Events

KLI Colloquia are informal, public talks that are followed by extensive dissussions. Speakers are KLI fellows or visiting researchers who are interested in presenting their work to an interdisciplinary audience and discussing it in a wider research context. We offer three types of talks:

1. Current Research Talks. KLI fellows or visiting researchers present and discuss their most recent research with the KLI fellows and the Vienna scientific community.

2. Future Research Talks. Visiting researchers present and discuss future projects and ideas togehter with the KLI fellows and the Vienna scientific community.

3. Professional Developmental Talks. Experts about research grants and applications at the Austrian and European levels present career opportunities and strategies to late-PhD and post-doctoral researchers.

  • The presentation language is English.
  • If you are interested in presenting your current or future work at the KLI, please contact the Scientific Director or the Executive Manager.

Event Details

Daniel Kostic
KLI Lab
Towards a Unifying Account of Causal and Non-Causal Explanations
Daniel KOSTIC (University Bordeaux Montaigne)
2020-01-23 12:00 - 2020-01-23 13:00
KLI
Organized by KLI

 

Topic description / abstract:

 

In the last few decades, several very sophisticated accounts of causal explanation have been developed in the philosophy of science. According to these accounts causal explanations appeal to causal processes and relations that produce phenomena which we want to explain. However, recently ideas about non-causal explanations started to emerge, according to which non-causal explanations do not appeal to causal processes or microphysical details of physical systems, but rather to mathematical properties and structures or to metaphysical relations (realization, supervenience, constitution, emergence).  The existence of causal and non-causal explanations implies an unbridgeable gap in our understanding of the world and how the science works, namely, given that every physical system is a part of the larger causal structure where every property or behavior is seen as an effect that has some causes and causal history, then how could the non-causal facts be explanatory of physical systems if they do not appeal to causes, causal histories or microphysical details?

Furthermore, given that non-causal explanations are sometimes used to devise neurological intervention (e.g. in implanting a neuromodulating device that stops the onset of symptoms in Parkinson’s disease the explanation appeals to facts about how mathematical properties of connectivity patterns in complex networks constrain the brain dynamics) or to design an ecological management policy (e.g. understanding the dependence between the health of a marine ecological community and the graph-theoretical hierarchies in the predation relations in such a community), it is important to have a clear set of the conditions of application of epistemic norms.

This project aims to answer these questions by providing a set of epistemic norms that are universally applicable to both seemingly incompatible families of explanations, as well as a set of conditions of application of these norms in clinical practice and policy making.

 

Biographical note:

Daniel Kostić is a researcher at the interdisciplinary lab Sciences Philosophie Humanités (SPH-EA 4574) of the University Bordeaux Montaigne and University of Bordeaux. From 2016 until 2018, he was the Marie Skłodowska-Curie Fellow at the IHPST (CNRS-Sorbonne Pantheon Paris 1).

The overarching theme of his research is understanding the scientific explanation.

In the last couple of years, he has worked on a comprehensive account of topological explanations, especially in neuroscience. The term “topological” in this context is used in strictly graph theoretical sense, because these explanations describe how the facts about empirical properties of a system counterfactually depend on mathematical properties of connectivity patterns in complex networks. Work on topological explanations has led him to a larger, more normative issue of any successful explanation. He is currently developing a set of epistemic norms that can be universally applied to both causal and non-causal explanations.

Daniel is currently co-editing (with Claus Hilgetag and Marc Tittgemeyer) a theme issue in Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences, on the topic of “Unifying the essential concepts of biological networks”.

He received his PhD degree in philosophy from Humboldt University in Berlin.