Distributed European School of Taxonomy (DEST) is organizing a course in Philosophy of Biological Systematics targeted at MSc students, PhD students, early career researchers, professional systematists/taxonomists and anyone who is interested in the philosophy of Biological Systematics. The course has a duration of one week and will take place between 8-12 September 2014.
Deadline for registration: 16 June 2014, extended until Friday 20 June 2014. To register and to learn more about the course visit the official webpage: http://www.taxonomytraining.eu/content/philosophy-biological-systematics
Approaching the subject from the perspective of the philosophical foundations of scientific inquiry, this course offers critical examinations of the principles required to judge the scientific merits of systematic/taxonomic procedures by way of the following topics:
	• The goal of science
	• The goal of biological systematics
	• Causal relationships in systematics
	• The nature of why-questions
	• Three forms of reasoning: deduction, induction, abduction
	• The uses of deduction, induction, and abduction in science
	• Evidence and reasoning
	• Fact, theory & hypothesis
	• Theory & hypothesis testing
	• Systematics involves abductive reasoning
	• Inferences of systematics hypotheses, i.e. taxa
	• Implications for ‘phylogenetic’ methods
	• Causal explanations, not ‘trees’ or cladograms
	• Parsimony, likelihood, Bayesianism: are they relevant to abductive reasoning, thus phylogenetic inference?
	• The requirement of total evidence
	• The errors of cladogram comparisons & character mapping
	• Homology, homogeny & homoplasy
	• Character coding
	• Mechanics of hypothesis testing: implications for cladograms
	• Character data cannot test phylogenetic hypotheses
	• The nature evidential support
	• The proper testing of phylogenetic hypotheses
	• The myths of bootstrap, jack-knife & Bremer ‘support’
	• Implications for nomenclature
	• Defining biodiversity and conservation
Participants will be provided reprints covering the topics in the course, as well as a PDF file with all course slides (>800) and associated notes.
Contact information:
dest-training@naturalsciences.be
DEST Traning
 
				
				
					
 
				
			
				
				
 
				
				
					
				
			
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