Location






The seminar is held online. Join Zoom Meeting:

https://us02web.zoom.us/j/889933315?pwd=Q3U3V3VQdXpXckhJYWRrcWRiMUhhQT09



5 March (Friday) 4:15 PM  ONLINE
György Turán
Department of Mathematics, Statistics, and Computer Science
University of Illinois Chicago
 
Explanation from Specification
Machine learning is often required to produce comprehensible results for the user, but recent methods, in particular deep learning, are problematic from this point of view. Explainable AI (XAI) is the subfield of AI trying to deal with this issue. We give an overview of the area and discuss the approach of explanation from specification, where the type of explanation required is specified by the user. We also discuss connections to a notion of explanation in the philosophy of science. (Joint work with Harish Naik.)



12 March (Friday) 4:15 PM  ONLINE
Zhiwei Gu

Department of Philosophy,  Central European University, Vienna
Institute of Philosophy, Eötvös University, Budapest
 
Anomalous Disjunctivism
The causal argument from hallucination leads to the screening-off problem, namely that the non-relational account of hallucinatory experience will hijack the naďve realist account of perceptual experience, rendering the ordinary objects and properties explanatorily redundant. To address the screening-off problem, disjunctivists usually deny that hallucinatory experience and perceptual experience are of the same fundamental psychological kind (the common-kind thesis), and further deny the generative theory, which claims that the underlying neurophysiological state is sufficient to bring about the alleged experience.

I offer a new disjunctivist solution—anomalous disjunctivism—to the problem. I show that anomalous disjunctivism is compatible with the generative theory and the common-kind thesis. According to anomalous disjunctivism, perceptual experience and hallucinatory experience are not produced in the same way: the presence of the seen thing and the failure of seeing play essential conditions for causing seeing and hallucination. I provide several analogies to show how the external causal conditions make a difference on the internal mechanisms underlying perception and hallucination. Thanks to the difference of the essential causal conditions, whatever account of hallucination need not apply to perception. Thus, the screening-off problem will not arise.



26 March (Friday) 4:15 PM  ONLINE
András Jánossy
John Wesley College, Budapest
 
Four Worlds' Citizen
In this talk, I will revisit Karl Popper's theory of of three ontological domains or worlds - first put forward in his Objective Knowledge (1972), then explicated in more detail in his Three Worlds lecture (delivered in 1978) - and while sustaining my sympathy towards his concerns, I will employ ontological distinctions which much differ
from his.

My main tenets:

Popper rejects the well-known philosophical point of view - called 'monism' in his terminology - which considers only individual material objects existent, and maintains that any other objects which seem to have different nature are nothing else but compositions of such objects, or interactions of such objects. I prefer to call this philosophical position 'reductionism'.

Popper admits that if we so wish, we can subdivide the world of material objects into the world of non-living physical objects and into the world of living things, of biological objects; but does not consider this distinction important. For me, this distinction is sharp because some reductionists postulate or presume that the existence and operations of living things can be deducted from the existence and workings of non-living physical objects.

Popper considers the realm of (animal or human) mental states a world on its own - whereas I believe that it can be assimilated into the world of biological objects and phenomena. On the other hand, I believe that the realm of (animal or human) social phenomena - not studied separately by Popper - does form world on its own, and its objects cannot be deducted from individual biological objects.

Popper puts the contents of human thoughts - for example, theories developed by scientists - into a world own its own in which the world of the products of the human mind, or in other words: 'abstract objects' dwell. I will argue that abstract objects - at least the ones truly considered so - exist independently from human discovery or creation.

I also claim that cognition of objects of these four worlds requires different capabilities; and that man is well equipped with all four. That is, he/she walks homely and with confidence in each and every of the four worlds. Nevertheless, it is false to consider him/her as being in all four places at the same time.