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HPASS: “A Molyneux Problem for Automated Science” – Kathleen Creel, Northeastern University

Feb 26 @ 5:00 pm - 7:00 pm
Dodd Hall 248,
February 26, 2025 | 5:00PM – 7:00PM
Dodd Hall 248 & Zoom
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Join us on Wednesday, February 26, 2025 in Dodd Hall 248 for a talk by Kathleen Creel, Northeastern University, as part of the History, Philosophy, and Science of Science (HPASS) speaker series.

 

A Molyneux Problem for Automated Science

 

Automated science is the attempt to use a combination of machine learning and robotics to perform experiments, build new models, postulate new laws, and design new experiments on the basis of what is observed to be the result of previous experiments. The comparison between the learning problems faced by automated machine learning and the learning problems faced by human scientists sheds light on a subtle measurement problem which I will call the Molyneux Problem for Science.  The Molyneux problem asks whether a newly sighted person could recognize objects previously known by touch. I generalize the Molyneux problem to all forms of data and characterize the problem as a special form of scientific learning. The Molyneux Problem for Science exists whenever identity must be recognized across perceptual modalities or data streams of different types without the aid of causal or correlational information.  After distinguishing the scientific Molyneux problem from inverse problems and problems of causal discovery, I will use the case of early radio telescopy to demonstrate that scientific Molyneux problems arise in traditional sciences. Finally, I argue that Molyneux problems for science will vex automated science especially, but that automated science has solutions unavailable to the Molyneux learner.

 

 

 

 

 

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Details

Date:
Feb 26
Time:
5:00 pm - 7:00 pm
Event Category:
Event Tags:

Venue

Dodd Hall 248

Organizer

UCLA Department of Philosophy