Matthew Sims
@philosobio.bsky.social
400 followers 330 following 31 posts
Research Associate at the University of Cambridge LCFI, working on the project Major Transitions in Cognitive Evolution. Philosophy of Biology/Cognitive Science: phenotypic plasticity, learning, memory, niche construction, evolvability, agency, sci-methods
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philosobio.bsky.social
Although I was not given funding to publish this OA, if anyone (or any one that you know) would like a pdf of the book, shoot me a message. I'd be more than happy to send it your way. www.cambridge.org/core/element...
Slime Mould and Philosophy
Cambridge Core - Philosophy: General Interest - Slime Mould and Philosophy
www.cambridge.org
Reposted by Matthew Sims
roto-rub.bsky.social
New semester, new lecture series 🎉Starting next month, we welcome amazing scholars to give online talks in the history and philosophy of life sciences. Find all dates and registration links here: rotorub.wordpress.com/roto-lecture...
We look forward to seeing you there 🤗
#PhilSci #HistSci #HPBio
Overview of the ROTO Lecture Series in the winter semester 2025/2026.

The talks will be: 
- "Race Reification and Population Descriptors in Human Genomics" by Celso Neto (University of Exeter)
- "Understanding plant holobionts through complexity science" by César Marín (Universidad Santo Tomás)
- "What is Dialectical Biology?" by Chris Shambaugh (University of Oregon)
- "Learning from Partial Overlaps Between Knowledge Systems" by Charbel El-Hani (Federal University of Bahia)
- "21st century eugenics, scientific racism and the role of academia in promoting political ideology" by Rebecca Sear (Brunel University London) 
- "The Organism and the System: Boundary Crossings in 20th Century Science" by Libby O’Neil (Mississippi State University)
philosobio.bsky.social
A few photo moments from the Shanghai and Beijing SAPoLSN 'Cognition Across the Tree of Life' graduate summer school and workshop. Highlights: engaging with extremely sharp students; getting to know some of the other instructors; seeing old friends; Chinese culture; and Shanghainese food!
Reposted by Matthew Sims
roto-rub.bsky.social
Very happy to get this in the mail today! Looks nice! 😀📖
#philsci #HPS #hpbio
Reposted by Matthew Sims
gershbrain.bsky.social
A wonderful article on work (both old and new) pushing the frontier of memory research.
quantamagazine.bsky.social
If you’ve ever tried to cram for an exam, you know that it’s easier to memorize something if you learn the information in shorter, spaced-out sessions. These dynamics are as relevant to each individual cell’s existence as they are to ours. Claire Evans reports: www.quantamagazine.org/what-can-a-c...
What Can a Cell Remember? | Quanta Magazine
A small but enthusiastic group of neuroscientists is exhuming overlooked experiments and performing new ones to explore whether cells record past experiences — fundamentally challenging what memory is...
www.quantamagazine.org
philosobio.bsky.social
Here's your chance to download not only my book 'Slime Mould and Philosophy' , but download ALL the books in Cambridge Elements Philosophy of Biology series from the 20th to the 25th of July for FREE! I highly recommend Jan Baedke's (2025) book 'The Organism'.
cup.org/4kEgivL
#ISHPSSB #philosophy
Philosophy of Biology
Welcome to Cambridge Core
cup.org
philosobio.bsky.social
This year's BSPS at the University of Glasgow was grand. I had a wonderful time with Jordan Theriault; @davidcolaco.bsky.social‬; ‪@phaueis.bsky.social‬; and Patrick McGivern at our symposium (serious Phil of sci pic). @martahalina.bsky.social‬ was missed by all. Up next - the ISH in Porto.
philosobio.bsky.social
More on C.H. Waddington at the KLI.
philosobio.bsky.social
More documentation of the wonderful talks at the 43rd Annual Altenberg Workshop at Konrad Lorenz Institute this last week.
philosobio.bsky.social
More theoretical biology and C.H. Waddington at the KLI. More to come.
philosobio.bsky.social
Theoretical biology at the KLI.
Reposted by Matthew Sims
yavannakemi.bsky.social
#HistBio and #HistMed people: You can still send your abstracts for FoGeL 2025! 🐋🌱
yavannakemi.bsky.social
🌱 Call for Contributions – FoGeL 2025: Plant-based 🌿
📍 Dresden | 🗓️ Sept 23, 2025
One day before the annual meeting of the @gwmt.bsky.social, we're looking at #plants in the history of the life sciences
Submit your idea by June 15 to vera.straetmanns[at]rub.de - in German or English.
#HistSci #HPBio
Poster for FoGeL 2025, saying: "FoGel 2025 - Plant-based
23. SEPTEMBER 2025 / DRESDEN
BEITRAGSVORSCHLÄGE BIS 15. JUNI 2025 AN:
VERA.STRAETMANNS@RUB.DE" Explanation about FoGeL 2025: 
"Im Vorfeld der diesjährigen Tagung der GWMT in Dresden
findet am 23.9.2025 erneut das Forum Geschichte der
Lebenswissenschaften (FoGeL) statt.
In diesem Jahr wollen wir bewusst einen Kontrapunkt zum
tierzentrierten Thema der Haupttagung setzen – aus der
pflanzlichen Perspektive.
Was passiert, wenn wir die Geschichte der
Lebenswissenschaften plant-based denken? Welche
Rolle spielten und spielen Pflanzen – als
Erkenntnisobjekte, als Modellorganismen, als
Gegenstände technischer Aneignung oder ästhetischer
Projektionen? Welche historischen Akteur*innen,
Praktiken, Orte, Bilder oder Konzepte rücken durch diese
Perspektive ins Zentrum?
Wir suchen Beiträge (ca. 10 Minuten), die aus laufenden
Projekten heraus eine Frage aufwerfen oder einen Aspekt
zur Diskussion stellen. Besonders willkommen sind
experimentelle Formate, unfertige Gedanken,
methodische Herausforderungen oder knifflige
Quellenfunde – all das, was im klassischen Vortrag oft
keinen Platz findet.
Bewerbungen (max. 200 Wörter Abstract + 1–2 Sätze zur
eigenen Person) bitte bis 15. Juni 2025 an
vera.straetmanns@rub.de."
philosobio.bsky.social
Highly recommend!
roto-rub.bsky.social
Out now (print and open access!):
Jan Baedke’s Element on “The Organism” at
@cambridgeup.bsky.social .
It discusses philosophical, historical and social dimensions of the organism concept.
www.cambridge.org/core/element...
#philsci #philsky #HPS #hpbio #histsci
Reposted by Matthew Sims
alisabokulich.bsky.social
Upcoming Boston Colloquium for Philosophy of Science: Decentering the Human in Human Sciences on Friday, May 2nd and Saturday, May 3rd. Free and open to the public. Speakers include @martahalina.bsky.social & @grantramsey.bsky.social #philsci
www.bu.edu/cphs/colloqu...
Poster for event with 9 photos of speakers in circles.  Conference details and link:
Schedule
Friday, May 2nd
All events to take place at the Metcalf Science Center, Room 117
590 Commonwealth Ave., Boston, MA 02215

9:30-10:00 a.m.
Breakfast, Welcome and Opening Remarks, Rachell Powell (Boston University)

10:15-11:30 a.m.
“Mirror, Mirror, Off the Wall: Rethinking Human Intuitive Physics Through Animals,” Marta Halina (University of Cambridge)

11:45-1:00 p.m.
“Dehumanizing the Mind-Body Problem,” Carrie Figdor (University of Iowa) 

1:00-2:30 p.m. Lunch

2:30-3:45 p.m.
“Why error is more interesting than success and failure for comparative psychology,” Aliya Rumana (University of Pittsburgh)

4:00-5:15 p.m.
“Decentering the Human in Medical Science: A Cautionary Tale of Two Concepts,” Rachell Powell (Boston University) 

6:30 p.m. Conference dinner

Saturday, May 3rd

9:30-10:00 a.m.
Breakfast, Welcome and Opening Remarks, Rachell Powell (Boston University)

10:15-11:30 a.m.
“Can we go against human nature?,” Grant Ramsey (KU Leuven)

11:45-1:00 p.m.
“Cooperation, Cognition, and the Elusive Role of Joint Agency,” Patrick Forber (Tufts University)

1:00 p.m. Lunch
Reposted by Matthew Sims
roto-rub.bsky.social
Join us Monday at 4pm (CET) for our next Reading Group session! 📖🧠
We’ll be discussing "Biological Mistakes: What They Are and What They Mean for the Experimental Biologist" by David Oderberg et al., published in @thebjps.bsky.social.
Just email jan.baedke[at]rub.de for the meeting details!
#HPBio
Title and abstract of the paper "Biological Mistakes: What They Are and What They Mean for the Experimental Biologist" by David S. Oderberg, Jonathan Hill, Christopher Austin, Ingo Bojak, François Cinotti and Jonathan M. Gibbins. Find the paper here: https://www.journals.uchicago.edu/doi/10.1086/724444
Reposted by Matthew Sims
Reposted by Matthew Sims