
Panthéon-Sorbonne)

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