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Call for Abstracts – Beyond Anthropocentrism: Non-human Agents and Objects in Science

Call for Abstracts – Beyond Anthropocentrism: Non-human Agents and Objects in Science

Spontaneous Generations, graduate journal for the history and philosophy of science and technology at the University of Toronto, invites abstract submissions for 2025’s issue on non-human agents and objects in science. We invite submissions from the history of science, philosophy of science, and science and technology studies broadly construed. A description of the issue’s topic and submission details follows.

Traditional studies of science focus on human theorizing and human actions while viewing non-human factors as ancillary. Here, we aim to highlight the role of non-human objects and agents in science. How do non-humans contribute to or co-produce scientific knowledge? What kinds of science emerge from interactions with non-humans? What are the epistemological and practical implications of relegating non-human actors and natural processes to an ancillary role in scientific inquiry?

For this issue, we encourage authors to conceive of “non-humans” quite broadly: tools, machines, artifacts, animals, artworks, networks, algorithms, and more.

The following are some potential themes to explore:

  • What makes an artifact a scientific tool? What epistemic role do tools play in science?

  • Do animals, AI, or other non-human agents have knowledge?

  • How do biological organisms shape how science is done? 

  • What is the role of biomimicry/biomimetics in the sciences?

  • How have certain technologies reshaped how science is done throughout history?

  • What are the relationships between instruments, measurements, and theory?

  • How has science been represented in or inspired by art?

  • To what degree are models in science autonomous from human agents?

  • What are the epistemological implications of framing natural phenomena as optimization processes in nature-inspired algorithms?

  • What are the disadvantages of predominantly anthropocentric science studies? What perspectives do non-human agents and objects add?

Please submit an abstract of less than 500 words by December 31, 2024, at the following link:https://forms.gle/cWQiEFRh8YTYV8VU8

Successful applicants will be notified in January of 2025, and will be expected to submit a full paper of 8000 words or less by the end of March. The papers will then be peer-reviewed by the end of May. Publication is slated for June 2025.

For any inquiries, please contact us at spontaneousgenerations2025@gmail.com


 October 23, 2024