Logic List Mailing Archive

Uncertainty & Surprise in the Exact Sciences

6 June 2013
Gent, Belgium

Save the date for a workshop on Uncertainty & Surprise in the Exact Sciences, June 6.
Location: Blandijn, Lokaal 2.16
Time: 13:30-18:00

There will be three speakers:
Jan-Willem Romeijn (Groningen): Model uncertainty and implicit complexity

ABSTRACT: Statistical model selection is a technique that is routinely 
used by social scientists when they need to choose among rivalling models 
of a target system. Arguably, it provides a statistical answer to what is 
often called model uncertainty, i.e., uncertainty that can perhaps not be 
expressed in the usual probabilistic fashion. Evaluation criteria for 
models include proximity to a hypothesized truth, and past or expected 
predictive performance. Remarkably, almost all such criteria lead to a 
built-in disadvantage for complex models. This paper concerns a hitherto 
untargeted problem with the notion of complexity that shows up in 
statistical model selection, specifically in curve fitting. It turns out 
that we can fit any scatter plot exactly at little cost in complexity, by 
choosing a family of highly versatile curves. The paper presents a 
diagnosis of this problem and investigates if and how current model 
selection tools can be used to resolve it. The upshot is that the 
evaluation of models must occur against a shared theoretical background. 
This reflects negatively on the use of model selection for resolving model 
uncertainty.

Liesbeth de Mol (Ghent): Unpredictability in computer-assisted mathematics.

ABSTRACT: In a paper from 1965, computer pioneer and mathematician Richard 
Hamming points at a fundamental misconception about computers, viz. that 
they can only do what they are told to do. Hamming's objection against 
this misconception is the inherent unpredictability of (the behavior of) 
computer programs. The aim of this talk is twofold. On the one hand, I 
will show how such unpredictability lies at the core of computer-assisted 
mathematical experiments. On the other, I will show how it is this 
unpredictability and the new (local and global) problems it results in for 
the mathematicians, which offers one possible way to tackle the still 
difficult question of the impact of the computer on mathematics. One 
hypothesis which will be suggested on the basis of several historical case 
studies is that this unpredictability is (re-)injecting time into 
mathematics.

Peter Streufert (University of Western Ontario, London): "Off-equilibrium 
beliefs in a game, and off-paradigm beliefs in a science"

ABSTRACT: TBA


Eric Schliesser
BOF Research Professor, Philosophy and Moral Sciences, Ghent University, 
Blandijnberg 2, Ghent, B-9000, Belgium. Phone: (31)-(0)6-15005958