Kedves Barataim !
Vegyetek ugy, mintha tudtam volni rajzolni egy karacsonyfat:
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Szoval mindekinek boldog unnepeket, sok szeretet, gondolkodast,
gondoskodast es sikert kivanok.
Pleh Csaba
Csaba Pleh
Department of Psychology
Attila Jozsef University, Szeged
Petofi sgt 30-34, 6722 Hungary
Home: Budakeszi Zichy P. u. 4 2092 Hungary, (36)(23) 453932 or 933
Editor, Hungarian Review of Psychology
------- Forwarded Message Follows -------
Date sent: Tue, 22 Dec 1998 12:16:36 -0400
To: TENNET-L mailing list <tennet-l(a)uqam.ca>
From: Henri Cohen <cohen.henri(a)uqam.ca>
Subject: [TENNET-L:24] Tennet 2nd call for papers. Extended deadline
Send reply to: cohen.henri(a)uqam.ca
<bold><fontfamily><param>Geneva</param><bigger>TENNET X
(June 17 - 19, 1999)
CALL FOR PAPERS
</bigger></fontfamily></bold><fontfamily><param>Geneva</param><bigger>The
tenth annual conference on theoretical & experimental neuropsychology,
TENNET X, will be on June 1999, in Montreal, Quebec, Canada, at the
Universite du Quebec, Montreal, Judith-Jasmin Bldg., Marie-Gerin-Lajoie
Hall.
The basic conference structure is (a) two thematic symposia of 3 hours
duration, followed by (b) refereed poster sessions. The poster papers
are discussed after the second symposium, each afternoon. This is the
first North American neuropsychology conference that is specifically
focussed on theoretical and experimental issues.
Participants may submit papers (up to 1600 words + 2 tables or figures)
for consideration. Since these are refereed submissions, accepted
poster papers will also be published as refereed articles in Brain and
Cognition.
<bold>Extended deadline for refereed submissions: January 10, 1999
via E-mail or regular post.
</bold>=======================================================
****Information for refereed submissions****
=======================================================
Poster presentations should deal with a well-defined topic or problem
in any domain of experimental or theoretical neuropsychology, including
history. Submissions are in two parts: (a) A 100-150 word abstract;
(b) A detailed description of the paper which will be refereed by the
Program Committee and external reviewers. If applicable, description
should include an introduction, methods, results, discussion and full
reference sections. Authors who choose to have their descriptions
refereed blindly should prepare the manuscripts accordingly, using a
code you have identified to the chair of the program committee. Four
(4) copies are are required if you submit by regular mail; if you
submit by E-mail, do so only once.
Please make sure that your complete mailing address, with your
institutional affiliation if any, and telephone number are included
with your submission, particularly if you submit by E-mail. This is
needed to properly prepare the program, if your paper is accepted.
Your submission should be sent by post or E-mail to arrive by the
January 10 deadline, to the chair of the Program Committee: Please
remember: 4 copies are needed EXCEPT if you send it by E-mail!
IMPORTANT: Please check your submission with a general purpose
antivirus application before sending it by e-mail. Ideal formats are
Office 97, MS Office 98 (Macintosh) or RTF.
Submissions should be sent to:
Henri Cohen, Ph.D.
Laboratoire de neuroscience de la cognition
UQAM
P.B. 8888, Stn. Centre Ville
Montreal, Qc.
Canada H3C 3P8
Telephone: (514) 987-7002
FAX: (514) 987-8952
E-mail: <underline><color><param>0000,0000,00FF</param>tennet(a)uqam.ca
</color></underline> <underline><color><param>0000,0000,00FF</param>cohen.henri(a)uqam.ca
</color></underline>Please, visit the Tennet web sites (addresses
below) for detailed accommodation and registration infortmation.
Registrants to the conference are asked to contact the hotel or
University Residences directly for reservations; a block of rooms has
been set aside for TENNET participants and will be held as long as
possible; you should identify yourself as part of the TENNET group to
receive the best rates.
<underline><color><param>0000,0000,00FF</param>http://www.er.uqam.ca/nobel/tennethttp://www.geocities.com/~neuroscience
</color></underline></bigger></fontfamily>
Csaba Pleh
Department of Psychology
Attila Jozsef University, Szeged
Petofi sgt 30-34, 6722 Hungary
Home: Budakeszi Zichy P. u. 4 2092 Hungary, (36)(23) 453932 or 933
Editor, Hungarian Review of Psychology
----------
> From: Dr. Jill Bepler <G.Bepler(a)hab.de>
> To: Katalin Neumer <h11104neu(a)ella.hu>; Larissa Juliet Taylor
<ljtaylor(a)colby.edu>; Lee Palmer Wandel <lwandel(a)ias.edu>; Luc Racaut
<lr1(a)st-andrews.ac.uk>; MARK GREENGRASS <M.Greengrass(a)sheffield.ac.uk>;
Merry Wiesner Hanks <merrywh(a)csd.uwm.edu>
> Subject: Barockkongress 2000
> Date: 1998. december 22. 15:44
>
>
> FOR YOUR INFORMATION - PLEASE DISTRIBUTE TO INTERESTED
> COLLEAGUES
>
> WOLFENBUETTELER BAROCKKONGRESS 2000
>
>
> Artes et scientiae. Repraesentation neuer und alter Sichtweisen von
> "Natur" in der fruehen Neuzeit
> Kongress in der Herzog August Bibliothek Wolfenbuettel vom 5. bis 8.
> April 2000
> 10. Jahrestreffen des Wolfenbuetteler Arbeitskreises fuer
> Barockforschung
> Vorbereitung und Leitung des Kongresses: Barbara Bauer (Marburg), in
> Verbindung mit Wolfgang Behringer (Muenchen/York), Thomas Leinkauf
> (Muenster), Anselm Steiger (Heidelberg) und Friedrich Vollhardt
> (Giessen)
>
> Die Jahrtausendwende ist ein geeigneter Anlass, aus der Perspektive
> der Geistes- und Naturwissenschaften ueber die Wurzeln des
> neuzeitlichen Natur- und Wissenschaftsverstaendnisses nachzudenken.
> Vertreter der historischen Kulturwissenschaften sind sich darueber
> einig, dass es nicht mehr genuege, aus interner Sicht die
> Erfolgsgeschichte der naturwissenschaftlichen Teildisziplinen zu
> schreiben und beispielsweise in den Werken von Nicolaus Copernicus,
> Johannes Kepler, Galileo Galilei und Isaac Newton die
> Gruendungsmanifeste der neuzeitlichen Physik und Astronomie
> aufzuspueren. Um aber zu pruefen, welche Rolle die "new sciences",
> die empirische Methode, die mathematische Fachsprache,
> Laborexperimente und neue technische Hilfsmittel im vielfaeltigen
> Panorama der kulturellen Praktiken im fruehneuzeitlichen Europa
> spielten, bedarf es der Zusammenarbeit zwischen Vertreteren
> verschiedener historischer Disziplinen. Dazu gehoeren: Kirchen- und
> Dogmengeschichte, Schul- und Universitaetsgeschichte, Kunst-, Musik-
> und Literaturgeschichte, Mediengeschichte und vergleichende
> Kulturanthropologie.
>
> Das Thema des internationalen Barock-Kongresses im April 2000 bietet
> Gelegenheit, darueber zu diskutieren, wie die Literatur und Kuenste,
> alte und neue Kommunikationsmedien an der Propagierung neuer
> wissenschaftlicher Ideen und Erfindungen beteiligt waren.
> Gleichzeitig soll aber auch geprueft werden, welche Mittel die
> Verteidiger traditioneller Wissensformen und bewaehrter Autoritaeten
> benutzt haben, um neue Deutungsansaetze und Verfahren der
> Naturforschung zu bekaempfen. Im Zentrum des Interesses stehen 1.)
> die Bedeutung verschiedener Kommunikationsmedien, Darstellungsformen
> und Gattungstraditionen als Vehikel neuer Ideen ueber das
> Weltgebaeude und den Ort des Menchen, 2.) das Verhaeltnis der neuen
> Naturwissenschaften zu alternativen Praktiken der
> Wissenserweiterung, die aus heutiger Sicht als Pseudowissenschaften
> gelten, und 3.) der heikle Zusammenhang zwischen religioesem
> Bekenntnis und naturwissenschaftlichem Sachverstand, der im
> Kompetenzstreit zwischen Theologen und Fachwissenschaftlern ueber
> ihre Forschungsgegenstaende und Methoden zur Diskussion stand.
>
> Kongressplanung
>
> I. Plenarsitzungen
>
> Mittwoch, 5. April, abends
> Eroeffnungsvortrag
>
> Donnerstag, 6. April, Vormittag
> Das Verhaeltnis kirchlicher Institutionen zu den neuen Wissenschaften
> ebenso wie zu Magie und Wunderglauben
> - Jesuitische Kultur, Bibelexegese und new sciences
> - Protestantismus und neue Wissenschaften
> - Die Kirchen und die magischen Praktiken
>
> Freitag, 7. April, Vormittag
> Schulen, Akademien und Museen
> - Neue Ordnungen des Wissens und die traditionelle
> Disziplinenhierarchie an den Hochschulen in katholischen,
> protestantischen und reformierten Territorien
> - Konkurrierende Verstaendnisweisen von "Natur"
> - Sammlungen als Naturtheater und Laboratorien, ihre Besucher und
> Benutzer
> Abendveranstaltung:
> Vortrag ueber spekulative Musiktheorien und Musizierpraxis (mit
> Konzert)
>
> Samstag, 5. April, Vormittag
> - Neue Techniken, Exaktheitsideal und die Kuenste
> - Literarische Formen der Vermittlung neuer naturphilosophischer
> Ideen
>
> Abschlussdiskussion
>
>
> Ausschreibung - Call for Papers
>
> Referate in den Arbeitsgruppen (6. und 7. April, Nachmittage)
>
> In jeder Arbeitsgruppe sollen folgende Themen unter den Aspekten
> eines Wissensgebiets eroertert werden:
> - Koexistenz und Konkurrenz verschiedener Wissensformen und Praktiken
> - Rivalitaet zwischen akademischen Wissenschaftlern und Technikern,
> Ingenieuren und Tueftlern
> - Verhaeltnis zur christlichen Lehre und zum Bibeltext
> - Verhaeltnis zu den Scbulen, zum Hof und zu fuerstlichen,
> kaiserlichen, paepstlichen etc. Foerderern
> - Kritik an traditionellen Autoritaeten (v.a. Aristoteles) und Suche
> nach Alternativen (z.B. Hermetismus, Neuplatonismus, Paracelsismus
> u.ae.)
> - Methodenprobleme: Exaktheitsideal, mathematische Fachsprache,
> empirische Ueberpruefbarkeit, Experimente, Synthesis vs. Analysis
> - neue Ordnungen des Wissens, Hierarchie der Disziplinen
> - Darstellungsformen des Neuen in Literatur und Kuensten und die
> Selbstinszenierung der Wissenschaftler (als Magier, Revolutionaere,
> Kuenstler etc.)
>
>
> Geplante Arbeitsgruppen
>
> Arbeitsgruppe I
> Astronomie, Astrologie, Kosmologie
> (Fritz Krafft, Eberhard Knobloch)
>
> Arbeitsgruppe II
> Physik, Geographie und Geogonie, Naturgeschichte
> (Martin Mulsow, Paul R. Blum)
>
> Arbeitsgruppe III
> Alchemie
> (Wilhelm Kuehlmann, Bruce T. Moran)
>
> Arbeitsgruppe IV
> Psychologie, Entdeckung des Bewusstseins
> (Eckhard Kessler, Lino Bolzoni)
>
> Arbeitsgruppe V
> Wissenschaften und Kuenste, die den Koerper und "Koerperlichkeit"
> discourse of the body, gender difference) betreffen, also die
> Heilkunst (theoretische und praktische Medizin, Pharmakologie,
> Anthropologie)
> (Barbara Becker-Cantarino, Wolfgang Behringer)
>
> Arbeitsgruppe VI
> Entgrenzungen der bekannten Welt und Erfahrungen der Neuen Welt.
> (Wolfgang Neuber, Hans-Dieter Metzger)
>
>
> Anmeldung zum Barockkongress 2000 Ars et scientiae
>
> Anmeldungen fuer ein Referat (bis zu 20 Minuten) in einer der
> Arbeitsgruppen, samt einem Abstract von bis zu einer Seite, werden
> bis zum 22. Januar 1999 erbeten.
>
> Name, Adresse:......................................................
>
> Themenvorschlag:....................................................
>
> Gewuenschte Arbeitsgruppe:...........................................
>
>
> Abstract
>
>
>
>
> Genauer Abfahrtort bei der Anreise zum Kongress im April
> 2000:.................
>
>
> Arbeitskreis Barockforschung
> Herzog August Bibliothek
> Postfach 1364 Fax: 05331-808-266
> 38299 Wolfenbuettel Email: forschung(a)hab.de
>
>
>
> ******************************************************************
> Dr. Jill Bepler Fax: 0049-5331-808-266
> Herzog August Bibliothek Tel: 0049-5331-808-208
> Postfach 1364
> D-38299 Wolfenbuettel, Germany email: bepler(a)hab.de
> ******************************************************************
IASS-AIS
INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR SEMIOTIC STUDIES
ASSOCIATION INTERNATIONALE DE SEMIOTIQUE
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
7th International Congress of the IASS-AIS - 1999/10/06-11
"SIGN PROCESSES IN COMPLEX SYSTEMS"
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
Dear Colleagues,
The 2nd Call for Papers for the 7th Congress of the IASS-AIS is
almost finished and will be distributed in the first weeks of
January. It will give many details concerning the Congress,
including the Invited Speakers and the Sections proposed so far.
IN ORDER TO GIVE MORE COLLEAGUES THE OPPORTUNITY TO PARTICIPATE,
THE DEADLINE FOR SUBMISSION OF _ABSTRACTS_ (300 words; for details
see below) HAS NOW BEEN EXTENDED TO
--> 31 MARCH 1999.
PARTICIPANTS ARE ALSO INVITED TO SUBMIT _SESSION PROPOSALS_ BY
--> 31 JANUARY 1999.
THE PROPOSALS SHOULD BE SENT TO THE OFFICE OF THE ORGANIZING COMMITEE;
EVERY PROPOSAL HAS TO INCLUDE: THE TITLE, AN ABSTRACT (UP TO 500
WORDS) AND A LIST OF PARTICIPANTS.
All proposals will be examined by the Scientific Committee.
For introductory remarks to the title and the wide range of topics to
be covered in the Congress please visit the Congress website which
will be updated soon: "http://www.tu-dresden.de/sulifg/semiotics".
In case you don't have access to the Web and are not (yet) included
in our mailing lists (i.e. you have not received the 1st CfP) please
send your snail mail address to the Organizing Committee.
BELOW YOU FIND A SHORT VERSION OF ALL NECESSARY INFORMATIONS AND THE
RELEVANT ADDRESSES.
We want to remind you that the 7th International Congress of the
IASS-AIS is being organized in close association with:
--> The 4th International Congress of Federacion Latinoamericana de
Semiotica, La Coruna, 1999/09/27-10/02 on the general topic
"Fin de Siglo / Fin de Milenio" (for details contact the
organizers <agas(a)udc.es> or <jmpaz(a)udc.es>, or visit the website:
"http://www.udc.es/congremilenio")
and
--> The 9th Congress of the German Association for Semiotic Studies
DGS, to be held in Dresden October 3-6, 1999 on the general
topic "Machines and History" (for details contact the Dresden
Organizing Committee which is the same for the DGS and IASS-AIS
Congress: <semiotic(a)mailbox.tu-dresden.de> or visit the website:
"http://www.tu-dresden.de/sulifg/dgs").
If you intend to participate not only in the 7th Congress of the
IASS-AIS, but also in one or both of these congresses, please indicate
this on the registration form.
Please feel free to distribute this information among your colleagues.
Best wishes & Season's Greetings
Jeff Bernard & Gloria Withalm
- - - - SHORT INFO 7IASS-1999 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
7th International Congress of the IASS-AIS
Title: "Sign Processes in Complex Systems"
"Semioses dans les Systemes Complexes"
"Significacion en Sistemos Complejos"
"Zeichenprozesse in komplexen Systemen"
Place: Dresden, Germany / University of Technology
Date: 1999, October 6-11
URL CfP "http://www.tu-dresden.de/sulifg/semiotics"
(incl. online registration)
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
--> Abstracts:
The title of the proposed paper and an abstract of appr. 300 words
should be submitted, preferably in electronic form (disk or e-mail),
by 31 March 1999 to the Organizing Committee (NOT to the Secretary
General of the IASS-AIS!).
Please indicate *5 key words* for your paper and relate your
topic to the following areas:
o theoretical questions
o empirical results
o methodological issues
o problems of application to
o nature
o culture
o society
o technology.
Please keep in mind that every individual presentation must not
exceed 30 MINUTES, DISCUSSION INCLUDED
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
--> Financial support
There will be a limited number of scholarships for Non-OECD countries
available to help cover travel costs and/or food and lodging.
Applications should be directed to the Office of the Organzing
Committee (NOT to the Secretary General of the IASS-AIS!).
Please send the abstract of your proposed paper together with a short
CV and a list of publications.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
--> Congress fees & registration schedule:
Congress registration is required for participation. The forms for
online-registration and for registration by fax or mail are included
in the website.
Date registration / Fees
Accompanying
Participants Guests Students
until 1998/12/31 $ 80 $ 50 $ 50
1999/01/01--03/31 $ 110 $ 80 $ 80
after 1999/04/01 $ 160 $ 110 $ 110
You can either send a check or transfer the money to:
Walter Schmitz / Lehrstuhl NdL
account number: 05 540 070 00
bank code: 850 800 00 (Dresdner Bank)
code word: Semiotik
If you intend to pay by your Visa or American Express Card you are
kindly asked to indicate the card number and the expiring date.
For further details see the website.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
--> Congress Languages
French, English, Spanish, German
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
Organizing Committee:
--> Office
TU Dresden
Institut fuer Germanistik
Projekt Semiotik
D--01062 Dresden
Germany
Tel: +49-351-463-4381
Tel: +49-351-463-5201 (answering machine)
Fax: +49-351-463-7750
eMail: <semiotic(a)mailbox.tu-dresden.de>
--> President
Walter Schmitz
Vice-President for Education
Technische Universitaet Dresden
Mommsenstrasse 13
D--01062 Dresden
Fax: +49 351 463-7769
email: <wschmitz(a)rek.tu-dresden.de>
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
--> Conditions for Participation
Participation in the Congress is open to all semioticians.
Since it is the Congress of the IASS-AIS, participants are encouraged
to join the IASS-AIS.
For information on membership and membership benefits see the website:
"http://vhf.msh-paris.fr/escom/Ais/AISindex.html"
--> link "Membership Information"
or directly "http://vhf.msh-paris.fr/escom/Ais/IASS6-mem.html"
In case of difficulties with currency exchange regulations (or, in
general, with bank remittances), please send the membership form to
one of the Treasurers and the Secretary General, indicating that
the membership fee will be paid in Dresden.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
--> Scientific Committee 7th International Congress of the IASS-AIS
Chair: Pierre Pellegrino (Switzerland);
Jeff Bernard (Austria), John Deely (U.S.A.), Gerard Deledalle (France),
Takashi Fujimoto (Japan), Adrian Gimate-Welsh (Mexico), Dinda L.
Gorlee (The Netherlands), Richard L. Lanigan (U.S.A.), Solomon Marcus
(Romania), Magdolna Orosz (Hungary), Roland Posner (Germany), Rosa
Maria Ravera, (Argentinia), Horst Ruthrof (Australia), Lucia Santaella
(Brazil), Thomas A. Sebeok (U.S.A.), Eero Tarasti (Finland), Vilmos
Voigt (Hungary), Gloria Withalm (Austria)
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
Jeff Bernard (Secretary General IASS-AIS)
Gloria Withalm (Assistant Secretary General IASS-AIS)
Institute for Socio-Semiotic Studies ISSS
Waltergasse 5/1/12, A-1040 Vienna, Austria
phone+fax +43-1-5045344
email: <gloria.withalm(a)uni-ak.ac.at>
IASS-AIS homepage
"http://vhf.msh-paris.fr/escom/Ais/AISindex.html"
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
Csaba Pleh
Department of Psychology
Attila Jozsef University, Szeged
Petofi sgt 30-34, 6722 Hungary
Home: Budakeszi Zichy P. u. 4 2092 Hungary, (36)(23) 453932 or 933
Editor, Hungarian Review of Psychology
Resent-From: "csaba pleh" <PLEH(a)IZABELL.elte.hu>
Rejected message: sent to koglist(a)cogpsyphy.hu by RICKER(a)SC.MARICOPA.EDU follows.
Reason for rejection: sender not subscribed.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Since the recent thread on "schemas," I have become mildly obsessed with trying
to understand the origins of the modern use of the word "schema." I have not
yet read William Brewer's papers on this (apparently they are both "in press"
still), but he has argued that the our modern usage began with Bartlett, who
obtained the idea from the neurologist, Henry Head. In his book _Remembering_
(1932), Bartlett is effusive in his praise for Head:
My debt to Sir Henry Head will be obvious to everyone who reads this
book. It was, indeed, largely through the inspiration of personal
contact with him that I began to see how the apparently tangled mass of
my experimental data revealed consistency and order in the working of
the human mind (p. xix; I am using a 1995 reissue of the book by the
Cambridge University Press)
On page 200, Bartlett stated that he was using Head's notion of schema to
develop his theory of remembering. In one of his posts, William Brewer
stated that, "Bartlett was probably being overly generous in giving Head
credit for the concept," but since I haven't read his paper yet, I don't yet
know the argument supporting this statement.
I looked a little more carefully at Bartlett's citations to Head's work. He
refers to Head's two-volume work, _Studies in Neurology_, published in 1920, as
the source for the word "schema." But it turns out that the first use of the
term by Head was in a paper he published with Gordon Holmes several years
earlier (Head & Holmes, 1911-1912, _Brain_, vol. 34, pp. 102-254). In fact, the
wording in his 1920 book (quoted on pages 199-200 of Bartlett), and in his
later work on aphasia, is very similar to the wording of this early paper (and,
in fact, explains the use of the pronoun "we" in these later works--works in
which there was only one author):
For this combined standard, against which all subsequent changes of
posture are measured before they enter consciousness, we propose the
word "schema." (p. 187)
Head and Holmes do not, however, cite any work that would explain why they
chose this word. In looking at the reference lists of Head's works, it seems
that his influences mostly came from within his field of neurology. So, I must
suppose that the word "schema" came from some other unmentioned influence
(perhaps he had read Kant?).
Bartlett, on the other hand, mentioned mostly psychologists and anthropologists
in his book. The founder and director of the lab in which he began his work was
C.S. Myers; and it seems that he was influenced strongly by the works of
various "social" psychologists--those psychologists who would have been most
likely to have read the works of Baldwin and his close friend Janet.
As I mentioned in an earlier post, Bartlett mentioned that Pierre Janet had
been an important influence on him, and that Janet had published a work in 1928
that had taken an approach very similar to that of Bartlett. Janet's close
friend was J. M. Baldwin, who had begun to use the term "schema" in 1906 to
refer to mental structures in a way very similar to Bartlett's eventual use of
the term.
Perhaps it was facts such as these to which Brewer was referring in his post.
But my point here is that the neo-Kantian movement of the late-nineteenth
century to which some members of this list referred perhaps gave rise to a way
of thinking about consciousness and memory that had a large influence on some
important psychologists (and neurologists) around the turn of the century.
These psychologists influenced not only the work of Jean Piaget but also (most
probably, in my still forming opinion) the work of Frederic Bartlett. Although
the lines of descent may then have continued separately after this point (in
the work of the Piagetians and the "Bartlettians"), they come together in the
same neo-Kantian pool of influences during the first decade of the 20th century.
Jeff Ricker
Scottsdale Community College
Scottsdale AZ
ricker(a)sc.maricopa.edu
Az internet vilagaban ime eddig tartott a dolog:
Arbib fejezete a semakrol nalam van, koeszonet Erdi Peternek.
Aki keri, annak elkuldom, ez jogilag tiszta igy.
udv kgy
Kedves Holgyek es Urak!
Mint bizonyara emlekeznek:
*********
A Magyar Kognitv Tudomnyi Alaptvany most mar szokasos evi
konferenciajat
"Dinamika es megismeres" cimmel rendezzuk.
A konferencia ideje: 1999 februr 1 - 3.
Helye: Visegrad
****************
Eloadasokkal december 21 (hetfo) 17.00 oraig lehet jelentkezni. Ha valaki
szeretne a szervezok eletet (kisse) konnyebbe tenni, szabad nem a
legutolso napon jelentkezni. (termeszetesen tudjuk, hogy olyan elvetemult
nincs, aki a hatarido leteltevel jelentkezne.)
Szoval: ELOADASCIMEKET kerunk!!
(az igazi streber megmondja, hogy szallast es etkezeset is ker. Olyan is
van, hogy valaki nem ad elo, de a konferenican reszt vesz.
***********
O:rulne'nk, ha SOK DIA'K is jo:nne, eze'rt ke'rju:k az ido"sebb
kolle'ga'kat, hirdesse'k a konferencia't! U'gy gondoljuk, a
re'szve'teli di'j "felno"teknek" 2600Ft, dia'koknak 1200 Ft lesz.
A re'szve'teli di'je'rt a bankett, az elo"ada'skivonat, reme'lheto"leg
MAKOG triko', e's fu"to:tt elo"ado'terem ja'r. (Nem vicc, az ide'n sokkal
to:bb terembe'rt fizetu:nk mint tavaly.)
A sza'lla's e's e'tkeze's ko"ltse'ge naponta kb. 2000 Ft. Reme'lju:k az
ido"sebb kollega'k segi'tenek a dia'koknak a ko:ltse'gek
elo"teremte'se'ben. U'gy tudjuk, a dia'kok megki'se'relhetnek valamennyi
ta'mogata'st a HO:K-to"l kicsikarni.
***********
Minden jot!
Erdi Peter
Talan erdekelhetei a nepet a most mar 3. forduloju tistazas, honnan
is vettuk a "semat".
udv Csaba
Hi All,
Several folks on this list have questioned why I did not include Piaget
in my intellectual genealogy of the construct *schema* in current cognitive
psychology/cognitive science.
My basic reason was that examination of the texts shows that both the
citation trail and the actual construct being discussed follows the path as
I outlined it in the previous message: (Head)--Bartlett--Minsky--Rumelhart
and other cognitive psychologists. For me this seems the crucial point.
An interesting aspect of the line of descent of schemata is that it has a
very crooked path. Bartlett actually gathered the memory data on which he
based the schema construct during WWI. He tried to explain the data in the
1920's with the construct of "conventionalization" taken from anthropology.
He was unsatisfied with this and in the late 1920's while interacting with
Henry Head he developed the schema construct (roughly--unconscious mental
structures that represent generic knowledge in long term memory). The
schema construct had a large impact on British psychology. For example Burt
(1933) stated that Bartlett's book (Remembering, 1932) "is by far the most
important contribution to psychology that has appeared in this country
during recent years."
However, the schema concept fell on hard times so by the time of
Bartlett's death in 1969 the obituaries were uniformly negative on
Bartlett's schema construct. Oldfield (1972) wrote "efforts to clarify the
essential elements of the theory so as to make it applicable to further use
in empirical investigation and experiment were unsuccessful." Zangwill
(1972) wrote "[schema] theory in my view never very plausible, is perhaps
best forgotten."
Then in 1975 the computer scientist, Marvin Minsky, read Bartlett and
wrote a very influential paper on frames (his term for schemata) and from
this source the idea spread into current cognitive psychology where by the
1980's Bartlett's book, Remembering, was the second most cited work in the
area of human memory. (This little history should be good for the morale of
all of us who feel some aspect of our work has not been appreciated by the
rest of the field--its time may yet come!)
While I have argued against Piaget as being in the main line of
intellectual descent of the schema construct it would be interesting to
know what Piaget had in mind. However, this is not easily done. There is
enormous confusion in the developmental literature on both the word
*schema* and the construct *schema*. For example, Flavell (1977) made a
public apology for mistranslating the French *scheme* as *schema*. In his
later work Piaget (1970) himself made an explicit distinction between a
*scheme* construct and a *schema* construct. And Furth (1969) was harsh
about this issue. He wrote, "Is this use of the word schema [by American
developmentalists] perhaps another subtle indication of how Piaget's
expressions can become assimilated to a different cognitive framework with
the result of fundamental misconceptions about Piaget's position?" When a
conceptually deep student of Piaget says things like that, I for one, am
not willing to make a simple equation of Piaget's ideas with those of
Bartlett or those of current cognitive psychology. It will require serious
scholars and historians of Piaget & developmental psychology to sort this
one out.
Bill Brewer
------------------
Prof. William F. Brewer, Dept. Psychology, U. of Illinois
603 E. Daniel Street, Champaign, IL 61820 USA
phone: (217) 333-1548 fax: (217) 244-5876 email: w-brewer(a)uiuc.edu
http://www.psych.uiuc.edu/~wbrewer/
Csaba Pleh
Department of Psychology
Attila Jozsef University, Szeged
Petofi sgt 30-34, 6722 Hungary
Home: Budakeszi Zichy P. u. 4 2092 Hungary, (36)(23) 453932 or 933
Editor, Hungarian Review of Psychology
Az ELTE TTK Tudomanytortenet es Tudomanyfilozofia Tanszeken
december 17.-en, csutortokon 17 orai kezdettel
kotetlen felevzaro osszejovetelt
tartunk a tanszek helyisegeiben es azok kornyeken.
Etelrol es italrol szereny mertekben gondoskodunk.
Minden erdeklodot szeretettel varunk uj helyunkon:
1117 Budapest, Pazmany Peter setany 1., 6. em. 658.
udv kgy
PS a TTK halozatanak leallasa miatt a tervhez kepest
nemi kesessel kuldom ezt.
=====================================================================
George Kampis, Associate Professor, Chairman,
Department of History and Philosophy of Science,
ELTE University, 1518 Budapest, P.O. Box 32, Hungary
Phone/FAX: (36) 1 372 2924 email: gk(a)hps.elte.hu
http://hps.elte.hu/~gk ftp://hps.elte.hu
=====================================================================
* * * Call for Papers * * *
The Institute of Philosophy, Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic,
announces the 13th event in the series of annual International Symposia
LOGICA '99
to be held at Liblice Chateau (Central Bohemia), 22th - 25th June, 1999.
Since 1987 the LOGICA Symposia have become an interdisciplinary platform
for discussion on all aspects of logic among both internationally
renowned scholars and young researchers.
Contributions devoted to any of the wide range of logical problems are
welcome except those focused on specialised technical applications.
Particularly welcome are contributions that cover the issues interesting
both for 'philosophically' and for 'mathematically' oriented logicians.
Selected contributions to LOGICA are published by the Academy of
Sciences. Recent volumes include, among others, papers from Nuel Belnap,
Paul Benacerraf, Jan Berg, Andre Fuhrmann, Reinhardt Grossmann,
Jaakko Hintikka, David Lewis, Alex Orenstein, Barbara Partee,
Graham Priest, Veikko Rantala, Michael Resnik, Jay Rosenberg,
Mark Sainsbury, Gabriel Sandu, Pirmin Stekeler-Weithofer, Goeran Sundholm,
Raymond Turner, Achille Varzi, and Jan Wolenski.
The official language of the symposium is English.
Among invited speakers are: Johan van Benthem (Amsterdam), Rohit Parikh
(New York), Stewart Shapiro (Columbus).
If you are interested in reading a paper at the symposium, please send
us a two-page abstract of the paper accompanied by a separate sheet with
your name, contact address, and affiliation to the address below by
February 28, 1999. E-mail submissions are possible in the format of a MIME
or UUencoded plain text, postscript, MS Word or WordPerfect file.
Notification of acceptance of the papers will be sent by March 31, 1999.
There is a registration fee for the symposium covering full board and
lodging at Liblice Chateau during the symposium, travel expenses from
Prague to Liblice and back, and a copy of the volume containing most of
the contributions to the symposium. The fee amounts to US$ 250 for
participants or US$ 200 for accompanying persons (volume not included).
Those who might have problems covering the expenses connected with
taking part in the symposium are invited to apply for a grant.
The organising committee will cover the registration fee for up to three
selected applicants. Those who wish to apply for the grant should explicitly
state this when submitting their abstract, which should be extended to five
pages.
For up-to-date information visit: www.flu.cas.cz/logica/l99cfpgraf.htm
Please direct all correspondence concerning the symposium to
logica(a)mbox.cesnet.cz
or to
Petr Kolar, Vladimir Svoboda
Institute of Philosophy, ASCR
Jilska 1
110 00 Praha 1
Czech Republic
fax: +4202/242-202-57
---------------------------------------
ANNOUNCEMENT AND CALL FOR PAPERS
CONFERENCE:=20
INCOMMENSURABILITY (AND RELATED MATTERS)
Conference to be held at the University of Hanover (Germany)
13-16 June 1999
Conference language: English
Conference website: http://sun1.rrzn.uni-hannover.de/zeww/inc.conf.html
CALL FOR PAPERS
This is the second call for contributed papers for the conference
`Incommensurability (and related matters)' to be hosted by the Center for
Philosophy and Ethics of Science of the University of Hanover, 13-16 June,
1999. Papers may address various topics related to the issue of the
incommensurability of scientific theories. For a list of suggested topics,
please consult the conference webpage. To offer a paper, submit an
abstract of 2-4 pages in electronic form to Paul Hoyningen-Huene
(hoyningen(a)mbox.ww.uni-hannover.de), with a copy to Howard Sankey
(h.sankey(a)hps.unimelb.edu.au). Abstracts may also be submitted by fax
(+49-511-762-4799) or by conventional mail to: Prof. Paul Hoyningen-Huene,
Universit=E4t Hannover, ZE f=FCr Wissenschaftstheorie und=
Wissenschaftsethik,
Oeltzenstr. 9, D-30169 Hannover, Germany. The deadline for submission of
abstracts is February 28, 1999.
AIMS OF THE CONFERENCE=20
The thesis of the incommensurability of scientific theories is one of the
most controversial claims to emerge from the post-positivist historical
turn in the philosophy of science. Incommensurability and post-positivism
are currently the subject of renewed discussion in the wake of the recent
deaths of Paul Feyerabend and Thomas Kuhn. Further interest has been
stimulated by the development in Kuhn's later work of a sophisticated
taxonomic version of the incommensurability thesis. Additional sources of
interest include the recent application of cognitive models of conceptual
change to the issue of incommensurability, as well as continued efforts to
develop an account of the reference of theoretical terms. This conference
seeks to promote discussion of the current status of the incommensurability
thesis, by drawing together various strands of contemporary debate on the
topic, and facilitating interaction between alternative approaches to the
problem currently being pursued. Among the matters related to
incommensurability which it is hoped the conference will explore are such
issues as: realist vs. anti-realist perspectives on incommensurability,
meaning vs. reference variance, reference and theory comparison, reference
of theoretical terms, translation failure between theories, rational theory
choice, local incommensurability, taxonomic incommensurability,
meta-incommensurability, cognition and conceptual change, historical
studies of conceptual change. For full details of suggested topics as well
as a continuously updated bibliography of the subject area, please consult
the conference webpage.
INVITED SPEAKERS AND COMMENTATORS
In addition to the contributed papers currently being solicited, there will
be presentations by the following invited speakers: Peter Barker
(Oklahoma), Richard Boyd (Cornell), Harold Brown (Northern Illinois),
Martin Carrier (Bielefeld), Michael Devitt (Maryland), Gerald Doppelt (UC
San Diego), Hartry Field (NYU), Fred Kroon (Auckland), Nancy Nersessian
(Georgia Tech), Robert Nola (Auckland), Dudley Shapere (Wake Forest) and
Harvey Siegel (Miami). Titles of the invited papers may be found on the
conference webpage. Commentators on invited papers include Hanne Andersen
(Copenhagen), Andreas Bartels (Paderborn), Alex Burri (Bern), Brigitte
Falkenburg (Dortmund), Michel Ghins (Louvain-la-Neuve), Stephan Hartmann
(Konstanz), Michael Heidelberger (Berlin), Hugh Lacey (Swarthmore), Eric
Oberheim (Hanover), Hans Rott (Amsterdam), and Marcel Weber (Hanover).
CONFERENCE COMMITTEE
The members of the conference organization committee are: Ronald Giere
(Minnesota), Paul Hoyningen-Huene (Chairperson, Hanover), Eric Oberheim
(Hanover), Howard Sankey (Melbourne/Pittsburgh/Hanover), Marcel Weber
(Hanover).
FURTHER INFORMATION
The conference is sponsored by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG)
and the Center for Philosophy and Ethics of Science, University of Hanover.
The conference will be held in the Leibniz-Haus in the center of the old
part of Hanover. Accommodation will be in hotels close to the
Leibniz-Haus. Further information about the conference, including costs,
accommodation, local transport, registration, a statement of the aims of
the conference, titles of invited papers, suggested paper topics, and a
comprehensive bibliography on incommensurability, please visit the
conference webpage at the homepage of the Center for Philosophy and Ethics
of Science at the University of Hanover:
http://sun1.rrzn.uni-hannover.de/zeww/inc.conf.html
=20
INQUIRIES
Expressions of interest, questions and requests for further information may
be directed to either Paul Hoyningen-Huene
(hoyningen(a)mbox.ww.uni-hannover.de) or=20
Howard Sankey (h.sankey(a)hps.unimelb.edu.au).
*************
Howard Sankey
After 15 December, my address will be:
Center for Philosophy and Ethics of Science
University of Hanover
Oeltzenstrasse 9
D - 30169 Hannover
Germany
E-mail: sankey(a)mbox.ww.uni-hannover.de
http://www.hps.unimelb.edu.au/staff/howard.htm