20-22 Jun 2013 Paris (France)

IASPM 2013 > Planning

Thursday, June 20, 2013

Time Event  
08:00 - 08:30 Registration and Breakfast (Room 1 - Centre Panthéon )  
08:30 - 09:00 Introductory speech (Room 1 - Centre Panthéon ) - Anne Fagot-Largeault and Jean Gayon  
09:00 - 10:20 Session 1 - Are there specific epistemological issues in clinical medicine? (Room 1 - Centre Panthéon ) - Norbert Paul (part 1)  
09:00 - 09:40 › Preliminary remarks on uncertainty, contingency, arbitrariness and other commonly neglected epistemological impairments of clinical problem solving - Norbert Paul, Institut für Geschichte, Theorie und Ethik der Medizin, Universitätsmedizin der Johannes Gutenberg-Universität Mainz  
09:40 - 10:20 › Elements of critical reflection upon uncertainty in the Philosophy of Medicine - Armand Dirand, Laboratoire de Recherches philosophiques sur les Logiques de l'Agir  
10:20 - 10:40 Coffee break  
10:40 - 12:40 Session 1 - Are there specific epistemological issues in clinical medicine? (Room 1 - Centre Panthéon ) - Norbert Paul (part 2)  
10:40 - 11:20 › Differential Diagnosis and Uncertainty in Medicine - Ashley Kennedy, University of South Carolina  
11:20 - 12:00 › Using integrated history and philosophy to inform diagnostic medicine: The case of heart failure - Nicholas Binney, University of Exeter  
12:00 - 12:40 › Divided we stand; United we fall—the problems of particular patients in public health, epidemiology and health policy. - CJ Blunt, Department of Philosophy, London School of Economics  
12:40 - 14:30 Lunch  
14:30 - 15:50 Session 2 - How history, sociology and ethics can influence epistemology of medical knowledge? (Room 1 - Centre Panthéon ) - Giovanni Boniolo (part 1)  
14:30 - 15:10 › From classical medicine to molecular medicine: only a problem of methods? - Giovanni Boniolo, European Institute of Oncology, Department of Health Sciences, University of Milano  
15:10 - 15:50 › Alternative experimental philosophy meets Philosophy of medicine: Where sociology has never been before - stéphanie van droogenbroeck, Vrije Universiteit Brussel  
15:50 - 16:10 Coffee break  
16:10 - 17:30 Session 2 - How history, sociology and ethics can influence epistemology of medical knowledge? (Room 1 - Centre Panthéon ) - Giovanni Boniolo (part 2)  
16:10 - 16:50 › Analysis of the concept of " intrauterine patient ": history, ethics and epistemology at the crossroads - Hélène Richard, Institut d'Histoire et de Philosophie des Sciences et des Techniques  
16:50 - 17:30 › Adults seeking prescriptions for cognitive stimulants under the rubric of ADHD: a case study in the ‘unity and autonomy' of Philosophy of Medicine within the Medical Humanities - Silvia Camporesi, King's College London (Center for the Humanities and Health)  

Friday, June 21, 2013

Time Event  
08:30 - 10:30 Session 3 - Can and should philosophy of medicine free itself from philosophy of biology? (Room 1 - Centre Panthéon ) - Maël Lemoine (part 1)  
08:30 - 09:10 › Commensalism or mutualism: What is pathophysiology to physiology? - Maël Lemoine, University of Tours  
09:10 - 09:50 › In what sense are the clinical concept of function and its philosophical rendering specific ? - Barthelemy Durrive, Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1, École normale supérieure de Lyon  
09:50 - 10:30 › Rethinking the Biology-Medicine Relation via Phenotypic Flexibility and Robustness - Jonathan Sholl, KULeuven  
10:30 - 11:00 Coffee break  
11:00 - 13:00 Session 3 - Can and should philosophy of medicine free itself from philosophy of biology? (Room 1 - Centre Panthéon ) - Maël Lemoine (part 2)  
11:00 - 11:40 › Symptoms in vivo and in vitro: Cellular reprogramming between biology and medicine - Pierre-Luc Germain, Università degli studi di Milano, European School of Molecular Medicine, European Institute of Oncology  
11:40 - 12:20 › Fighting infectious diseases: how an ecological vision of disease may inform biomedical and therapeutical strategies? - Gladys Kostyrka, Institut d'Histoire et de Philosophie des Sciences et des Techniques  
12:20 - 13:00 › Pathology in context: response to Kingma - Lydia du Bois, University of Wisconsin Madison  
13:00 - 15:00 Lunch  
15:00 - 16:20 Session 4 - Which methodological approaches for philosophy of psychiatry? (Room 1 - Centre Panthéon ) - Derek Bolton (part 1)  
15:00 - 15:40 › Conceptualising the medical gaze: definitions of disorder in and around the main psychiatry texts - Derek Bolton, King's College London  
15:40 - 16:20 › Psychiatric objects in research and practice: Introducing the RDoC - Kathryn Tabb, University of Pittsburgh  
16:20 - 16:40 Coffee break  
16:40 - 18:00 Session 4 - Which methodological approaches for philosophy of psychiatry? (Room 1 - Centre Panthéon ) - Derek Bolton (part 2)  
16:40 - 17:20 › Schizophrenia or the detours of the history of psychiatry: perspectives from the German psychiatry in the last third of the nineteenth century - Yazan Abu Ghazal, Institute of the History, Philosophy and Ethics of Medicine  
17:20 - 18:00 › Meaning and meaninglessness in psychiatric disorder - Norman Poole, Centre for Humanities, King's College London  

Saturday, June 22, 2013

Time Event  
09:00 - 10:20 Session 5 - How does medicine combine different types of evidence and different types of explanations? (Room 1 - Centre Panthéon ) - Part 1  
09:00 - 09:40 › Science, Argument and Clinical Trials - Jonathan Fuller, University of Toronto  
09:40 - 10:20 › Radical transformation of Chine traditional medicine in Japan – Epistemology in East-­‐Asian traditional medicine - Hajime Fujimori, Institut d'histoire et de philosophie des sciences et des techniques  
10:20 - 10:40 Coffee break  
10:40 - 12:00 Session 5 - How does medicine combine different types of evidence and different types of explanations? (Room 1 - Centre Panthéon ) - Part 2  
10:40 - 11:20 › The Myth of Placebo Additivity: Taming the Efficacy Paradox in Randomized Controlled Trials - Marco Annoni, University of Milan, Department of Health Sciences, European School of Molecular Medicine, European Institute of Oncology  
11:20 - 12:00 › The Status of Mechanistic Evidence in Evidence-Based Medicine - Jennifer Bulcock, Rice University  
12:40 - 14:00 Lunch  
14:00 - 16:00 Session 5 - How does medicine combine different types of evidence and different types of explanations? (Room 1 - Centre Panthéon ) - Part 3  
14:00 - 14:40 › Abstracting and Abstractions in the Medical Sciences - Lara Keuck, Institut für Philosophie der Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin, Institut für Geschichte, Theorie und Ethik der Medizin, Universitätsmedizin der Johannes Gutenberg-Universität Mainz  
14:40 - 15:20 › Mechanistic and topological explanations in medicine : the case of network medicine - Marie Darrason, Institut d'Histoire et de Philosophie des Sciences et des Techniques  
15:20 - 16:00 › Dynamical models: a type of explanation in neuroscience and medicine - Lauren Ross, University of Pittsburgh  
16:00 - 16:15 Coffee break  
16:15 - 17:45 Health and disease concepts: is there still any relevance of their philosophical analysis? (Room 1 - Centre Panthéon ) - Elodie Giroux (Université Lyon 3) and Marion Le Bidan (Université Lyon 3)
 
16:15 - 17:45 Knowledge and practice in medicine (Room 211 - Centre Panthéon) - Alain Leplège (Université Paris 7) and Hidetaka Yakura (Université Paris 7)
 
16:15 - 17:45 Plurality of explanatory schemes in medicine (Room 214) - Michel Morange (ENS) and Smaïl Bouaziz (IHPST)
 
17:45 - 18:00 Closing remarks - Maël Lemoine  
  
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