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Presentations

    2022

  1. B. Gyenis, “From philosophy to science, and back again”, Philosophy and Science: Rivals or Allies conference, Institute of Philosophy, ELKH Budapest 2022 Nov
  2. B. Gyenis, “Hempel's dilemma and the optimistic meta-induction”, Research Seminar in Decision and Action Theory, LMU, Munich, 2022 July
  3. B. Gyenis, “Hempel's dilemma and the optimistic meta-induction”, Workshop: Physicalism, Munich Center for Mathematical Philosophy, Munich, 2022 June
  4. B. Gyenis, “Causation: a dynamical systems approach”, CONICET, University of Buenos Aires, Buenos Aires, 2022 March
  5. B. Gyenis, “Hempel dilemma, optimistic meta-induction, and multiple realization”, Logic and Philosophy of Science Seminar (on Zoom) Buenos Aires, 2022 March
  6. László E. Szabó, “Physicalism and the Quine–Putnam indispensability argument”, Physicalism (Workshop), Munich 2022 May
  7. László E. Szabó, “On the basic premises of quantum theory”, Logic and Philosophy of Science Seminar, Eötvös University Budapest, 2022 October
  8. M. Rédei “On mathematical limits in physical theories”, Mathematical Limits in Physics Workshop, Politecnico di Milano (Milan, Italy, April 7-8, 2022)
  9. M. Rédei: “A „Bizonyítások és Cáfolatok” korai, informális fogadtatása”, Lakatos 100. A magyar perspektiva emlékkonferencia, Bölcsészettudományi Kutatóközpont Filozófiai Intézet (Budapest, Szeptember 2, 2022)
  10. M. Rédei: “On the tension between physics and mathematics”, Physics Meets Philosophy Group Seminar, Institute for Quantum Optics and Quantum Information of the Austrian Academy of Sciences (Vienna, Austria, November 22, 2022)
  11. M. Rédei: “Imre Lakatos 1922-1974 – comments on his life and work”, Lunchtime Seminar, Research Institute of the University of the University of Bucharest, Humanities Division (Bucharest, Romania, November 17, 2022)
  12. M. Gömöri and C. Hoefer, “Classicality and Bell's theorem,” Physics Meets Philosophy: Foundations of Quantum Theory, Institute of Philosophy, Research Center for the Humanities, Budapest, 2022 September
  13. M. Gömöri, “Bell's spaceships in free fall,” Tarskian Algebraic Logic, Relativity Theory and Methodology of Science – István Németi is 80, Alfréd Rényi Institute of Mathematics, Budapest, 2022 September
  14. M. Gömöri and M. Rédei, “Entropic taming of the Look Elsewhere Effect,” Logic and Philosophy of Science Seminar, Eötvös Loránd University, Budapest, 2022 April
  15. Gábor Hofer-Szabó, ”A kvantumelmélet interpretációi,” (Interpretations of quantum theory), Tudomány Napja, University of Pannonia, Veszprém, Hungary, 2022 November
  16. Gábor Hofer-Szabó, "Idő és relativitás," (Time and relativity) Tudós-kör, József Attila Gimnázium, Budapest, 2022 November
  17. Gábor Hofer-Szabó, "Is the quantum state real?," Physics meets philosophy, Institute of Philosophy, Research Centre for the Humanities, Budapest, 2022 September
  18. Gábor Hofer-Szabó, “Contextuality in natural and social sciences," Milestone Interdisciplinary Reading Group, Budapest, 2022 August
  19. Gábor Hofer-Szabó, ”Between social and classical: contextuality in quantum theory,” Parmenides Center for the Conceptual Foundations of Science, Pullach, Germany, 2022 July
  20. Gábor Hofer-Szabó, ”Quantum mechanics without operational equivalence,”Work-in-Progress Seminar, Munich Center for Mathematical Philosophy, LMU, Munich, Germany, 2022 May
  21. Gábor Hofer-Szabó, ”Sociophysics,” Complexity, Culture, Individual Conference, iASK, Kőszeg, Hungary, 2022 May
  22. Gábor Hofer-Szabó, ”Two concepts of noncontextuality in quantum mechanics,” History and Philosophy of Physics Research Seminar, Lichtenberg Group, University of Bonn, Germany, 2022 April
  23. Gábor Hofer-Szabó, ”Quantum mechanics without operational equivalence,” Research Seminar, University of Wuppertal, Germany, 2022 April
  24. Gábor Hofer-Szabó, ”Contextuality in the natural and social sciences,” Institute seminar, Institute of Philosophy, Budapest, Hungary 2022 March
  25. Gábor Hofer-Szabó, ”Quantum mechanics without operational equivalence,” Logic and Philosophy of Science Seminar, Eötvös University, Budapest, Hungary 2022 February
  26. Zalán Gyenis, ”Another look on amalgamation in algebraic logic”, Németi 80 conference, Rényi Institute of mathematics, Budapest, 2022 Sept
  27. 2021

  28. László E. Szabó, "Semantics and diffeomorphism invariance", Physics Meets Philosophy: Conceptual Foundations of Relativity, Institute of Philosophy, ELKH, Budapest, Sep 2021
  29. László E. Szabó, "On the basic premises of quantum theory", Logic and Philosophy of Science Seminar, ELTE, Oct 2021
  30. Miklós Rédei and Zalán Gyenis, "The Maxim of Probabilism, with examples", Logic and Philosophy of Science Seminar, ELTE, Nov 2021
  31. Gábor Hofer-Szabó, ”A dynamical systems approach to causation,” Philosophy of Science Seminar, Munich Center for Mathematical Philosophy, LMU, Munich, Germany, 2021 December
  32. Gábor Hofer-Szabó, ”Two concepts of noncontextuality in quantum mechanics,” New Foundations for Physics, Center for Advanced Studies LMU, Munich, Germany, 2021 November
  33. Gábor Hofer-Szabó, ”Quantum and quantum-like,” iASK-HAS Conference, Budapest, Hungary, 2021 October
  34. M. Gömöri and C. Hoefer, “Classicality and Bell's theorem”, The 20th UK and European Conference on Foundations of Physics, École Normale Supérieure, Paris, Oct 2021
  35. M. Gömöri and C. Hoefer, “Bell’s Assumptions and the Structure of Quantum Mechanics”, 8th Biennial Conference of the European Philosophy of Science Association, University of Turin, Sep 2021
  36. M. Gömöri, “Covariance, invariance and Galilean relativity: lessons from Einstein 1905 paper,” Physics Meets Philosophy: Conceptual Foundations of Relativity, Institute of Philosophy, ELKH, Budapest, Sep 2021
  37. M. Gömöri, “What exactly does the special principle of relativity state? A discussion of Einstein's 1905 paper”, Logic, Relativity and Beyond, Jul 2021
  38. M. Gömöri, Comment on Carl Hoefer: “Scientific realism and direct reference to unobservable natural kinds,” Institute of Philosophy, ELKH, Jan 2021
  39. B. Gyenis, "Hempel's dilemma and the optimistic metainduction", Physicalism Workshop, Institute of Philosophy, ELKH, November 2021
  40. B. Gyenis, “Physicalism,” Research seminar of the Institute of Philosophy, ELKH, Apr 2021
  41. Z. Gyenis, "The weak interpolation property", Logic and Philosophy of Science Seminar, ELTE, Oct 2021
  42. Z. Gyenis, "Rational belief functions, nonclassical logics, and Dutch Books", Logic and Philosophy of Science Seminar, ELTE, Apr 2021
  43. 2020

  44. Gábor Hofer-Szabó, Comment on Daniel Kodaj's “Finite Conditional Frequentism,“ Institute of Philosophy Seminar, Research Centre for the Humanities, Budapest, 2020 December
  45. Gábor Hofer-Szabó, “A valószínűség interpretációi“ (Interpretations of probability), Physics meets philosophy, Institute of Philosophy, Research Centre for the Humanities, Budapest, 2020 September
  46. B. Gyenis, “Whatever Happened to Efficient Causes in Physics?,” Research seminar of the Institute of Philosophy, ELKH (invited reflections on a talk by Gyula Klima), 2020
  47. Márton Gömöri and Gábor Hofer-Szabó, "On the Meaning of EPR’s Reality Criterion", Logic and Philosophy of Science Seminar, Eötvös University Budapest, 9 October 2020.
  48. László E. Szabó, "Physicalism without the idols of mathematics", Logic and Philosophy of Science Seminar, Eötvös University Budapest, 16 October 2020.
  49. László E. Szabó and Márton Gömöri, “The elimination of probability,” Physics Meets Philosophy: Physical Probability, Institute of Philosophy, Research Centre for the Humanities, Budapest, 2020 September.
  50. M. Rédei, “Having a look at the Bayes Blind Spot", Department of Theoretical Philosophy, University of Bucharest, Bucharest, Romania, February 26, 2020.
  51. M. Rédei, “Philosophical Qualities of Science in Robert Musil’s `Man without Qualities’“, Research Institute of the University of Bucharest, Humanities Division, Bucharest, Romania, February 27, 2020
  52. Gábor Hofer-Szabó, ”Simultaneous versus measurement contextuality in quantum theory,” Faculty of Philosophy, University of Barcelona, Spain, 2020 March.
  53. B. Gyenis, "A Dynamical Systems Approach to Causation", Causation and Reduction: From Metaphysics to the Sciences, UIUC / Zoom, 2020, April.
  54. M. Gömöri, “Outline of a Causal Theory of Chance,” LOGOS Seminar, University of Barcelona, 2020 February.
  55. 2019

  56. L.E. Szabó, “Questionable and Unquestionable in Quantum Mechanics”, Physicalism and reduction – a Jerusalem–Budapest twin workshop, Budapest, December 2019.
  57. Gábor Hofer-Szabó, ”Comment on Orly Shenker and Meir Hemmo's: The Physics of Implementing Logic: Landauer’s Principle and the Multiple-Computations Theorem,” Physicalism and Reduction workshop, Institute of Philosophy, Budapest, Hungary, 2019 December.
  58. Gábor Hofer-Szabó, “Contextuality and the Kochen-Specker theorem,” Department of Philosophy, University of Bristol, UK, 2019 October.
  59. Gábor Hofer-Szabó, “Two concepts of noncontextuality,” Sigma Club, London School of Economics, London, UK,, 2019 October.
  60. Gábor Hofer-Szabó, “Between social and classical: contextuality in quantum theory,” Institute of Advanced Studies Kőszeg, 2019 October.
  61. Gábor Hofer-Szabó, “Noncontextuality in quantum mechanics,” The Seventh Conference of the European Philosophy of Science Association, University of Geneva, Switzerland, 2019 September.
  62. Márton Gömöri, Comment on Miklós Márton: “What is the ‘physical’? Attempts to define the term in the contemporary debates over physicalism,” Physicalism and Reduction – a Jerusalem-Budapest Twin Workshop, Institute of Philosophy, Research Centre for the Humanities, Budapest, 2019 December.
  63. Márton Gömöri, “On the reality of the classical electromagnetic field,” Physics Meets Philosophy: On What There Is, Institute of Philosophy, Hungarian Academy of Sciences, Budapest, 2019 September.
  64. Márton Gömöri, “A Causal Account of Initial Distributions,” 7th Biennial Conference of the European Philosophy of Science Association, University of Geneva, 2019 September.
  65. Miklós Rédei, Work in Progress Seminar at Munich Center for Mathematical Philosophy, Ludwig-Maximilians University, Munich, Germany (January 24, 2019) Title of talk: “On the tension between mathematics and physics"
  66. Miklós Rédei, “German Philosophy of Science Society Annual Conference", Cologne, Germany, (February 25-28, 2019) (joint talk with Z. Gyenis) Title of talk: "Features of Bayesian learning based on conditioning using conditional expectations"
  67. Miklós Rédei, “Frühjahrstagung der Deutschen Physikalischen Gesellschaft", Munich, Germany (March 19, 2019) (invited plenary talk) Title of talk: “On the tension between mathematics and physics"
  68. Miklós Rédei, Technical University of Munich, Garching, Germany (March 26, 2019) Title of talk: “On the tension between mathematics and physics"
  69. Miklós Rédei, “Interpreting Quantum Mechanics: Old and New Philosophical Problems", Workshop, Department of Mathematics of the Polytechnic University of Milan, Milan, Italy (March 11, 2019) Title of talk: “Structural similarities and interpretational differences between classical and quantum probability theory"
  70. Miklós Rédei, Theoretical Philosophy Forum, Institute of Philosophy, Eötvös University, Budapest, Hungary (April 10, 2019) (joint talk with W. Brown and Z. Gyenis) Title of talk: “Bayesian learning and modal logics"
  71. Miklós Rédei, Department of Theoretical Philosophy, University of Bucharest, Bucharest, Romania, (April 3, 2019) Title of talk: “On the tension between mathematics and physics"
  72. Miklós Rédei, Department of Philosophy, University of Geneve, Geneve, Switzerland (April 17, 2019) Title of talk: “Categorial Local Quantum Physics"
  73. Miklós Rédei, “Relativistic Locality", Workshop, Munich Center for Mathematical Philosophy, Ludwig-Maximilians University, Munich, Germany (May 4, 2019) Title of talk: “How to express locality in categorial local quantum field theory"
  74. Miklós Rédei, Department of Philosophy, University of Salzburg, Salzburg, Austria (June 3, 2019) Title of talk: “On the tension between mathematics and physics"
  75. Miklós Rédei, Physics Colloquium, Department of Physics, University of Heidelberg, Heidelberg, Germany (June 7, 2019) Title of talk: “On the tension between mathematics and physics"
  76. Miklós Rédei, “12th MUST Conference & Workshop `Perspectives on Scientific Error'", Munich, Germany (July 1-4, 2019) Title of talk: “A bird's eye view of conditioning in probability theory"
  77. Miklós Rédei, “All things Reichenbach", Conference, Munich Center for Mathematical Miklós Rédei, Philosophy, Ludwig-Maximilians University, Munich, Germany (July 22-24, 2019) Title of talk: “Reichenbach's Common Cause Principle"
  78. Márton Gömöri, “Why do outcomes in a long series of rolling a fair dice approximately follow the uniform distribution?,” 16th International Congress on Logic, Methodology and Philosophy of Science and Technology, Czech Technical University, Prague, Czech Republic, 2019 August.
  79. Márton Gömöri, “Probability, causality and the approach to equilibrium,” Theoretical Philosophy Forum, Eötvös University, Budapest, 2019 May.
  80. Zalán Gyenis, "Bayesian learning and modal logics," Mini-Workshop: Conditioning, Munich Center for Mathematical Philosophy, Munich, Germany, 2019 July.
  81. Zalán Gyenis, "On the categorical characterization of the weak Beth definability property," Logic, categories and philosophy of mathematics: Michael Makkai 80, Budapest, Hungary, 2019 June.
  82. Zalán Gyenis, "Bayesian learning and modal logics," Theoretical Philosophy Forum, Budapest, Hungary, 2019 April.
  83. Zalán Gyenis, "Features of Bayesian learning based on conditioning using conditional expectations," Conference of the German Society for Philosophy of Science, Cologne, Germany, 2019 February.
  84. Sunil Kumar Sekar and László E. Szabó, "On the origin of irreversibility", Theoretical Philosophy Forum, Institute of Philosophy, Eötvös University Budapest, 2019.March.
  85. Sunil Kumar Sekar and László E. Szabó, "On the origin of irreversibility", Theoretical Philosophy Forum, Institute of Philosophy, Eötvös University Budapest, 2019.March
  86. László E. Szabó, “Intrinsic, extrinsic, and the constitutive a priori", Theoretical Philosophy Forum, Institute of Philosophy, Eötvös University Budapest, 2018.April.
  87. Balázs Gyenis, "A proof of tendency towards equilibrium", Sigma Club Lecture Series, Centre for Philosophy of Natural and Social Science, LSE, London, 2019 January.
  88. Gábor Hofer-Szabó, “Two concepts of noncontextuality,” Deparment of History and Philosophy of Science, National and Kapodistrian University of Athens, Greece, 2019
  89. June.
  90. Gábor Hofer-Szabó, “Noncontextuality in physics and beyond,” Department of Cognitive Science and Psychology, New Bulgarian University, Sofia, Bulgaria, 2019 June.
  91. Gábor Hofer-Szabó, “Bell's local causality in local physical theories,” Relativistic Locality Conference, Munich Center for Mathematical Philosophy, Munich, Germany, 2019 May.
  92. Gábor Hofer-Szabó, “Two concepts of noncontextuality in quantum mechanics,” Philosophy of Physics Seminar, Munich Center for Mathematical Philosophy, Munich, Germany, 2019 May.
  93. Gábor Hofer-Szabó, “Two concepts of noncontextuality in quantum mechanics,” Theoretical Philosophy Forum, Department of Logic, Eötvös University Budapest, 2019 April.
  94. 2018

  95. Miklós Rédei, “Physics Meets Philosophy", Workshop, Institute of Philosophy, Hungarian Academy of Sciences, Budapest, Hungary (September 25, 2018) Title of talk “On the tension between mathematics and physics"
  96. Miklós Rédei, “Robert Musil und die Modernen Wissenschaften", Workshop, Institute Vienna Circle, University of Vienna, Vienna, Austria (October 18-19, 2018) Title of talk: “Wissenschaftstheoretische Eigenschaften der Wissenschaften in Musils `Mann ohne Eigenschaften' "
  97. Miklós Rédei, “Biennial Conference of the Philosophy of Science Association (PSA2018)" (November 1-4, 2018, Seattle, U.S.A.), Symposium organiser and joint talk with Z. Gyenis, Title of talk: “Features of Bayesian learning based on conditioning using conditional expectations"
  98. Miklós Rédei, Logic and Philosophy of Science Colloquium at Munich Center for Mathematical Philosophy, Ludwig-Maximilians University, Munich, Germany (November 21, 2018) Title of talk: “Some features of Bayesian learning based on conditioning using conditional expectations"
  99. Z. Gyenis, G. Hofer-Szabó. M. Rédei: “Kolmogorov’s (1933) solution of Borel’s (1903) Paradox” HOPOS2018, Groningen, The Netherlands, 2018 July.
  100. Z. Gyenis, M. Rédei: “Categorial Independence in Categorial Quantum Field Theory” 19th UK-European Foundations of Physics Conference, Utrecht, The Netherlands, 2018 July.
  101. M. Redei: “Four lectures on the Foundations of Quantum Field Theory” XXI Summer School in Philosophy of Physics, Philosophy of Quantum Field Theory, Urbino, Italy, 2018 June.
  102. M. Rédei: “Foundations of quantum probability” Probability and the Many Worlds Interpretation of Quantum Mechanics, Workshop, London School of Economics, London, UK, 2018 July.
  103. M. Rédei: “The Bayes Blind Spot is typically large” For a Bottom Up Epistemology, Workshop, Bertinoro, Italy June, 2018
  104. Balázs Gyenis, "Towards new notion(s) of physical possibility", Popper Seminar, LSE, London, UK, 2018 November.
  105. Balázs Gyenis, "Determinism, Physical Possibility, and Laws of Nature", Philosophy of Science Association Conference, Seattle, US, 2018 November.
  106. Balázs Gyenis, "What powers inductive inference", The Material Theory of Induction and Beyond Conference, Pittsburgh, US, 2018 October.
  107. Zalán Gyenis, "On the modal logic of statistical inference," Non-Classical Logic. Theory and Applications, Torun, Poland, 2018 September.
  108. Zalán Gyenis, “Probabilistic update methods after their sort” and “Logic and updating methods”, Entia et Nomina, Gdansk, 2018 August.
  109. Zalán Gyenis, “The modal logic of Jeffrey conditionalization”, UNILOG'18, Vichy, France, 2018 June.
  110. Zalán Gyenis, “No finite axiomatizability for intermediate logics”, LAPOM, Budapest, 2018 April.
  111. Balázs Gyenis and Zalán Gyenis, “Results in Bayesian learning theory - In the footsteps of Miklós Rédei”, Rédeifest, London, 2017 October.
  112. Zalán Gyenis, “Multiverses - On a paper by Vaananen”, LAPOM, Budapest, 2017 October.
  113. László E. Szabó, "A végtelen idóluma", MTA BTK Filozófia Intézet / A végtelen fogalmai, Budapest, 2018 November.
  114. László E. Szabó, Meaning, Truth, and Physics, Edelstein Center for History and Philosophy of Science, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem / Physicalism and Reduction, Jerusalem, 2018 November.
  115. László E. Szabó, “I find it quite amazing that it is possible to predict what will happen by mathematics, which is simply following rules which really have nothing to do with the original thing”, MTA BTK Filozófia Intézet/Physics Meets Philosophy: "The unreasonable effectiveness of mathematics in natural sciences", Budapest, 2018 September.
  116. László E. Szabó, Comments on "Alison Fernandes: Three Accounts of Laws and Time", CEU, Conference on History and Metaphysics of the laws of nature, Budapest, 2018 July.
  117. László E. Szabó, Intrinsic, extrinsic, and the constitutive a priori, U. of Krakow, Modality in Physics, Krakow, 2018.June.
  118. László E. Szabó, Meaning, Truth, and Physics, Department of Philosophy, Logic and Scientific Method, LSE, London, 2018.June.
  119. László E. Szabó, Empirical definitions of spatiotemporal conceptions, Department of Philosophy, Logic and Scientific Method, LSE, London, 2018.July.
  120. László E. Szabó, “Comments on “Alison Fernandes: Three Accounts of Laws and Time”, Conference on History and Metaphysics of the laws of nature, CEU, Budapest, 2018 July.
  121. László E. Szabó, “Intrinsic, extrinsic, and the constitutive a priori”, Modality in Physics, University of Krakow, Krakow, 2018 June.
  122. László E. Szabó, “Intrinsic, extrinsic, and the constitutive a priori”, Theoretical Philosophy Forum, Eötvös University Budapest, 2018 April.
  123. Márton Gömöri and László E. Szabó, “The Unreality of Probability”, Quantum Investigations: A Conference in Honour of Miklós Rédei, LSE, London, 2017 October.
  124. László E. Szabó, “A Physicalist Account for Meaning and Truth in Physics”, EPSA2017, European Philosophy of Science Association, Exeter, 2017 September.
  125. Gábor Hofer-Szabó, “Do Kochen-Specker arguments prove quantum contextuality?,” Reduction and Physicalism Conference, Hebrew University, Jerusalem, Israel, 2018 November.
  126. Gábor Hofer-Szabó, “A fizika filozófiája“ (Philosophy of Physics), Témaválasztási dilemmák a 21. századi filozófiában, Wesley János Lelkészképző Főiskola, Budapest, 2018 October.
  127. Gábor Hofer-Szabó, “What is quantum contextuality and what is not,” Foundations of Physics Conference, Utrecht, The Netherlands, 2018 July.
  128. Gábor Hofer-Szabó, “Quantum contextuality,” Philosophy of Science Reading Group, University of Salzburg, Austria, 2018 June.
  129. Gábor Hofer-Szabó, “Modality of noncommuting common causes,” Modality in Physics, Jagiellonian University, Krakow, Poland, 2018 June.
  130. Gábor Hofer-Szabó, “Kochen-Specker arguments and quantum contextuality,” Philosophy of Science Conference, Inter-University Center, Dubrovnik, Croatia, 2018 April.
  131. Gábor Hofer-Szabó, “Contextuality,” Institute of Advanced Studies Kőszeg, 2018 April.
  132. Gábor Hofer-Szabó, “A kvantumelmélet és a tulajdonságok metafizikája” (Quantum theory and the metaphysics of properties), Department of Philosophy, Károli Gáspár University, Budapest, 2018 March.
  133. Gábor Hofer-Szabó, “Commutativity, commeasurability, and contextuality,” Theoretical Philosophy Forum, Department of Logic, Eötvös University Budapest, 2018 February.
  134. Gábor Hofer-Szabó, “Contextuality,” Institute seminar, Research Center for the Humanities, Budapest, Hungary, 2017 November.
  135. Gábor Hofer-Szabó, “Bell’s local causality in local physical theory,” Quantum Investigations: A Conference in Honour of Miklós Rédei, London School of Economics, London, UK, 2017 October.
  136. Gábor Hofer-Szabó, “How human and nature shakes hand: on the role of no-conspiracy in physical theories,“ The Sixth Conference of the European Philosophy of Science Association, University of Exeter, UK, 2017 September.
  137. Márton Gömöri, “Why do initial conditions in an actual sequence of experiments approximately follow the uniform distribution over phase space with respect to the Lebesgue measure?,” Foundations 2018: The 19th UK and European Conference on Foundations of Physics, Utrecht University, 2018 July.
  138. Márton Gömöri, “On the Very Idea of Distant Correlations,” Budapest Science Studies Laboratory, CEU, Budapest, 2018 November.
  139. Márton Gömöri, “Outline of a Causal Theory of Chance,” Colloquium of the Düsseldorf Center for Logic and Philosophy of Science, University of Düsseldorf, Germany, 2018 October.
  140. Márton Gömöri, “On the Role of Statistical versus Single-Case Dependencies in Einstein’s Incompleteness Arguments,“ Jagiellonian University, Kraków, 2018 June.
  141. Márton Gömöri, “Probability, randomness and the Common Cause Principle,” Philosophy of Physics Reading Group, Leibniz University Hannover, 2018 May.
  142. Márton Gömöri and László E. Szabó, “The Elimination of Probability,” Theoretical Philosophy Forum, ELTE, Budapest, 2017 December.
  143. Márton Gömöri, “Fundamental questions in classical statistical mechanics,” Physics Meets Philosophy: Foundations of Thermodynamics and Statistical Mechanics, MTA, Budapest, 2017 September.
  144. Balázs Gyenis, "Towards new notion(s) of physical possibility,” Modality in physics, Krakow (invited talk), June 2018.
  145. Balázs Gyenis, “Do ideal gases have color?”, Science Studies Workshop, MTA-CEU (invited talk), June 2018.
  146. Balázs Gyenis, “Physical possibility for actualists,” Theoretical Philosophy Forum, ELTE, May 2018.
  147. Balázs Gyenis, “Approach towards equilibrium and the interpretation of probability,” SZTE TTIK Theoretical Physics Department Seminar (invited talk), March 2018.
  148. 2017

  149. Balázs Gyenis, “Approach towards equilibrium and the interpretation of probability,” MTA Wigner FK RMI (invited talk), December 2017.
  150. Gábor Hofer-Szabó, “Local causality in algebraic field theories,” The Third Logic, Relativity, and Beyond Conference, Rényi Institute of Mathematics, Budapest, 2017 August.
  151. Márton Gömöri and László E. Szabó, “Derivation of the transformation laws for the electrodynamic quantities from electrodynamics without presuming covariance,” Logic, Relativity and Beyond, Rényi Institute, Budapest, 2017 August.
  152. Márton Gömöri, “Derivation of the transformation laws for the electrodynamic quantities from electrodynamics without presuming covariance,” 6th Summer School on the History and Philosophy of Science: Understanding Relativity Theory, University of Tubingen, 2017 August.
  153. Márton Gömöri, “Probability without probability,” THINK 3 Conference on Science and Society, Tata, 2017 July.
  154. Márton Gömöri, “Probability, randomness and the Common Cause Principle,” Seminar Series of the Institute of Philosophy, Hungarian Academy of Sciences, Budapest, 2017 July.
  155. Gábor Hofer-Szabó, “A dynamical systems appoach to causation,” Triennial International Conference of the Italian Society for Logic and Philosophy of Science, University of Bologna, Italy, 2017 June (with Péter Fazekas, Balázs Gyenis, and Gergely Kertész).
  156. Balazs Gyenis, “Humean supervenience and objective modality”, Modally rich metaphysical landscapes, Krakow, 2017 June.
  157. Gábor Hofer-Szabó, “Bell’s local causality,” The Descartes Centre for the History and Philosophy of the Sciences and the Humanities, University of Utrecht, The Netherlands, 2017 May.
  158. Gábor Hofer-Szabó, “Three levels of Bell’s inequalities,” Logic and Interactive Rationality Seminar, University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands, 2017 May.
  159. Gábor Hofer-Szabó, “On the Common Cause Principle,” Philosophy of Physics Seminar, Institute of Philosophy, Stockholm University, Sweden, 2017 April.
  160. Gábor Hofer-Szabó, “Local causality in quantum theory,” Department of Philosophy, University of Belgrade, Belgrade, Serbia, 2017 April.
  161. Márton Gömöri, “Monty Hall on the Humean Mosaic,” Theoretical Philosophy Forum, Eötvös University, Budapest, 2017 April.
  162. Gábor Hofer-Szabó, “Publishing a paper in a journal,” Philosophy Publication Workshop, Central European University, Budapest, 2017 March.
  163. Zalán Gyenis and William Brown, “The modal logic of Bayesian learning,” Logic and Philosophy of Mathematics, Department of Logic, Eotvos Lorand University, Budapest, 2017 March.
  164. Zalán Gyenis and Miklós Rédei, “Categorial subsystem independence as morphism co-possibility,” Theoretical Philosophy Forum, Department of Logic, Eotvos Lorand University, Budapest, 2017 March.
  165. Márton Gömöri, “On the Persistence of the Electromagnetic Field,” Lunchtime Colloquium of the Center for Philosophy of Science, University of Pittsburgh, 2017 March.
  166. Márton Gömöri, “On the relation of the relativity principle and covariance,” Meeting of the Southern California Philosophy of Physics Group, University of California, Irvine, 2017 March.
  167. Gábor Hofer-Szabó, “Quantum theory and local causality,” (talk on skype) IMT School for Advanced Studies Lucca, Italy, 2017 February.
  168. 2016

  169. László E. Szabó, “Mi is az az ‘általános relativitás’?” (What is general relativity?), 100 éves az általános relativitáselmélet, Nemzeti Közszolgálati Egyetem, Budapest, 2016 November.
  170. László E. Szabó, “Az okozás ontológiája” (The ontology of causation), Az okság mint az “univerzum cementje”, MTA, Budapest, 2016 November.
  171. László E. Szabó, “Time as constitutive a priori”, FLOW OF TIME, Mini-symposium of the Philosophy of Physics Research Group, MTA BTK Filozófia Int., Budapest, 2016 November.
  172. Gábor Hofer-Szabó, “A Bell-egyenlőtlenségek” (Bell inequalities), Department Seminar, Institute of Theoretical Physics, Budapest University of Technology and Economics, 2016 November.
  173. Gábor Hofer-Szabó, “Kauzalitás és dinamika” (Causality and dynamics), Magyar Tudomány Ünnepe, Institute of Philosophy, Hungarian Academy of Sciences, 2016 November.
  174. László E. Szabó, “'The laws of physics have the same form in all inertial frames of reference.’ Philosopher reads physics.”, Science Studies in Budapest, CEU, Budapest, 2016 October.
  175. Miklós Rédei, “General properties of Bayesian learning based on conditional expectation as a conditioning device” Popper Seminar, London School of Economics, London, UK, October 22, 2016.
  176. Gábor Hofer-Szabó, “Einstein realitáskritériuma” (Einstein’s reality criterion), Department Seminar, Institute of Philosophy and History of Science, Budapest University of Technology and Economics, 2016 October.
  177. Gábor Hofer-Szabó, “Julian Barbour időtlen világa” (The timeless world of Julian Barbour), Emlékezet és felejtés, Bolyai Társaság, Babes-Bolyai Egyetem, Kolozsvár (Cluj-Napoca), Romania, 2016 October. “On the Budapest Research Group,” Science Studies in Budapest, Central European Univesity, Budapest, 2016 October.
  178. Miklós Rédei, “Categorial subsystem independence as morphism co-possibility” Local Quantum Physics and beyond - in memoriam Rudolf Haag (September 26-27, 2016, DESY, Hamburg, Germany).
  179. László E. Szabó, “The principle that ought to be generalized: the special principle of relativity”, Sixth Workshop of the Budapest –Krakow Research Group on Probability, Causality and Determinism, Krakow, 2016 September.
  180. Gábor Hofer-Szabó, “Deconstructing superposition,” The Sixth Budapest-Krakow Workshop on Probability, Causality and Determinism, Research Center for the Humanities, Krakow, Poland, 2016 September.
  181. Gábor Hofer-Szabó, “Einstein’s reality criterion,” XII Conference of the Italian Society for Analytic Philosophy, Pistoia, Italy, 2016 September.
  182. Gábor Hofer-Szabó, “Mik a kvantumállapotok?” (What are quantum states?), Physics meets philosophy, Institute of Philosophy, Hungarian Academy of Sciences, 2016 September.
  183. Gábor Hofer-Szabó, “The Common Cause Principle,” Analytic Philosophy Department, Czech Academy of Sciences, Prague, Czechy, 2016 September.
  184. Zalán Gyenis, “The modal logic behind Bayesian learning,” Sixth Workshop of the Budapest-Krakow Research Group on Probability, Causality and Determinism, Jagiellonian University, Krakow, 2016 Sept.
  185. Zalán Gyenis, “General properties of Bayesian learning as statistical inference determined by conditional expectation I and II,” Entia et Nomina, Warszawa, 2016 Sept.
  186. Zalán Gyenis, “How much can a Bayesian agent learn?,” Entia et Nomina, Warszawa, 2016 Sept.
  187. Balazs Gyenis, “The Free Will Problem in the light of the Dynamical Systems approach to causation,” The Fifth Workshop of the Budapest-Krakow Research Group on Probability, Causality, and Determinism, Budapest, 2016 September.
  188. Miklós Rédei, “General properties of Bayesian learning based on conditional expectation as a conditioning device”, British Society for Philosophy of Science Conference, Cardiff, UK, 2016, July.
  189. Miklós Rédei, “Having a look at what a Bayesian Agent does not see (the Bayes Blind Spot)”, 8th Quadrennial International Fellows Conference, Lund, Sweden, 2016 July.
  190. László E. Szabó, ”Empirical Definitions of Spatiotemporal Conceptions“, University of Lund, Eighth International Pittsburgh Center for Philosophy of Science Fellows Conference, Lund, Sweden, 2016 July.
  191. Gábor Hofer-Szabó, ”On the meaning of EPR’s Criterion of Reality,” Eighth Quadrennial Pittsburgh Fellows Conference, Lund University, Lund, Sweden, 2016 July.
  192. Márton Gömöri and Gábor Hofer-Szabó, ”On the Meaning of EPR’s Criterion of Reality” British Society for the Philosophy of Science Annual Conference, Cardiff University, 2016 July.
  193. Márton Gömöri and László E. Szabó, “For the 40th Birthday of Bell’s Spaceships” The 18th UK and European Conference on Foundations of Physics, London School of Economics and Political Science, 2016 July.
  194. Miklós Rédei, “Categorial local quantum field theory”, Methaphysics and Fundamental Physics, Bristol, UK, 2016 June.
  195. Gábor Hofer-Szabó, “Quantum mechanics as a representation of classical conditional probabilities,” Quantum Foundations workshop, Quantum Information Theory Group, University of Pavia, Pavia, Italy, 2016 June.
  196. Gábor Hofer-Szabó, ”Quantum mechanics from scratch,” The Fifth Budapest-Krakow Workshop on Probability, Causality and Determinism, Research Center for the Humanities, Budapest, Hungary, 2016 May.
  197. Zalán Gyenis and Miklós Rédei, ”Having a look at what a Bayesian Agent cannot see“, Fifth Budapest-Krakow Workshop on Probability, Causality and Determinism, Budapest, 2016 May.
  198. Balázs Gyenis, “Freedom and laws of nature” (Szabadság és természeti törvenyek”), Ütközéspontok 3 (co-refereeing, in Hungarian), 2016 May.
  199. Balázs Gyenis, “The Free Will Problem in the light of the Dynamical Systems approach to causation,” The Fifth Workshop of the Budapest-Krakow Research Group on Probability, Causality, and Determinism, 2016 May.
  200. Márton Gömöri, “Chance in a Physical World”, Fifth Workshop of the Budapest-Krakow Research Group on Probability, Causality and Determinism, Institute of Philosophy, Hungarian Academy of Sciences, Budapest, 2016 May.
  201. Miklós Rédei, “John von Neumann: episodes from his life and comments on his work”, Cohn Institute, Tel Aviv University, Israel, 2016, April.
  202. Miklós Rédei, “Why Bertrand’s paradox is not paradoxical but is felt so”, Bar Hillell Colloquium, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Jerusalem, Israel, 2016, April.
  203. Gábor Hofer-Szabó, “How man and nature shakes hand: the role of no-conspiracy in physical theories,” Institute of Philosophy, Jagiellonian University, Krakow, Poland, 2016 March.
  204. Zalán Gyenis and Miklós Rédei, ”Properties of Bayesian learning based on conditional expectation as a conditioning device“, Institutional seminar of MTA Institute of Philosophy, Budapest, 2016 January.
  205. 2015

  206. M. Gömöri, Z. Gyenis, and L.E. Szabó: "Operationalist Approach to Quantum Theory: Two Representation Theorems", The British Society for the Philosophy of Science 2015 Annual Conference, Manchester, July 2015.
  207. L. E. Szabó: “Meaning, Truth, and the Diffeomorphism Invariance”, Logic, Relativity and Beyond – 2nd international conference, Budapest, August 2015.
  208. Miklós Rédei, ”Informal, early Reception of Imre Lakatos’ Proofs and Refutation”, Research Institute of Humanities, University of Bucharest, Romania, 2015 December.
  209. Miklós Rédei, “Local causality in categorial quantum field theory,” Causality and Non-locality in Physics, Quantum and Classical, University of the Basque Country, San Sebastián, Spain, 2015 November.
  210. Gábor Hofer-Szabó, ”Local causality in local physical theories,” Causality and Non-locality in Physics, Quantum and Classical, University of the Basque Country, San Sebastián, Spain, 2015 November.
  211. Zalán Gyenis, ”Gödel nem-teljességi tételei az elsőrendű logika töredékeire“, A tudomány ünnepe, BME, Budapest, 2015 November.
  212. Gábor Hofer-Szabó, “Einstein’s reality criterion,” Department of Philosophy, University of Haifa, Haifa, Israel, 2015 October.
  213. László E. Szabó, ”On the semantics of spacetime theories,“ Budapest, MTA BTK Fil. Int. / Physics Meets Philosophy: In Time, Budapest, 2015 September.
  214. Gábor Hofer-Szabó, Zalán Gyenis and Miklós Rédei, ”Conditioning using conditional expectation: the Borel-Kolmogorov paradox,” Fifth Conference of the European Philosophy of Science Association, Düsseldorf, Germany, 2015 September.
  215. Balázs Gyenis, Gábor Hofer-Szabó and Márton Gömöri, “On the Emergence of Macrostates,” The Fourth Budapest-Krakow Workshop on Probability, Causality and Determinism, Institute of Philosophy, Jagiellonian University, Krakow, Poland, 2015 September.
  216. Balázs Gyenis, “Is time fundamental? What makes time special?”, Physics Meets Philosophy: In Time, Budapest, 2015 September.
  217. Balázs Gyenis, “Can a Bayesian learn a new probability?,” Entia et Nomina, Kraków, Poland, 2015 September.
  218. Márton Gömöri, ”A short remark on generalizing probability spaces in quantum mechanics”, Fourth Workshop of the Budapest-Krakow Research Group on Probability, Causality and Determinism, Jagiellonian University, Krakow, 2015 September.
  219. Zalán Gyenis and Miklós Rédei, ”Having a look at what a Bayesian Agent cannot see“, Theoretical Philosophy Forum, Budapest, 2015 April.