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Subj: ECAP 2 - First Announcement (fwd) ha gondolod Martanak is kuldd el!
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Date: Mon, 27 NOV 1995 21:21:24 GMT
From: Peter Simons <PHLPMS(a)LUCS-MAC.NOVELL.LEEDS.AC.UK>
To: Members of the list <philos-l(a)liverpool.ac.uk>
Subject: ECAP 2 - First Announcement
EUROPEAN SOCIETY FOR ANALYTIC PHILOSOPHY
ECAP 2: 2nd European Congress for Analytic Philosophy, Leeds, 5-7 September 1996
First Announcement and Call for Papers
The second European Congress for Analytic Philosophy will take place on 5-7
September 1996 at the University of Leeds, England. It will follow the same general
format as the first Congress held at Aix-en-Provence in 1993, with invited and
contributed papers on any suitable topic, treated from the point of view of
analytic philosophy.
Conference Fee 40 GB pounds, (20 pounds for students)
Accommodation will be available at the University of Leeds. Further details will be
gven in subsequent announcements.
Submitted papers will be subjected to a blind refereeing system and chosen on
merit.
Those wishing to submit papers for presentation at the congress are invited to send
3 copies of an abstract of not more than 1500 words, with their name and
affiliation on a separate sheet, by not later than 29 February 1996 to
ECAP 2
Department of Philosophy
University of Leeds
Leeds LS2 9JT
England
====
Kollegak,
Szabo Laszlo eloadasa utkozik Robinson prof.-eval, mi is ott leszunk,
ezert az eloadast dec.14.-re halasztjuk. Minden egyeb parameter valtozatlan.
Bocs koesz udv kgy
19:41:50 +100 Return-path: <gfekete(a)epas.utoronto.ca>
Dear Folks,
Fekete Gabor of U. Toronto will have the following course (in English)
as part of our Cognitive Psychology PhD program.
We are of course trying to recruite other people as well.
Please post this note, and notify of your interest both Gabor at the
above adress and me at pleh(a)izabell.elte.hu
All the best Pleh Csaba
Suggested course title: INTENTIONALITY AND QUALIA IN A WORLD OF CAUSES
Abstract: If thinking, feeling and other mental activities are identical to
brain processes, then mental events may just supervene upon physical (or at
least neuro-biological) processes. This may mean that having translated the
vocabulary of psychology into that of the reducing science we should look
for a more complete and more appropriate explanatory theory of mental events
there and psychologists could soon be out of their jobs. On the other hand,
we may want to deny that mental terms could ever be reduced to non-mental
ones (even without assuming a Cartesian dualist position) finding ourselves
in the same camp with the new mysterians who seem to end up denying a lot
more of the well-established a posteriori truth of science than they might
have wished to bargain for. Does presumed ontological identity between mind
and brain processes imply that psychological theories are deducible from
neuro-physiological ones (let alone some unified theory of science)? Or can
reasons be causes on their own power? We shall investigate these questions
and others, like those pertaining to the existence of qualia, the nature of
first person experience versus third person empirical observation and the
relation of functional equivalence to structural identity and its
consequeces on the possibilities of strong AI.
Key words and concepts: absent and inverted qualia, adaptation, artificial
intelligence, autophenomenology, autoregulation, behavior, belief, bridging
laws, category mistake, causation, center of narrative gravity, cognition,
conation, connectionism, consciousness, constructivism, Darwinism, de re -
de dicto distinction, determinism, disposition, dual-aspect theory, dualism,
eliminative materialism, emotivism, empiricism, epiphenomenalism,
essentialism, evolution, falsifiability, first person perspective, free
will, folk-psychology, functionalism, genotype-phenotype, ghost in the
machine, heterophenomenology, holism, homonculus, identity theory,
information processing, innatism, intensionality, intentionality,
intentional stance, intuitionism, knowledge, logical positivism,
materialism, mind, , nativism, naturalism, neural Darwinism, nominalism,
opacity, other minds, paralellism, perception, personal identity,
phenomenology, pragmatism, private events, qualia, rationality,
reductionism, representations, semantics, solipsim, supervenience,
teleological functionalism, token and type identities, Turing machine,
unconscious
Readings from: Armstrong, Chisholm, Churchland, Davidson, Dennett, Dretske,
Fodor, McGinn, Nagel, Searle, Schoemaker, Quine
Nem tudom meg pontosan miket valasztanek, a fenti szerzoktol szeretnek
szemelvenyeket. Konyvekbol Armstrong: _A Metrialist Theory of Mind_-bol,
Davidson: _Actions, Reasons and Causes_-bol, Dennett: _Intentional
Stance_-bol, _Elbow Room_-bol, Dretske: _Behavior Explained_-bol, Fodor:
_Representations_-bol, tobbi az cikk.
Requirements: One, approx. 5000 words long paper at the end of the term. Ez OK?
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
LINGUIST List: Vol-6-1653. Thu Nov 23 1995. ISSN: 1068-4875. Lines: 90
Subject: 6.1653, FYI: Postdocs at MIT
Moderators: Anthony Rodrigues Aristar: Texas A&M U. <aristar(a)tam2000.tamu.edu>
Helen Dry: Eastern Michigan U. <hdry(a)emunix.emich.edu>
Associate Editor: Ljuba Veselinova <lveselin(a)emunix.emich.edu>
Assistant Editors: Ron Reck <rreck(a)emunix.emich.edu>
Ann Dizdar <dizdar(a)tam2000.tamu.edu>
Annemarie Valdez <avaldez(a)emunix.emich.edu>
Software development: John H. Remmers <remmers(a)emunix.emich.edu>
Editor for this issue: lveselin(a)emunix.emich.edu (Ljuba Veselinova)
---------------------------------Directory-----------------------------------
1)
Date: Wed, 22 Nov 1995 17:54:31 EST
From: cphill(a)MIT.EDU
Subject: Postdocs at MIT
---------------------------------Messages------------------------------------
1)
Date: Wed, 22 Nov 1995 17:54:31 EST
From: cphill(a)MIT.EDU
Subject: Postdocs at MIT
Date: Wed, 22 Nov 95 17:32:58 EST
From: marantz(a)MIT.EDU (Alec Marantz)
Subject: postdoc announcment
McDonnell-Pew Center for Cognitive Neuroscience at MIT
1996 Postdoctoral Fellowships
The McDonnell-Pew Center for Cognitive Neuroscience at MIT has several
postdoctoral fellowships available in 1996-1997 for interdisciplinary
study of the neural bases of cognition, including language, memory,
reasoning, and the higher levels of vision and motor control. We seek
researchers whose work substantially combines neuroscience and
cognitive science. Candidates should identify two faculty sponsors,
whose expertise represents two of the three fields of cognition,
computation, and neuroscience.
The application consists of a CV, a brief (< 2 pages) summary of the
proposed research, and three letters of recommendation. Send them to
the Postdoc Selection Committee, McDonnell-Pew Center for Cognitive
Neuroscience at MIT, E25-406, Cambridge, MA 02139. The deadline is
February 1, 1996, for one-year fellowships beginning July 1, 1996 or
later. Fellowships may be renewed for a second year, following a
competitive review.
Questions about the program may be sent to the Director, Professor
Steven Pinker, steve(a)psyche.mit.edu. Questions about the fellowships
may be sent to Judith Rauchwarger, judithr(a)wccf.mit.edu, E25-406, MIT,
Cambridge, MA 02139. Copies of the brochure of the Department of Brain
and Cognitive Sciences, MIT, may be obtained from Jan Ellertsen,
ellertsen(a)wccf.mit.edu, same postal address.
Faculty:
Edward Adelson, visual perception, computational vision.
Bart Anderson, visual perception.
Robert Berwick, computational linguistics.
Emilio Bizzi, motor control.
Suzanne Corkin, neuropsychology and behavioral neuroscience.
Peter Dayan, neural computation, learning.
Edward Gibson, psycholinguistics, computational linguistics.
Ann Graybiel, neuroscience, neuroanatomy.
Alan Hein, sensorimotor development.
Neville Hogan, motor control.
Michael Jordan, motor control and connectionism.
Alec Marantz, linguistics, psycholinguistics, neurolinguistics.
Earl Miller, visual neuroscience.
David Pesetsky, linguistics, psycholinguistics, neurolinguistics.
Steven Pinker (Director), language and cognitive science.
Tomaso Poggio, neural computation, learning, visual perception.
Molly Potter, cognitive psychology, short-term memory.
Marc Raibert, motor control, robotics.
Whitman Richards, visual perception, mental models.
Peter Schiller, visual neuroscience.
Jerry Schneider, developmental neuroscience, neuroanatomy.
Mriganka Sur, neural plasticity, visual system.
Susumu Tonegawa, neural and genetic basis of learning.
Kenneth Wexler, linguistics, language acquisition.
Matt Wilson, neuroscience of space and memory.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
LINGUIST List: Vol-6-1653.
M E G H I V O
A Magyar Filozofiai Tarsasag Tudomanyfilozofiai Munkacsoportjanak
kovetkezo rendezvenyen
HOWARD ROBINSON
professzor (Budapest, Liverpool, UK) tart eloadast
REDUCTIONISM IN THE PHILOSOPHY OF MIND
cimmel, amelyre minden erdeklodot szeretettel varunk. Az eloadas
helye es ideje:
Muegyetem K. (kozponti) epulet I. em. 66.
(Oktatoi Klub)
1995. XI. 30., csutortok, 18:00
Kerjuk, a tisztelt kollegakat, hogy a fenti hirdetmenyt tegyek ki a
tanszeki / intezeti hirdetotablara!
Udvozlettel
Forrai Gabor
Margitay Tihamer
> The 1996
> James S. McDonnell Foundation
> Summer Institute in
> Cognitive Neuroscience
> at Dartmouth College and Medical School
>
>The 1996 Summer Institute will be held at Dartmouth College from June 30
>through July 14, 1996. The two-week course will examine how information
>about the brain affects issues in cognitive science, and how approaches in
>cognitive science apply to neuroscience research. A distinguished
>international faculty will lecture on current topics in memory and frontal
>lobe function. Laboratories and demonstrations will provide practical
>experience with cognitive neuropsychology experiments,
>connectionist/computational modeling, and neuroimaging techniques. At
>every stage, the relationship between cognitive processes and underlying
>neural circuits will be explored. The Foundation is providing room,
>partial board, and limited support for travel.
>
> Faculty Includes:
>
>Jamshed Bharucha
>Antonio Damasio
>Hanna Damasio
>Howard Eichenbaum
>Michela Gallagher
>Michael S. Gazzaniga
>Apostolos P. Georgopoulos
>Patricia Goldman-Rakic
>Michael Hasselmo
>John Jonides
>Robert Knight
>Leah Krubitzer
>Marta Kutas
>Joseph LeDoux
>Gary Lynch
>Gregory McCarthy
>Randy McIntosh
>Janet Metcalfe
>Elizabeth Phelps
>Robert Rafal
>Edmund Rolls
>Dan Schacter
>Terry Sejnowski
>David Sherry
>Larry Squire
>Chantal Stern
>Donald Stuss
>Endel Tulving
>
> For Information and applications please write to:
> McDonnell Summer Institute in Cognitive Neuroscience
> Dartmouth Medical School
> 7915 Kellogg Building
> Hanover, NH 03755-3822 USA
>
> Contact: Darleen Mimnaugh
> darleen.g.mimnaugh(a)dartmouth.edu
>
>Applications Must be Received By February 5, 1996
Kedves Kollegak,
ha nem is kognitiv ugy, de mas jo mailing list-ek hijan hadd
hivjam fel itt a figyelmet Szabo Laszlo logikat es fizikat erinto
eloadasara. udv kgy
====================
SZEMINARIUMI ELOADAS
Az ELTE TTK Tudomanytortenet es Tudomanyfilozofia Tanszeken (1088
Bp., Rakoczi ut 5.)
Szabo Laszlo
ELTE TTK Elmeleti Fizika Tanszek
"Az elagazo teridok elmelete es a Greenberger-Horne-Zeilinger-
tetel"
cimmel tart eloadast.
ELOADASKIVONAT
Egyik kiindulopontunk Nuel Belnap elagazo terido elmelete. Ez az
egyetlen olyan szigoruan megfogalmazott formalis elmelet, amely
lehetove teszi az objectiv indeterminizmus koncepciojanak es a
relativitaselmeletnek az egyesiteset. Ha igaz a kvantumelmelet
kovetkeztetese, melyszerint a vilagunkban letezik objektiv -- va-
gyis nem csupan a tudasunk hianyara visszavezetheto -- modalitas
(indeterminisztikussag), akkor a vilagunk modalis strukturajat
egy nem-trivialis elagazo terido irja le, vagyis olyan, amelyben
nem csak egyetlen ag van.
Az eloadas masik pillere a Greenberger, Horne es Zeilinger (GHZ)
altal 1990-ben bebizonyitott kvantummechanikai tetel, amely
egyfajta Bell-tetel, valoszinusegekre felirt egyenlotlensegek
nelkul. A bizonyitasnak azonban vannak gyengesegei, amelyeket
tobben, igy Bohm es Hiley is kritizaltak.
Az elagazo terido elmelet nyelvet felhasznalva sikerult Belnappal
megadnunk a GHZ-tetel egy precizebb ujrafogalmazasat. Ebben az
uj megfogalmazasban sikerult olyan bizonyitast adnunk, amely
mentes a kritizalt gyengesegektol. A problema altalunk megadott
analizisebol az is vilagosan kiderul, hogy hol vannak a GHZ-tetel
ervenyessegenek pontos hatarai.
Idopontja: 1995 november 30., csutortok, 17 ora.
Helye: Rakoczi ut 5., I. em. 105.
Az eloadas idotartama 50-60 perc, amelyet rovid szunet utan kb.
30-60 perc vita kovet. Minden erdeklodot szeretettel varunk.
Udvozlettel, a szervezok: &&Kampis Gyorgy &&(gk(a)hps.elte.hu)
&&Szabo Laszlo &&(leszabo(a)hal9000.elte.hu)
&&Szecsenyi Tibor &&(szecska(a)ludens.elte.hu)
M E G H I V O
A VISELKEDES NEUROBIOLOGIAJA DOKTORI PROGRAM KLUBDELUTANJARA
amelyet 1995. november 15-en szerdan delutan 17.30-kor tartunk az
ELTE Tanari Klubjaban (Budapest, V. Szerb u. 21-23. I.emelet).
A klubdelutanon
Dr. Ba'rdos Gyorgy kandidatus, c. docens, tud. fomunkatars
ZSIGERI EREDETU KELLEMETLEN INGEREK HATASA A VISELKEDESRE
cimen ismerteti sajat, valamint kozvetlen munkatarsainak kutatasait.
A klubdelutanon az osszes doktoranduszt es minden erdeklodot szivesen
latunk.
Dr. Adam Gyorgy
programvezeto neveben
-----
Fent Janos
ST_JANO(a)ludens.elte.hu
Eighteenth Annual Conference of the
COGNITIVE SCIENCE SOCIETY
July 12-15, 1996
University of California, San Diego
La Jolla, California
CALL FOR PAPERS
DUE DATE: Thursday, February 1, 1996
The Annual Cognitive Science Conference began with the La
Jolla Conference on Cognitive Science in August of 1979.
The organizing committee of the Eighteenth Annual Conference
would like to welcome members home to La Jolla. We plan to
recapture the pioneering spirit of the original conference,
extending our welcome to fields on the expanding frontier of
Cognitive Science, including Artificial Life, Cognitive and
Computational Neuroscience, Evolutionary Psychology, as well
as the core areas of Anthropology, Computer Science,
Linguistics, Neuroscience, Philosophy, and Psychology. As a
change this year, we follow the example of Psychonomics and
the Neuroscience Conferences and invite Members of the
Society to submit one-page abstracts for guaranteed poster
presentation at the conference. A second change is that all
papers accepted as posters will only get one page in the
proceedings.
The conference will feature plenary addresses by invited
speakers, invited symposia by leaders in their fields,
technical paper and a poster sessions, a banquet, and a
Blues Party. San Diego is the home of the world-famous San
Diego Zoo and Wild Animal Park, Sea World, the historic
all-wooden Hotel Del Coronado, beautiful beaches, mountain
areas and deserts, is a short drive from Mexico, and
features a high Cappuccino Index. Bring the whole family
and stay a while!
GUIDELINES FOR PAPER SUBMISSIONS
Novel research papers are invited on any topic related to
cognition.
Members of the Society may submit a one page abstract for
poster presentation, which will be automatically accepted
for publication in the proceedings. Submitted full-length
papers will be evaluated through peer review with respect to
several criteria, including originality, quality, and
significance of research, relevance to a broad audience of
cognitive science researchers, and clarity of presentation.
Papers will either be accepted for publication in the
proceedings, or (if the author is a Society member) will be
accepted as a poster, and a one-page abstract will be
published. Such authors will get a chance to flesh out the
abstract to a page when submitting their camera ready copy.
Poster abstracts from non-members will be accepted, but the
presenter should join the Society prior to presenting the
poster.
Accepted papers will be presented at the conference as
talks. Papers may present results from completed research
as well as report on current research with an emphasis on
novel approaches, methods, ideas, and perspectives. Posters
may report on recent work to be published elsewhere that has
not been previously presented at the conference.
Authors should submit five (5) copies of the paper in hard
copy form by Thursday, February 1, 1996, to:
Dr. Garrison W. Cottrell
Computer Science and Engineering 0114
FED EX ONLY: 3250 Applied Physics and Math
University of California San Diego
La Jolla, Ca. 92093-0114
phone for FED EX: 619-534-5948 (my secretary, Marie Kreider)
If confirmation of receipt is desired, please use certified
mail or enclose a self-addressed stamped envelope or
postcard.
DAVID MARR MEMORIAL PRIZES FOR EXCELLENT STUDENT PAPERS
Papers with a student first author are eligible to compete
for a David Marr Memorial Prize for excellence in research
and presentation. The David Marr Prizes are accompanied by
a $300.00 honorarium, and are funded by an anonymous donor.
LENGTH
Papers must be a maximum of eleven (11) pages long
(excluding only the cover page but including figures and
references), with 1 inch margins on all sides (i.e., the
text should be 6.5 inches by 9 inches, including footnotes
but excluding page numbers), double-spaced, and in 12-point
type. Each page should be numbered (excluding the cover
page). Template and style files conforming to these
specifications for several text formatting programs,
including LaTeX, Framemaker, Word, Word Perfect, and HTML
will be available by anonymous FTP after November 15th,
1995. (Check "http://www.cse.ucsd.edu/events/cogsci96/" for
details).
Submitted abstracts should be one page in length, with the
same margins as full papers. Style files for these will be
available at the same location as above.
Final versions of papers and poster abstracts will be
required only after authors are notified of acceptance;
accepted papers will be published in a CD-ROM version of the
proceedings. Abstracts will be available before the meeting
from a WWW server. Final versions must follow the HTML
style guidelines referred to above.
This year we will continue to publish the proceedings in two
modalities, paper and a CD-ROM version. When the procedures
for efficient HTML submission stabilize, we will be
switching from paper to CD-ROM publication in order to
control escalating costs and permit use of search software.
[Comments on this change should be directed to
"alan(a)lrdc4.lrdc.pitt.edu" (Alan Lesgold,
Secretary/Treasurer).]
COVER PAGE
Each copy of the submitted paper must include a cover page,
separate from the body of the paper, which includes:
1. Title of paper.
2. Full names, postal addresses, phone numbers, and e-mail
addresses of all authors.
3. An abstract of no more than 200 words.
4. Three to five keywords in decreasing order of relevance.
The keywords will be used in the index for the
proceedings.
5. Preference for presentation format: Talk or poster, talk
only, poster only. Poster only submissions should follow
paper format, but be no more than 2 pages in this format
(final poster abstracts will follow the same 2 column
format as papers). Accepted papers will be presented as
talks. Submitted posters by Society Members will be
accepted for poster presentation, but may, at the
discretion of the Program Committee, be invited for oral
presentation. Non-members may join the Society at the
time of submission.
6. A note stating if the paper is eligible to compete for a
Marr Prize.
DEADLINE
Papers must be received by Thursday, February 1, 1996.
Papers received after this date will be recycled.
CALL FOR SYMPOSIA
In addition to technical papers, posters, plenary sessions,
and invited symposia, the conference will accept submitted
research symposia. Proposals for symposia are invited and
should indicate:
1. A brief description of the topic;
2. How the symposium would address a broad cognitive science
audience, and some evidence of interest;
3. Names of symposium organizer(s);
4. List of potential speakers, their topics, and some
estimate of their likelihood of participation;
5. Proposed symposium format (designed to last 90 minutes).
Symposium proposals should be sent as soon as possible, but
no later than January 1, 1996. Abstracts of the symposium
talks will be included in the proceedings and must be made
available in HTML format, as above.
CONFERENCE CHAIRS
Edwin Hutchins and Walter Savitch
hutchins(a)cogsci.ucsd.edu savitch(a)cogsci.ucsd.edu
PROGRAM CHAIR
Garrison W. Cottrell
gary(a)cs.ucsd.edu
Date: Fri, 3 Nov 1995 14:40:37 +0000 (GMT)
From: Steven Young <steven.young(a)psy.ox.ac.uk>
Sender: Steven Young <steven.young(a)psy.ox.ac.uk>
Reply-To: Steven Young <steven.young(a)psy.ox.ac.uk>
Subject: Oxford Summer School on Connectionist Modelling
To: connectionists(a)cs.cmu.edu, dev-europe(a)durham.ac.uk,
info-childs(a)poppy.psy.cmu.edu, psyling(a)psy.gla.ac.uk,
psyc(a)pucc.princeton.edu, neuron(a)cattell.psych.upenn.edu
CC: Steven.Young(a)psy.ox.ac.uk, Susan.King(a)psy.ox.ac.uk,
Kim.Plunkett(a)psy.ox.ac.uk, Edmund.Rolls(a)psy.ox.ac.uk
Message-ID: <199511031440.OAA04054(a)cogsci2.psych.ox.ac.uk>
The call for participation for the 1996 Oxford Summer School on
Connectionist Modelling follows. Please pass on this information
to people you know you would be interested.
--------
OXFORD SUMMER SCHOOL ON CONNECTIONIST MODELLING
Department of Experimental Psychology
University of Oxford
21 July - 2nd August 1996
Applications are invited for participation in a 2-week
residential Summer School on techniques in connectionist
modelling. The course is aimed primarily at researchers who
wish to exploit neural network models in their teaching and/or
research and it will provide a general introduction to
connectionist modelling through lectures and exercises on Power
PCs. The course is interdisciplinary in content though many of
the illustrative examples are taken from cognitive and
developmental psychology, and cognitive neuroscience. The
instructors with primary responsibility for teaching the course
are Kim Plunkett and Edmund Rolls.
No prior knowledge of computational modelling will be required
though simple word processing skills will be assumed.
Participants will be encouraged to start work on their own
modelling projects during the Summer School.
The cost of participation in the Summer School is #750 to
include accommodation (bed and breakfast at St. John's College)
and registration. Participants will be expected to cover their
own travel and meal costs. A small number of graduate student
scholarships providing partial funding may be available.
Applicants should indicate whether they wish to be considered
for a graduate student scholarship but are advised to seek their
own funding as well, since in previous years the number of
graduate student applications has far exceeded the number of
scholarships available.
There is a Summer School World Wide Web page describing the
contents of the 1995 Summer School available on:
http://cogsci1.psych.ox.ac.uk/summer-school/
Further information about contents of the course can be obtained
from Steven.Young(a)psy.ox.ac.uk
If you are interested in participating in the Summer School,
please contact:
Mrs Sue King
Department of Experimental Psychology
University of Oxford
South Parks Road
Oxford OX1 3UD
Tel: (01865) 271353
Email: susan.king(a)psy.oxford.ac.uk
Please send a brief description of your background with an
explanation of why you would like to attend the Summer School
(one page maximum) no later than 31st January 1996.
Regards,
Steven Young.
--
Facility for Computational Modelling in Cognitive Science
McDonnell-Pew Centre for Cognitive Neuroscience, Oxford
<mailto:Steven.Young@psy.ox.ac.uk>