Center for Advanced Studies (CAS) Research Focus Reduction and Emergence (LMU)

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Through the reduction of one theory or discipline to another, the results of the reduced theory or discipline can be obtained from the reducing one. In contrast, a theory that describes emergent phenomena is ostensibly autonomous: no other theory can be understood as providing a reducing basis. Questions of emergence and reduction determine how much one discipline can borrow from another, and, to a certain extent, what structures scientific theories in various disciplines can have. Successful reductions increase the epistemological importance of the reducing theories, and arguably their claim to research funding as well. If it is shown that a phenomenon is emergent, on the other hand, the discipline concerned with the emergent phenomenon is unlikely to be replaced by research in other fields, and thus requires its own funding. Furthermore, stronger relationships between the disciplines make it difficult to cast doubt on a small number of selected theories without affecting the rest of the sciences. This is important, for example, in the politically motivated, selective doubt of the theory of evolution, climate research, or genetic technology.

Recent Episodes
  • The Structural Evolution of Morality
    Dec 13, 2014 – 00:51:22
  • Agent-based Models and Confirmation Theory
    Dec 13, 2014 – 00:48:32
  • Minding Norms. Mechanisms and Dynamics of Social Order in Agent Societies
    Dec 12, 2014 – 00:47:57
  • The Formation of Epistemic Networks
    Dec 12, 2014 – 00:49:17
  • Collective Accuracy: Agent Based & Emergent vs Statistical and Assumed
    Dec 11, 2014 – 01:21:45
  • Chaos beyond the Butterfly Effect
    Jan 10, 2014 – 00:56:01
  • String Theory and the Scientific Method
    Dec 10, 2013 – 00:54:42
  • Cross-Level Linkages in Neurobiology
    Nov 16, 2013 – 00:50:14
  • Emergence and Explanation
    Nov 16, 2013 – 00:28:49
  • Scarecrow’s Brain and Homunculi: Neurobiological Reductionism as Ensoulment-Objectification Process Seen Through Anthropological Lenses
    Nov 16, 2013 – 00:33:37
  • Heterogeneity and Emergence in the Social Sciences
    Nov 16, 2013 – 00:30:30
  • How Can One and the Same Thing be Subject to Different Theories?
 On the Proper Logic for Non-Reductive Monism
    Nov 16, 2013 – 00:40:05
  • Technical Aspects of Reduction and Multiple Realizability
    Nov 16, 2013 – 00:30:55
  • "Reversed Reduction" in Gibbsian Statistical Mechanics
    Nov 15, 2013 – 00:33:00
  • Holography and the Emergence of Gravity
    Nov 15, 2013 – 00:40:57
  • Novelty and Autonomy as Alternatives to, or Bases for, a Conception of Emergence in Physics
    Nov 15, 2013 – 00:26:26
  • Theory Reduction in Physics: A Model-Based, Dynamical Systems Approach
    Nov 15, 2013 – 00:33:40
  • The Topology of Intertheoretic Reduction
    Nov 15, 2013 – 00:28:31
  • Inter-theoretic Relations: the Brønsted-Lowry Theory of Acids and Microphysics
    Nov 15, 2013 – 00:32:28
  • An Explication of Emergence
    Nov 15, 2013 – 00:27:48
  • Reductionism in Economics: Causality and Intentionality in the Microfoundations of Macroeconomics
    Nov 14, 2013 – 00:58:00
  • Agent-based models as mixed-level: lessons from E.coli
    Nov 14, 2013 – 00:27:50
  • From Dressed Electrons to Quasiparticles: The Emergence of Emergent Entities in Quantum Field Theory
    Nov 14, 2013 – 00:32:42
  • The Physics of Ontological Emergence
    Nov 14, 2013 – 00:51:07
  • Reduction and Emergence in Physics
    Nov 13, 2013 – 00:44:24
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