7:00 PM Peter Galison
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Fetishizing Science
Concept: Peter Galison, Cambridge/Mass.; Susan Neiman, Potsdam
Participants: Lorraine Daston, Berlin; Wendy Doniger, Chicago; Rivka Feldhay, Tel Aviv; Michael Gordin, Princeton; Anthony Grafton, Princeton; Caroline Jones, Cambridge/Mass.; Philip Kitcher, New York; Glenn Most, Pisa; Katharine Park, Cambridge/Mass.; Nimrod Reitman, Caputh
Views of science differ widely even among relatively similar cultures – just consider the many differences between Humanities and Geisteswissenschaften. But since the early 20th century, there has been general agreement about the priority of the natural sciences – in truth-value, in independence from ideology, and in funding. At the same time, the rise of the history of science as a discipline has cast doubt on most of the myths that make natural science a priority. Recent studies have called into question hard distinctions between reason and nature, while enriching our notions of objectivity, observation, and rationality itself. Leading historians of science, as well as other historians, philosophers and critics will discuss the extent to which the imperialism of the natural sciences can be justified.
Jun 9, 2016
Jun 10, 2016
11:00 AM Susan Neiman
Sure Path of a Science?
12:00 PM Philip Kitcher
Progress in the Sciences and in the Arts
3:00 PM Katharine Park
Rethinking the History of Western Science Narrative, Translation, and the Longue Durée
4:00 PM Michael Gordin
The Road to Gloro: Max Talmey and the Einsteinian Language
5:30 PM Lorraine Daston
When Science Went Modern – and Why
7:00 PM Peter Galison, Robb Moss
CONTAINMENT
Jun 11, 2016
10:30 AM Nimrod Reitman
Ersatz Fetish: A Case Study
11:30 AM Caroline Jones
Cognitive Science and the Neuro-Fetish
12:30 PM Anthony Grafton
John Caius and the Early History of Cambridge
3:30 PM Glenn Most
Philology and Science
4:30 PM Rivka Feldhay
Science as Fetish and the Genealogy of its Critique: The Case of a Hebrew Writer
6:00 PM Wendy Doniger