Skip to main content

School of Philosophy

  • Home
  • People
  • Events
    • Event series
    • Conferences
      • Past conferences
    • Past events
  • News
    • Audio/Video Recordings
  • Research
  • Study with us
    • Prizes and scholarships
  • Visit us
  • Contact us

Centres & Projects

  • Centre for Consciousness
  • Centre for Moral, Social and Political Theory
  • Centre for Philosophy of the Sciences
  • Humanising Machine Intelligence

Related Sites

  • Research School of Social Sciences
  • ANU College of Arts & Social Sciences

Centre for Consciousness

Related Sites

Centre for Moral, Social and Political Theory

Centre for Philosophy of the Sciences

School of Philosophy

Administrator

Breadcrumb

HomeHomeProf Dr. Holger Lyre (Magdeburg): Shared Structure of Dynamics, Computations, and Mechanisms
Prof Dr. Holger Lyre (Magdeburg): Shared structure of dynamics, computations, and mechanisms

On shared structure of dynamics, computations and mechanisms

 

Theoretical neuroscience deals with dynamical and computational models of cognition. Such models explain their target phenomena by providing dynamical and computational explanations. In contrast, proponents of mechanistic explanations have proclaimed that all explanations in the neurosciences appeal to mechanisms: since both dynamical and computational models refer to abstract formal properties of physico-neural systems, they are in and of themselves not explanatory, while only the realizing mechanisms are. I shall argue that this conclusion is overhasty. Both dynamical and computational models pick out relevant spatiotemporal-cum-causal relations of the underlying mechanisms. This shared structure can be Nagel-identified with the physical organization structure of the mechanisms. The structural grounding of dynamical and computational explanations accounts for their powerful generalizability and the multiple realizability of their target systems. I shall sketch a general and integrative account of “vertical” and “horizontal” types of scientific explanations illuminating the different perspectives as well as “intersections” of mechanistic explanations versus dynamical and computational explanations.

 

Preceded by a pre-talk for graduate students, 1:30PM Benjamin Library.

 

3:30-5:30PM Thursday 1 Nov 2018

Sir Roland Wilson Building 1.02, ANU

 

If you would like to come to dinner following the talk, please let me know.

Date & time

  • Thu 01 Nov 2018, 3:30 pm - 5:30 pm

Location

Room 1.02 Sir Roland Wilson Building, ANU

Speakers

  • Prof. Dr. Holger Lyre (University of Magdeburg, Germany)

Event Series

Philosophy Departmental Seminars

Contact

  •  Renee Bolinger
     Send email