To Err is Not (Only) Human: Mistakes and What they Mean for Biology and PhilosophyInfo Location Contact More Info Event Information![]()
DescriptionTime: 6.00-7.30 pm; light refreshments in the foyer at 5.30 pm
Public Lecture by Prof. David S. Oderberg, Department of Philosophy, sponsored by the Royal Institute of Philosophy and the John Templeton Foundation
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ContactFor enquiries: [email protected] More Information
Prof. Oderberg and a team of scientists and philosophers (Jonathan Hill, Ingo Bojak, Jon Gibbins, Christopher Austin, François Cinotti) are investigating the phenomenon of biological mistakes, under a three-year grant generously awarded by the John Templeton Foundation. The project ties into a broader, global research program involving many research teams working on agency, purpose, and function in biology. It is not only humans who make mistakes. So do other living things, and even their parts. This one area where biology and physics are distinct: electrons do not make mistakes; organisms do. But what, exactly, is a biological mistake? Can it be defined? Are mistakes found across biology? Prof. Oderberg answers these questions, showing how mistake-making in living systems can provide a framework for generating new empirical hypotheses and tests of interest to the working biologist. Registration free. All welcome. No prior knowledge of philosophy or biology is presupposed. |