Logic and Philosophy of Science Seminar
Department of Logic, Institute of Philosophy
Eötvös Loránd University
Budapest, Múzeum krt. 4/i Room 224
_____________________________________________
P R O G R A M
The seminar is held in hybrid format, in person (Múzeum krt. 4/i Room 224)
and online. Zoom link
<https://us02web.zoom.us/j/84594385686?pwd=a7KPWoNLrPg11xNTi5Ug91YR5mHmmS.1>
20 March (Friday) 4:15 PM Room 224 + ONLINE
Tibor Papp
Eötvös Loránd University, Department of Logic
Title: Introduction to Universal Logic
*The talk will be in Hungarian.*
_____________________________________________
ABSTRACT:
The first part of my doctoral thesis is a self-developed metalogical
theory, called Universal Logic (UL). The doctoral thesis outlines UL as
follows:
*There is a hidden internal architecture of logic that is obscured by the
implicit paradigms governing syntax, semantics, and consequence. By
explicating and reformulating these paradigms in two distinct directions,
this hidden architecture becomes visible.First, modern (post-Fregean) logic
has typically approached traditional (pre-Fregean) logic by reformulating
its categories within modern logical frameworks. To make the internal
architecture of logic visible, however, this direction must be reversed:
modern logic must be reconstructed on the basis of the categorical
distinctions already present in traditional logic.Second, the internal
architecture of logic has typically been sought through its algebraisation.
Yet algebraic abstraction, while structurally powerful, necessarily
suppresses certain features specific to logical construction, and therefore
cannot render the full internal architecture of logic visible. To make this
architecture fully explicit, it is not logic that must be algebraised, but
algebra that must be logified.As a result of this reformulation, the
completeness theorem emerges in a new light. It is a universal property of
the internal architecture of logic itself, rather than a result tied to
particular logical calculi, and it can be formally proved within the new
paradigms that make this architecture explicit. In other words, the absence
of a completeness theorem in higher-order logics does not reflect an
intrinsic limitation of logic itself; it reveals instead that the implicit
paradigms governing syntax, semantics, and consequence are insufficient to
support completeness in higher orders.*
Of course, I cannot present the entire UL during the seminar lecture, as it
is a mathematical construction of over 100 pages. The aim of the lecture is
to show the basic ideas on which UL is based.
Finally, an important note: I will give the lecture* in Hungarian*.
_____________________________________________
The seminar is open to everyone, including students, visitors, and
faculty members from all departments and institutes! Format: 60 minute
lecture, coffee break, discussion.
_____________________________________________
Organizers: Márton Gömöri and Zalán Molnár
_____________________________________________
LPS - Logic and Philosophy of Science (Student and Faculty Seminar)
Department of Logic, Institute of Philosophy
Eötvös University Budapest
http://phil.elte.hu/lps
Dear All,
The CEU Department of Cognitive Science invites you to the following talk:
Catherine Crockford (CNRS Lyon)<https://www.eva.mpg.de/ecology/staff/catherine-crockford/>
Chimpanzees show protracted vocal utterance development with implications for language evolution theories.
Theories of language evolution depend in part upon accurate empirical and comparative assessment of animal communicative capacities. One problem, demonstrated by recent discoveries, is that we still do not know how complex animal communication is. Ontogenetic analyses are helping to change this. Only one natural communication system is considered combinatorially complex with respect to mapping complex structure to complex meaning. This is human language. With a limited sound set, we combine words into utterances, generating endless new and relational meanings. Most animals have a limited sound set that is largely fixed from birth, and per species produce few multi-signal utterances in which the meaning shifts compared to the composing signals. However, recent studies delving into vocal sequence production suggest a dramatically different pattern in chimpanzee vocal production. Chimpanzees demonstrate highly flexible abilities to combine calls with ordering and recombinatorial properties. Vocal combinations which show compositional-like structures, such that calls combined into utterances may disambiguate, add or generate new meanings compared to the composing calls. Like humans but unlike African monkeys, ontogenetic development is protracted, with utterance length and diversity dramatically increasing until 10 years of age. Such a developmental trajectory, in combination with population differences documented in sequence structure, are both suggestive of social learning capacities. Social learning is also indicated by population and community differences in the form and usage of some gestural signals. Taken together, our results place chimpanzee combinatorial capacities between those of humans and African monkeys, with implications for brain evolution, including changes to reorganization of human language tract homologues and for evolution of language theories.
Date: Wednesday, March 18, 2026
Time: 4 pm (to 5:30 pm) CET
Venue: D001-Tiered* (QS Vienna) and Zoom (meeting ID: 969 2496 5784<https://ceu-edu.zoom.us/j/96924965784?pwd=c2duZ0dDMFdEMUthK2Mwa2wzMllEUT09>, passcode: 471712)
Chair: Prof. Gergely Csibra
*Anyone not affiliated with CEU wishing to attend in-person in Vienna must RSVP here<https://forms.cloud.microsoft/Pages/ResponsePage.aspx?id=E1nE2VN24kuSC72wOG…> to get access to the lecture hall.
Looking forward to seeing you then!
All the best,
Anna Banki
[Image]
Anna Bánki
Postdoctoral Researcher
Department of Cognitive Science, Causal Cognition Lab
bankia(a)ceu.edu<mailto:bankia@ceu.edu> | +43 1 25230 7584<tel:+431252307584> | My Research<https://research.ceu.edu/en/persons/anna-banki/>
CENTRAL EUROPEAN UNIVERSITY
D501 | Quellenstrasse 51 | A-1100 Vienna | Austria | www.ceu.edu<http://www.ceu.edu/>
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______________________________________________
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by DUCOG - Dubrovnik Conference on Cognitive Science
Dear All,
We are pleased to announce the *late-breaking abstract submission* for
the XVII.
Dubrovnik Conference on Cognitive Science devoted to Adaptations across
different timescales until 20 March! The conference is going to take place
on 21-24 May 2026, in the Center for Advanced Studies of Dubrovnik,
Croatia, located by the Adriatic sea at the foot of the old city of
Dubrovnik, a UNESCO world heritage site.
Adaptation is a defining feature of living systems, from immediate
adjustments to long-term developmental and societal changes. Here, we will
explore adaptation and its limits across multiple scales, asking how
individuals, groups, and societies adjust to shifting internal and external
demands, and what this means for personality and mental health. We will be
interested in how cognition is adjusted to cope with more immediate
challenges like scarcity, threat, or turmoil. On top of that, effects of
the environment during sensitive developmental periods can leave enduring
marks on information processing and behavioural tendencies. In this vein,
we will consider whether cognitive correlates of personality traits and
psychopathology can be seen as generalized adaptations to the past, or as
obstacles to meeting challenges in the present. In this conference, we will
bring together researchers who address this broad question from various
angles such as experimental psychology, genetics and neuroscience, or
clinical & personality psychology, and use diverse tools such as
computational cognitive modelling and time series analysis of daily life
data.
Invited speakers include:
-
Laura Bringmann (University of Groningen)
-
Judith R. Homberg (Radboud University)
-
Stephan Lewandowsky (University of Bristol)
-
Kevin Mitchell (Trinity College Dublin)
-
Katalin Oláh (Eötvös Loránd University)
We invite poster submissions from all areas of cognitive science. Both
theoretical and empirical posters are welcome.
You may submit your poster abstract here: https://ducog.cecog.eu/submit
The deadline for late-breaking bstract submission is 20 March 2026.
Registration fees: CECOG member: 270 EUR, Non-member: 350 EUR, Late (after
May 1): 420 EUR
Authors will be notified of acceptance of their abstracts by 27 March 2026.
For more information please visit https://ducog.cecog.eu
or email us at: ducog(a)cecog.eu
On behalf of the organisers,
Bertalan Polner (ELTE Eötvös Loránd University & Donders Institute) &
Levente Rónai (ELTE Eötvös Loránd University & University of Szeged)
- Conference chairs
Logic and Philosophy of Science Seminar
Department of Logic, Institute of Philosophy
Eötvös Loránd University
Budapest, Múzeum krt. 4/i Room 224
_____________________________________________
P R O G R A M
The seminar is held in hybrid format, in person (Múzeum krt. 4/i Room 224)
and online. Zoom link
<https://us02web.zoom.us/j/84594385686?pwd=a7KPWoNLrPg11xNTi5Ug91YR5mHmmS.1>
13 March (Friday) 4:15 PM Room 224 + ONLINE
Hongkai Yin
Central European University, Vienna
Title: The Guarded Fluted Fragment of First-Order Logic
_____________________________________________
Abstract is available from the seminar website:
https://lps.elte.hu/lps/2025-2026/March/
The seminar is open to everyone, including students, visitors, and
faculty members from all departments and institutes! Format: 60 minute
lecture, coffee break, discussion.
Organizers: Márton Gömöri and Zalán Molnár
_____________________________________________
LPS - Logic and Philosophy of Science (Student and Faculty Seminar)
Department of Logic, Institute of Philosophy
Eötvös University Budapest
http://phil.elte.hu/lps
Dear All,
The CEU Department of Cognitive Science invites you to the following talk.
Speaker: Thibaud Gruber<https://www.unige.ch/cisa/center/members/gruber-thibaud/> <https://www.unige.ch/cisa/center/members/gruber-thibaud/>
Title: An affective, behavioral and cognitive story of the evolution of communication and culture in humans and other great apes
The studies of the evolution of language and culture are intertwined. Often, the same mechanisms – including the usual suspects such as imitation – are argued to be at the heart of the evolution of both. In addition, in the last decades, research on social learning in non-humans vs humans has largely focused on behavioral and cognitive processes, while research on non-human vs human communication has often opposed cognitive processes to emotional ones. These two approaches sometimes fall in the pitfall of looking for the one characteristic that makes us unique amongst other animals. In this talk, I want to focus on the commonalities between animal and human social learning, with the goal to braid together literature from social learning, affective development, and the evolution of communication. All three domains can be unified in an ABC model of social learning, which aims to provide a combined Affective, Behavioral and Cognitive approach to the acquisition of knowledge in a broad sense. Affect, for example through motivation or emotions, indeed colors our quest for knowledge and for knowledge transmission. I will rediscuss classic examples of the animal literature such as the vervet alarm call system or the acquisition of tool use in chimpanzees. The ABC framework also allows introducing continuity between so-called simple and complex cognitive processes, which makes it a more realistic pathway for their attribution to animals or non-verbal infants. As such it opens new avenues of research to resolve the debates on the evolution of communication and culture, particularly in our lineage.
Thibaud Gruber is a primatologist and a comparative psychologist whose has been working over 15 years on the topics of the evolution of culture and communication in great apes and humans. After a Master in Cognitive Sciences at the ENS, Paris, he pursued a PhD in Psychology at the University of St Andrews, UK in 2011. He then obtained his Habilitation in Cognitive Sciences at the ENS, Paris, in 2018. He has held postdoctoral research positions at the University of Zürich, Neuchâtel and Geneva, funded by the Fyssen Foundation, the Marie Curie initiative of the European Commission, and the Swiss National Science Foundation. In 2020, thanks to an Eccellenza Fellowship from the SNSF, he has set up his own lab, the eccePAN lab (Ecology, Cognition, Communication, Emotion), at the Faculty of Psychology and Educational Sciences, at the University of Geneva, with a joint position at the Swiss Center for Affective Sciences.
Time: 16:00, Thursday, 28 November 2024
Location: Vienna Campus, Quellenstrasse 51, Room : QS D-002 Tiered
Zoom: Meeting ID: 984 1754 5209<https://ceu-edu.zoom.us/j/98417545209?pwd=909i0Oc5aydidvanERaSfHkbKzEZmh.1> Passcode: 041432
Hosts: Thomas Ganzetti and Günther Knoblich
Best regards,
Andi
______________________________________________
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Logic and Philosophy of Science Seminar
Department of Logic, Institute of Philosophy
Eötvös Loránd University
Budapest, Múzeum krt. 4/i Room 224
_____________________________________________
P R O G R A M
The seminar is held in hybrid format, in person (Múzeum krt. 4/i Room 224)
and online. Zoom link
<https://us02web.zoom.us/j/84594385686?pwd=a7KPWoNLrPg11xNTi5Ug91YR5mHmmS.1>
6 March (Friday) 4:15 PM Room 224 + ONLINE
Mátyás Lagos
Department of Logic and Research Centre for Linguistics
Eötvös Loránd University, Budapest
Title: Generalization via Aggregation: An Analogical Inference Mechanism
for Natural Language Syntax
_____________________________________________
Abstract is available from the seminar website:
https://lps.elte.hu/lps/2025-2026/March/
The seminar is open to everyone, including students, visitors, and
faculty members from all departments and institutes! Format: 60 minute
lecture, coffee break, discussion.
Organizers: Márton Gömöri and Zalán Molnár
_____________________________________________
LPS - Logic and Philosophy of Science (Student and Faculty Seminar)
Department of Logic, Institute of Philosophy
Eötvös University Budapest
http://phil.elte.hu/lps
Kedves Kollégák,
Dear Colleagues,
Új munkatársat keresünk a PTE BTK Kognitív és Evolúciós Pszichológia Tanszékére teljes, határozatlan idejű kinevezéssel. Viszonylag tág lehetőségünk van a felvételre, így tanársegédtől tanárig bárki jelentkezését szívesen vesszük. Oktatás szempontjából elsődlegesen kognitív pszichológiai, neuropszichológiai vagy képességmér fókuszú tárgyak és módszertani kurzusok (pl. kutatásmódszertan, statisztika, pszichometria, laborgyakorlat) oktatása BA és MA szinten, angolul és magyarul. Ugyanakkor kutatásmódszertani jártasság és kutatási, pályázati előzmények előnyt jelentenek.
Segítségeteket kérném a csatolt hirdetés terjesztésében, potenciális érdeklődőkhöz való eljuttatásában. Részletek a .pdf-ben találhatók. Kérdés, jelentkezés esetén közvetlen nekem írjatok.
Beadási határidő 2026. március 30.
Kezdés 2026. szeptember 1.
We are looking for a new colleague for the Department of Cognitive and Evolutionary Psychology at the University of Pécs Faculty of Humanities with a full-time, permanent position. We are relatively flexible in terms of recruitment, so we welcome applications from anyone, from assistant lecturers to professors. In terms of teaching, the primary focus is on cognitive psychology, neuropsychology, or ability assessment-focused subjects and methodology courses (e.g., research methodology, statistics, psychometrics, laboratory practice) at the BA and MA levels, in English. At the same time, proficiency in research methodology and previous research and grant application experience are an advantage.
I would appreciate your help in distributing the attached advertisement and forwarding it to potentially interested parties. Details can be found in the .pdf file. If you have any questions or would like to apply, please contact me directly.
The deadline for applications is March 30, 2026. The earliest start date is September 1, 2026.
Köszönettel,
Thanks,
András
-----
András Norbert ZSIDÓ, PhD habil. FPsyS
Senior Research Fellow
Head of Cognitive and Evolutionary Psychology Department
Institute of Psychology, University of Pécs
Director: Visual Cognition and Emotion Lab
Website: https://btk.pte.hu/en/vicelab
Editorial Board member: Scientific Reports, Frontiers in Psychiatry
[cid:11bc9e78-8784-476f-bed4-fe7cec013da5]
________________________________
A PTE Zöld Egyetem programja jegyében kérem, ne nyomtassa ki ezt az e-mail-t, kivéve, ha szükséges.
Green University - Please do not print this e-mail unless it's necessary.
________________________________
JOGI NYILATKOZAT: Az e-mailben továbbított információ kizárólag a címzett vagy az általa képviselt szervezet számára készült, és bizalmas, valamint jogilag védett információkat tartalmazhat. Az információ bármilyen áttekintése, továbbítása, terjesztése, más módon történő felhasználása vagy arra való hivatkozás a címzettől eltérő személyek vagy szervezetek számára szigorúan tilos. Amennyiben ezt az üzenetet tévesen kapta, kérjük, értesítse a feladót, és haladéktalanul törölje az üzenetet és annak esetleges mellékleteit az összes eszközéről. Az e-mailben szereplő üzeneteket és mellékleteket vírusellenőrzésnek kell alávetni. A Pécsi Tudományegyetem nem vállal felelősséget semmilyen számítógépes vírus által okozott kárért, sem az e-mail vagy mellékletei továbbításából eredő adatvesztésért vagy egyéb hibákért.
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Logic and Philosophy of Science Seminar
Department of Logic, Institute of Philosophy
Eötvös Loránd University
Budapest, Múzeum krt. 4/i Room 224
_____________________________________________
P R O G R A M
The seminar is held in hybrid format, in person (Múzeum krt. 4/i Room 224)
and online. Zoom link
<https://us02web.zoom.us/j/84594385686?pwd=a7KPWoNLrPg11xNTi5Ug91YR5mHmmS.1>
6 March (Friday) 4:15 PM Room 224 + ONLINE
Mátyás Lagos
Department of Logic and Research Centre for Linguistics
Eötvös Loránd University, Budapest
Title: Generalization via Aggregation: An Analogical Inference Mechanism
for Natural Language Syntax
_____________________________________________
Abstract is available from the seminar website:
https://lps.elte.hu/lps/2025-2026/March/
The seminar is open to everyone, including students, visitors, and
faculty members from all departments and institutes! Format: 60 minute
lecture, coffee break, discussion.
Organizers: Márton Gömöri and Zalán Molnár
_____________________________________________
LPS - Logic and Philosophy of Science (Student and Faculty Seminar)
Department of Logic, Institute of Philosophy
Eötvös University Budapest
http://phil.elte.hu/lps
Dear All,
The CEU Department of Cognitive Science and the Center for Cognitive Computation (CCC) invite you to the upcoming event of the Budapest Computational Neuroscience Forum<https://ccc.ceu.edu/budapest-computational-neuroscience-forum>. Please note that there will be two talks consecutively.
Speakers: Morten L Kringelbach<https://www.psych.ox.ac.uk/team/mlk> (University of Oxford) and Gustavo Deco<https://www.upf.edu/web/cns/gustavo> (Pompeu Fabra University)
Titles and abstracts:
Whole-brain modelling. Cartography of eudaimonia and flourishing in the human brain
In order to survive, the brain must constantly extract, predict and recognise the essential
spacetime features of complex environments. This distributed computation of information
relies on having a hierarchy of optimal information transfer across the whole brain at the
lowest possible metabolic cost. Suboptimal brain orchestration has been linked to mental
illness, yet the fundamental principles of brain orchestration over fast and slow timescales are
still not well understood. I will show how significant progress has been made using whole-
brain modelling of neuroimaging data using new frameworks based on stochastic
thermodynamics and turbulence. A series of studies have already furthered our understanding
of human flourishing using data from experiments including music, food, social interactions,
meditation and psychedelics. Overall, this new evidence has given rise to a deeper
understanding of experiences that can give rise to both flourishing and suffering, providing
meaning and purpose to life, and may eventually help to find novel ways to rebalance the
brain in neuropsychiatric disorders.
The computing brain: Explaining cognition through a realistic whole-brain anatomically constrained-reservoir model
The perhaps most important unsolved problem in neuroscience is how the brain survives in a
complex world by performing a rich repertoire of computation on a minimal energy budget.
The brain is much better at adapting to the multiplicity of stimuli and outcomes than current
generations of computers, artificial neural deep learning and reservoir model architectures.
Yet, at first glance the brain appears to use a fixed anatomical architecture to perform the
necessary huge variety of computations. But evolution’s boldest trick is that in fact
the brain’s effective connectivity is constantly being updated through neuromodulation to
allow the rich repertoire of computation. Inspired by this, we created a whole-brain model
using empirical neurotransmitter maps modulating the underlying local regional dynamics.
This NEMO (neurotransmission modulated) whole-brain model is able to flexibly compute
the full task repertoire and associated functional connectivity of the neuroimaging data from
971 healthy participants. For each individual we defined a measure of ‘brain computability’
as the fitting of the NEMO whole-brain model to all tasks performed by the individual.
Importantly, brain computability correlates with both behavioural performance on individual
tasks and with a general behavioural measure of intelligence. Overall, our proposed unifying
NEMO framework offers a natural way to sculpt different brain dynamics in a fixed brain
architecture to compute the rich repertoire of tasks required for surviving and thriving.
Date and time: February 27, Friday, 10:00 am
Location: CEU Budapest Site (1051 Budapest, Nádor u. 15.) room 101. Quantum
Zoom Meeting ID: 944 5722 1783<https://ceu-edu.zoom.us/j/94457221783?pwd=57tog3a8IKMn80SucqCZKadP9GFObM.1>
Passcode: 239091
Should you have any inquiries about the series, please contact Mihály Bányai<mailto:mihaly.s.banyai@gmail.com>.
Please be informed that video/photo recording might take place at the event and the edited version of the video material might be published to communicate or promote CEU's activities. Please, find our Privacy Notice here<https://www.ceu.edu/privacy>.
Best regards,
[cid:3e14a0f6-95ec-4bc7-9678-0c1f175c9400]
Ildikó Varga
Department Coordinator (Budapest)
Department of Cognitive Science<https://cognitivescience.ceu.edu/>
Pronouns: she/her | vargai(a)ceu.edu | +36 1 327 3000 2941
H-1051 Budapest, Nádor street 15. FT 404
CENTRAL EUROPEAN UNIVERSITY
Quellenstrasse 51 | A-1100 Vienna | Austria | www.ceu.edu<http://www.ceu.edu>
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______________________________________________
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by DUCOG - Dubrovnik Conference on Cognitive Science
Dear All,
We are pleased to announce that abstract submission for the *XVII.
Dubrovnik Conference on Cognitive Science* devoted to *Adaptations across
different timescales *has been* extended to 7 March*! The conference is
going to take place on 21-24 May 2026, in the Center for Advanced Studies
of Dubrovnik, Croatia, located by the Adriatic sea at the foot of the old
city of Dubrovnik, a UNESCO world heritage site.
Adaptation is a defining feature of living systems, from immediate
adjustments to long-term developmental and societal changes. Here, we will
explore adaptation and its limits across multiple scales, asking how
individuals, groups, and societies adjust to shifting internal and external
demands, and what this means for personality and mental health. We will be
interested in how cognition is adjusted to cope with more immediate
challenges like scarcity, threat, or turmoil. On top of that, effects of
the environment during sensitive developmental periods can leave enduring
marks on information processing and behavioural tendencies. In this vein,
we will consider whether cognitive correlates of personality traits and
psychopathology can be seen as generalized adaptations to the past, or as
obstacles to meeting challenges in the present. In this conference, we will
bring together researchers who address this broad question from various
angles such as experimental psychology, genetics and neuroscience, or
clinical & personality psychology, and use diverse tools such as
computational cognitive modelling and time series analysis of daily life
data.
*Invited speakers will include:*
Laura Bringmann (University of Groningen)
Philip Corlett (Yale Unviersity)
Judith R. Homberg (Radboud University)
Stephan Lewandowsky (University of Bristol)
Kevin Mitchell (Trinity College Dublin)
We invite *poster submissions* from* all areas of* cognitive science.
Both theoretical and empirical posters are welcome.
You may submit your poster abstract here: https://ducog.cecog.eu/submit
*The deadline for abstract submission is 7 March 2026.*
Authors will be notified of acceptance of their abstracts by 15 March 2026.
For more information please visit https://ducog.cecog.eu
or email us at: ducog(a)cecog.eu
On behalf of the organisers,
*Bertalan Polner (Donders Institute & ELTE Eötvös Loránd University) &
Levente Rónai (ELTE Eötvös Loránd University & University of Szeged)-
Conference chairs*