KLI Colloquia are invited research talks of about an hour followed by 30 min discussion. The talks are held in English, open to the public, and offered in hybrid format.
Fall-Winter 2025-2026 KLI Colloquium Series
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https://us02web.zoom.us/j/5881861923?omn=85945744831
Meeting ID: 588 186 1923
25 Sept 2025 (Thurs) 3-4:30 PM CET
A Dynamic Canvas Model of Butterfly and Moth Color Patterns
Richard Gawne (Nevada State Museum)
14 Oct 2025 (Tues) 3-4:30 PM CET
Vienna, the Laboratory of Modernity
Richard Cockett (The Economist)
23 Oct 2025 (Thurs) 3-4:30 PM CET
How Darwinian is Darwinian Enough? The Case of Evolution and the Origins of Life
Ludo Schoenmakers (KLI)
6 Nov (Thurs) 3-4:30 PM CET
Common Knowledge Considered as Cause and Effect of Behavioral Modernity
Ronald Planer (University of Wollongong)
20 Nov (Thurs) 3-4:30 PM CET
Rates of Evolution, Time Scaling, and the Decoupling of Micro- and Macroevolution
Thomas Hansen (University of Oslo)
4 Dec (Thurs) 3-4:30 PM CET
Chance, Necessity, and the Evolution of Evolvability
Cristina Villegas (KLI)
8 Jan 2026 (Thurs) 3-4:30 PM CET
Embodied Rationality: Normative and Evolutionary Foundations
Enrico Petracca (KLI)
15 Jan 2026 (Thurs) 3-4:30 PM CET
On Experimental Models of Developmental Plasticity and Evolutionary Novelty
Patricia Beldade (Lisbon University)
29 Jan 2026 (Thurs) 3-4:30 PM CET
Jan Baedke (Ruhr University Bochum)
Event Details
Topic description:
In his landmark book "Chance and Necessity: An Essay on the Natural Philosophy of Modern Biology," Jacques Monod seeks to articulate and then to resolve what he perceived to be a paradox afflicting modern biology: organisms both must be and can’t be purposive systems. The purposiveness of organisms, he claims, can by explained exhaustively by chance mutations to the otherwise invariant chemical basis of life: “Pure chance, absolutely free but blind, at the very root of the stupendous edifice of evolution” (Monod 1971: 112). In tracing evolutionary biology’s commitment to chance back to its methodological roots, Monod is echoing the Pre-Socratic atomist philosopher Democritus, who Monod credits with holding that everything in the world is the fruit of chance and necessity. Monod’s choice of philosophical avatar is apt and telling. Modern evolutionary biology is thoroughly neo-Democritean; like its atomist precursor, it allows no explanatory appeal to purposes. This, I maintain, is current evolutionary biology’s principal weakness. I attempt to develop in outline, a neo-Aristotelian conception of evolutionary biology, one that gives the purposiveness of organisms a central explanatory role.
Biographical note:
Denis Walsh is Canada Research Chair in Philosophy of Biology in the Department of Philosophy, the Institute for the History and Philosophy of Science and Technology, and the Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, at the University of Toronto. He gained his PhDs from McGill University, and King's College London. His research interests are in the nature of biological explanation, evolutionary population dynamics, and the place of development in evolutionary theory. He is currently completing a book manuscript provisionally entitled "Organisms: A Philosophical Introduction."