Co-organized by the ESHS and the Research Centre for the Humanities (RCH)
Hosted by the Department of History and Philosophy of Science, National and Kapodistrian University of Athens
Topic: History of Science and the Humanities
Dates: 23-24 September 2021
The conference will take place online via Zoom.
Zoom Link: https://us02web.zoom.us/j/86492839303?pwd=Y1l4emtrTHBSQWxhWHBzVDZiL0FhZz09
Download the program here (PDF)
Description
Since the very first stages of its professionalization the history of science has been seen as a bridge between the “two cultures”, the natural sciences and the humanities. Over the years, one part of this triadic complex, the relations between the history of science and the natural sciences, has been extensively discussed. The relations between the history of science and the humanities, however, have been less commented upon. The aim of this workshop is to further elaborate these latter relations: First, by discussing how history of science fits within the rich landscape of the humanities, which have themselves been facing various challenges and opportunities. Second, by reflecting on how history of science, and the humanities more generally, can be brought to bear on wider and socially relevant issues, such as the digital condition, the rise of fake news, post-truth, and science denialism.
Speakers:
Maria Paula Diogo (NOVA University of Lisbon) & Ana Simões (University of Lisbon), https://youtu.be/-RLa8-G9Tp4
Sven Dupré (Utrecht University), https://youtu.be/OY1npzNrf4A
Kostas Gavroglu (National and Kapodistrian University of Athens), https://youtu.be/ZEo66kwAoSg
Michael Gordin (Princeton University), https://youtu.be/JuF1ca0zZGM
Matthieu Husson (CNRS, Paris Observatory)
Dana Jalobeanu (University of Bucharest), https://youtu.be/q3BlNpw2mGk
Erwin Neuenschwander (University of Zurich)
Chris Newfield (Independent Social Research Foundation), https://youtu.be/6DD9TUX77nQ
Koen Vermeir (CNRS, Univ. Paris-Diderot), https://youtu.be/yU5foDoCW98
Program – (Eastern European Summer Time / UTC + 3)
September 23
4:00 – 4:15 pm, Theodore Arabatzis: Welcome, https://youtu.be/ln1WOvDNWrY
4:15– 5:00 pm, Maria Paula Diogo and Ana Simões: History of Science and Technology, Humanities and Contemporaneity. Some Reflections
5:00– 5:45 pm, Dana Jalobeanu: Emblems as Epistemic Tools and Heuristic Devices: An Exercise on Perspectival Contextualism
5:45– 6:00 pm, Break
6:00– 6:45 pm, Kostas Gavroglu: A Nightmare Come True: The Humanities as Applied Mathematics
6:45– 7:30 pm, Michael Gordin: Fringe Theories Stack: The History, Philosophy, and Sociology of Pseudoscience
September 24
4:00 – 4:45 pm, Sven Dupré: History of Knowledge: A Future
4:45– 5:30 pm, Erwin Neuenschwander: A Key to Riemann’s Breakthroughs in Mathematics and Natural Philosophy: Studying the Göttingen University Library borrowing registers
5:30– 6:15 pm, Matthieu Husson: Bridging History of Astronomy, Digital Humanities and Artificial Intelligence: A Field Report
6:15– 6:30 pm, Coffee Break
6:30– 7:15 pm, Koen Vermeir: Open Science and the Humanities: Past and Future
7:15– 8:00 pm, Chris Newfield: What is Literary Knowledge? Describing Humanities Research in an Ongoing ‘Two Cultures’ World