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Agency: The Case for an Eliminative Pluralism by Professor Armin Schulz (U of Kansas)

Friday, November 7, 2025 4:00–5:00 PM
  • Location
    Susan V. Herbst Hall (Formerly Oak Hall)
  • Description
    Agency: The Case for an Eliminative Pluralism Concepts of agency are invoked in explanations, models, theories, and predictions in many different sciences, from evolutionary biology to computer science and economics. In order to understand and assess the work in these sciences, therefore, it is crucial to understand these appeals to "agency." To make progress in this, this paper makes the case for three interrelated conclusions. First, the best way to understand the question about the nature of agency is as an account that lays out defensible scientific uses of the concept of agency—not a purely metaphysical-philosophical account, or a purely interpretationist account. Second, the paper seeks to show that there is not one right answer about what an agent is—that is, we should be eliminativists about the general concept of agency. Third, though, it also shows that this should not be conflated with the view that anything goes as far as agency is concerned: in specific scientific contexts, such as economics and biology, there are more and less defensible views of agency in that context. That is, we should be scientific pluralists about agency.
  • Website
    https://events.uconn.edu/live/events/1421042-agency-the-case-for-an-eliminative-pluralism-by
  • Categories
    Conferences & Speakers

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