A new AJOB commentary I wrote with some of my (awesome) undergrads is live. "Re-Entrenching Vulnerability and the Ethics of AI Psychotherapy Chatobts." Builds on the excellent Target Article in the same issue by @thebusyowl.bsky.social & Megan Delahanty.
doi.org/10.1080/1526...
Posts by Matt Haber
Really excited to see this in print. It's a great article by @teejperk.bsky.social that nicely balances history and philosophy of science.
More broadly, the lab explores the implications of challenging categorical thinking in biology, esp. for biological systematics, classification and nomenclature, but lab members are also studying this in the context of tech- and bioethics. It’s a great group and we’re excited to welcome summer RAs!
UofU Phil Bio Lab logo
SPUR RAs will work collaboratively in the lab on our Entangled Linages, Classification, and Individuality project. This examines how the breadth and depth of lineage entanglement impacts concepts of biological individuality, our biological theories, our methodological tools, and biological practice.
If you know an undergrad that would like to spend the summer doing research in my philosophy of biology lab, encourage them to apply to the U’s SPUR program. Includes a $5,000 stipend and subsidized housing to work in my lab.
Details and how to apply here:
tinyurl.com/SPUR-PhilBio...
Last but not least, my "Biology's Einstein Moment: Specifying Lineal Frames of Reference and Rejecting Absolute Biological History." Name kind of says it all. TL;DR (but read it): specifying frames in reference in biology is super useful and informative:
doi.org/10.1007/s137...
Kate MacCord's "Let’s Talk About Sex…Cell Lineages" revises and updates the epistemic framework of germ that challenges the Weismann barrier.
doi.org/10.1007/s137...
François Papale's, "The Unit of Selection and the Theory of Evolution by Natural Selection Without Lineage Formation." Unit of selection without reproduction. (Reminiscent of @fbouchard.bsky.social)
doi.org/10.1007/s137...
Lucie LaPlane's "Cancer Clones Revised" complicates the way we think about the clonal evolution model of cancer:
doi.org/10.1007/s137...
@lucielaplane.bsky.social
Javier Suárez and Sophie Veigl's, "Vindicating Lineage Eliminativism." Super interesting paper that stakes out a position that challenges a lot of the ways I think about lineages:
doi.org/10.1007/s137...
The thematic issue I co-edited with @javiersuarez.bsky.social "Complicating the Concept of Lineage" is online. Includes papers by Javier & @phieveigl.bsky.social, @lucielaplane.bsky.social, François Papale, Kate MacCord and me. See reply for links to articles:
doi.org/10.1007/s137...
Special issue on "The ecology and evolution of bacterial immune systems." @pradeu.bsky.social @philinbiomed.bsky.social and all the other philosophers interested in immunology, etc.
royalsocietypublishing.org/toc/rstb/202...
Looking forward to reading this. My undergrads brought up this topic in my lab this morning and I'm confident they'll be eager to read this as well.
Loving Porto #ISHPSSB2025. Looking forward to catching up with folks. If anyone wants to catch my talk it’s on Friday afternoon, in a session with (the always great) Joeri Witteveen. My talk is on rogue taxonomy, taxonomic vandalism and a surprising analog version of bad AI science. Should be fun!
Jim's "Reflection on Taking a Class with Feyerabend" is a wonderful read. Captures his personality and approach as a philosopher. I remember Jim sharing these stories when I was a grad student, and was just passing them along to students in my lab the other day.
link.springer.com/chapter/10.1...
The complete book may be found at this link:
link.springer.com/book/9783031...
Thanks to @rachelankeny.bsky.social @mikedietrich.bsky.social @sabinaleonelli.bsky.social for putting together this wonderful volume. It's a great set up, each of Jim's papers are introduced by a different friend.
Excited to share that "Scaffolding: Selected Contributions of James R. Griesemer to History, Philosophy, and Biology" is out. I introduce Jim's chapter on formalization. (My original title, "Undermining Dichotomies and the Friends You Make Along the Way."
doi.org/10.1007/978-...
For the cog sci folks out there, a special issue of Philosophical Transactions B @royalsocietypublishing.org: ‘Selection shapes diverse animal minds’. Collection of papers focusing on diversity of evolved animal cognition, from nematodes to primates.
royalsocietypublishing.org/toc/rstb/202...
The similarity to other papers is a bit deceptive. [I see you John.]
Call for Papers - AAHPSSS Conference 2025
Submissions are now open!
The 2025 AAHPSSS conference will be held in a hybrid format at the University of Queensland from Wednesday 3rd December to Friday 5th December.
Further details can be found on our website:
aahpsss.net.au/conference/2...
Or maybe it's not free to access and download? I'm not sure. Regardless, there's a philsci-archive draft in case you can't access the Synthese version:
philsci-archive.pitt.edu/25440/
Very happy to see my "Positively Misleading Errors" finally published (it's been a long road). It generalizes an error of statistical reasoning discovered by Joe Felsenstein in 1978. Really happy with how it turned out.
Currently free to access and download, so go for it!
doi.org/10.1007/s112...
Excited to share the publication of my paper, "Biology's Einstein Moment" in Biological Theory. TL;DR: biology is complex and entangled and there's lot of very cool recent upshots of this. (Shout out to @javiersuarez.bsky.social). PS open access, so it's free to download.
doi.org/10.1007/s137...
Thank you Alisa! That's very kind.
Interested in lineages? Read this paper by Kate MacCord on the germline.
link.springer.com/article/10.1...
Fun and provocative. A great combination of history and philosophy of biology.
Part of a spetial issue on Lineage in Biological Theory. @javiersuarez.bsky.social @profmatthaber.bsky.social
So glad to have your awesome paper in this issue!
"Cancer clones revised". Out in Biological Theory: rdcu.be/d4SEk
My first philosophy paper that includes a bioinformatic analysis (variance in gene expression from RNAseq data). Nothing fancy. But a first step. One I care about.
#PhiLabo
Thanks! That's a good tip. I think I'm following it. I'm still getting the hang of things around here.
Sure! Students can submit mock MCAT questions; propose new modules to diversify the course; write a commentary on a paper; analyze a relevant movie (h/t Eleanor Gilmore-Szott); interview a PI/Clinician they work with about the course topic; or propose a new assignment. One student is writing a song!