vegleges vision programfelhivas
Csaba Pleh, Professor of Psychology
Budapest U. of Technology and Economics, Center for Cognitive Science
Presently at Collegium Budapest, Budapest, Szentharomsag u 2 H-1014
cspleh@ colbud.hu, T: 3612248323, Fax: 3612248310 Mobile: (06)303500431
----- Original Message -----
From: Kovács Gyula
To: Pléh Csaba
Sent: Saturday, May 18, 2002 10:49 AM
Subject: vegleges vision programfelhivas
VISION
International exhibition, symposium, screening series, net.project,
publications
Budapest Autumn Festival Mûcsarnok/Kunsthalle Budapest C3
18 October 17 November 2002
Vision, human vision in particular, the primary focus of our project, is a
historically changing, active, cognitive process. With the cooperation and
collaboration of neuroscientists, psychologists, historians and artists, we
have undertaken the task of establishing a new, interdisciplinary field,
which we hope will prove to be suitable for the establishment of new
perspectives toward the comprehension of vision.
Vision Image and Perception, exhibition organised as the opening event of
the Budapest Autumn Festival by the C3 Foundation and the
Mûcsarnok/Kunsthalle Budapest in the Mûcsarnok, aims to present the active
process of human vision as approachable through historical, cultural,
technical and neurobiological methods, with the aid of artworks,
demonstration charts and apparatus, as well as the potentials of
interactive multimedia. The exhibition and the accompanying events, among
them the symposium entitled Brain and Image, would like to create a
discoursive space in which the representatives of the various scientific
and artistic branches, the authors and researchers, can become acquainted
with each others? points of view, and can examine the common and divergent
domains in such a way that it be interesting and informative, both for the
recipients and for the viewers.
With respect to the understanding, modelling and description of vision, the
scientific research of the past one-and-a-half to two decades has reached a
point that we must recognise: extremely important experiences are concealed
within those objects and experiments that we have come to denote with the
collective term of ?art?. Similarly, artistic compositions and the
experiences of artists can provide a basis for the evolution of a new
system of perspective for scientific researchers, taken in the strictest
sense of the word. The Visio research group that was formed within the
framework of C3 last year was established in order to create an opportunity
through the investigation of the process of vision for a dialogue between
the various fields of research, and for becoming acquainted with those new
tendencies of examination that are taken note of with a general interest,
beyond the professional approach. In this way, the investigation can be
inspiring for both the artists and the scientific researchers.
In the present case, similarly as with our previous exhibitions achieved
with great success, The Butterfly Effect and Perspective, our aim is to
establish a comprehensive, scientific and technological historical context.
Thus, we have organised a scientific symposium founded upon the
participation of eminent international and Hungarian
professionals neurologists, neurobiologists, art historians, as well as a
screening series and additional lectures, the publication of printed and
digital materials, and the presentation of such (media) artworks that
reflect upon the research of vision and the sphere of thought of image and
perception.
Principal elements of the presentation organised in all exhibition halls of
the Mûcsarnok/Kunsthalle:
The first, and largest, group of artworks presents the thematic sphere of
vision image and perception, through the means of contemporary media art
and in accordance with the characteristics of art. We sent out a call for
applications toward the realisation of such new works that are linked to
the theme at hand and would be produced first and foremost through the
application of technical media. Those projects suitable for realisation and
approaching the subject at hand are produced within the framework of the C3
Foundation Lab Grant. The recipient is provided with technical and
operational assistance, as well as the opportunity for consultation with
our scientific colleagues participating in the programme.
The second, the historical section is divided between earlier artworks,
apparatus and documentation. Here, for both the researchers and the
audience, such rarely visible and studiable original objects and equipment
are rendered accessible, which, with the exception of such infrequent
occasions, are closed to public view. New, until now unpublished, results
and reports relevant to the theme of research are employed and presented in
connection with this Hungarian and international material.
The third part is comprised of demonstration tableaux, prepared for this
occasion, as well as those produced earlier by scientists researching
similar themes, which render viewable those artworks that, due to their
high value, are inaccessible and unlendable, which are important as
illustrations or images demonstrating and assisting in comprehension of the
theme and research.
Participating artists include, among others: Róza El-Hassan, Gábor Gyõrfi,
János Sugár, Zoltán Szegedy-Maszák, Péter Türk, Joachim Fleischer, Miklós
Erdély, Rosa Barba, Aegedius Sadeler, György Jovánovics, Agostino Musi,
Mária Chilf, Ilona Keserü, Dóra Maurer, Jan Saenredam, Hendrik Goltzius,
Gábor Palotai, Gábor Kerekes, Luchezar Boyadjiev, Attila Csörgõ, I. L. Galeta.
Historical material is lent by, among others: the Technical History Museum
- Prague, and the Museum of Fine Arts, Collection of György Gadányi,
Library of the Hungarian Academy of Fine Arts, the Hungarian Patent Office,
all Budapest.
Accompanying events take place in various locations in Budapest.
FILM-EYE Screening series throughout the period of the exhibition.
EYE, VISION, IMAGE - DOCUMENTATION / DATABASE / PUBLICATIONS
Text anthology/Catalogue/Web development
Responsible for the event series, leader of the Visio research group on the
part of C3: Miklós Peternák;
Assisted by: Nikolett Erõss and József Mélyi, as well as the other members
of the Visio research group;
Scientific preparation work and consultation: Dr. Ilona Kovács, Dr. Gyula
Kovács, Zoltán Vidnyánszky, László Beke;
Web development: Gusztáv Nikázy
http://vision.c3.hu
e-mail: vision(a)c3.hu
__________________________________________________________________
IMAGE AND THE BRAIN
International Conference on Vision
Mûcsarnok / Kunsthalle Budapest - Budapest Autumn Festival - C3
19-20 October 2002
The Budapest Autumn Festival is one of the major festivals organized
annually in Budapest. It attracts tens of thousands of visitors from inside
and outside of Hungary.
This year, the opening event of the Budapest Autumn Festival is an
exhibition and International Conference, Vision, in the
Mûcsarnok/Kunsthalle, the main exhibition hall for contemporary art in Hungary.
The scientific conference is entitled Image and the Brain, and it will
focus on the following topic:
Visual art is the product of the human brain, and therefore the creation
and appreciation of art depends upon and obeys the general organizational
principles and rules of the brain. Understanding the neural basis of visual
art can help us to answer some of the most challenging questions of human
history: what is art and how did it evolve?
The purpose of the conference is to provide a forum for scientists, artists
and others interested in questions about visual art and its neural basis.
Invited speakers include:
Vilayanur S. Ramachandran (Professor of Neurosciences and Psychology,
University of California, San Diego).
Melvyn A. Goodale (Canada Research Professor in Visual Neuroscience;
University of Western Ontario, London Ontario, Kanada)
Prof. Nicholas Wade (Professor of Visual Psychology, University of Dundee,
Dundee)
Prof. Jean-Pierre Changeux (Collège de France; Institut Pasteur, Paris)
Richard Gregory (Professor of Psychology, Downing College Cambridge)
Prof. Thomas V. Papathomas (Laboratory of Vision Research, Center for
Cognitive Science, Rutgers University, New Jersey, USA)
Siegfried Zielinski (Kunsthochschule für Neue Medien, Köln)
Peter Weibel (ZKM, Karlsruhe)
Jaroslav Andel (Art historian, New York)
Prof. Tamás Roska (Hungarian Academy of Sciences, Budapest)
Scientific preparation work and consultation: Dr. Ilona Kovács, Dr. Gyula
Kovács, Zoltán Vidnyánszky
Csaba Pleh, Professor of Psychology
Budapest U. of Technology and Economics, Center for Cognitive Science
Presently at Collegium Budapest, Budapest, Szentharomsag u 2 H-1014
cspleh@ colbud.hu, T: 3612248323, Fax: 3612248310 Mobile: (06)303500431
----- Original Message -----
From: Jef Verschueren <jef.verschueren(a)ipra.be>
To: <tolcsvai(a)cc.helsinki.fi>; <nam(a)snu.ac.kr>; <francois.nemo(a)wanadoo.fr>;
<Ulrika.Nettelbladt(a)logopedi.lu.se>; <maurice.nevile(a)anu.edu.au>;
<nemether(a)osi.hu>; <nnemeth(a)isis.elte.hu>; <enpatric(a)cityu.edu.hk>;
<pnichols(a)email.sjsu.edu>; <femoe(a)ruc.dk>; <nikifor(a)otenet.gr>;
<a.b.nilsen(a)ilf.uio.no>; <randi.nilsen(a)hf.ntnu.no>; <mvnoblia(a)filo.uba.ar>;
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<aohta(a)u.washington.edu>; <kaoru(a)u.washington.edu>;
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<mselito(a)mscc.huji.ac.il>; <olson(a)wiko-berlin.de>; <luca.oppiz
Sent: Sunday, May 19, 2002 4:58 PM
Subject: 8th International Pragmatics Conference
8th INTERNATIONAL PRAGMATICS CONFERENCE
TORONTO, Canada
13-18 July 2003
The 8th International Pragmatics Conference will be held on 13-18 July
2003 at the University of Toronto.
CONFERENCE CHAIR: Monica HELLER (Univ. of Toronto)
LOCAL SITE COMMITTEE: Susan EHRLICH (York Univ.), Ruth KING (York Univ.),
Normand LABRIE (Univ. of Toronto), Grit LIEBSCHER (Univ. of Waterloo),
Bonnie McELHINNY (Univ. of Toronto) Donna PATRICK (Brock Univ.), Jack
SIDNELL (Univ. of Toronto)
INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE COMMITTEE: In addition to the members of the
Local Site Committee, the International Conference Committee includes:
Charles ANTAKI (Loughborough Univ.), Jenny COOK-GUMPERZ (Univ. of
California
at Santa Barbara), Susan ERVIN-TRIPP (Univ. of California at Berkeley;
IPrA President), GU Yueguo (Chinese Academy of Social Sciences), Andreas
JUCKER (Justus Liebig Univ. Giessen), Ferenc KIEFER (Hungarian Academy
of Sciences; chair, 7th IPC), Enikö NÉMETH (Univ of Szeged), Ben RAMPTON
(King's College London), Eddy ROULET (Univ. of Geneva), Anna-Brita
STENSTRÖM
(Univ. of Bergen), Elizabeth TRAUGOTT (Stanford Univ.), Jef VERSCHUEREN
(Univ. of Antwerp; IPrA Secretary General), Yorick WILKS (Univ. of
Sheffield)
THEMES: As always, the conference will be open to all themes relevant
to the pragmatics of language in its widest sense as an interdisciplinary
cognitive, social, and cultural perspective. Prospective participants
should, however, pay attention to the distribution of topics across event
types, as described below. In addition, there is a special theme.
SPECIAL THEME:
Linguistic pluralism : policies, practices and pragmatics
This is a theme that was chosen by the Local Site Committee and approved
by the Consultation Board. It corresponds to the interests of a large
number of IPrA members, and permits us to link cognitive, linguistic,
social and political approaches to a phenomenon of long-standing interest
in pragmatics and of current theoretical, as well as social and policy
importance. The intention will be to focus the conference on making those
links in a number of ways, ranging from choice of plenary speakers and
special panels, to invitations to interested and relevant Canadians outside
the academy. The theme is one which also fits the venue, given Canada's
historical involvement in debates on such issues, and Toronto's profile
as a major centre of new globalized urban multilingualism. However, it
is meant here to go beyond traditional ideas about "multilingualism"
understood
as connecting linguistic difference primarily to ethnic or national
distinctio
ns, and rather to extend that concept to the links between language and
all forms of social difference and social inequality. The theme is also
appropriate to the expertise of the members of the Local Site Committee
which is committed to tying academic approaches to broader public debates.
PLENARY LECTURES: Plenary speakers will include
Susan GAL (Dept. of Anthropology, Univ. of Chicago), Language ideologies
and the practices of power: "Reading between the lines" during the Cold
War
Jocelyn LÉTOURNEAU (Département d'histoire, Univ. Laval, Québec), La langue
comme lieu de mémoire et lieu de passage / Language as realm of memory
and passage
Lorenza MONDADA (Sciences du Langage, Univ. Lumière, Lyon, France),
Scientific
knowledge as an interactional accomplishment: On the analysis of research
groups in international networks
Eni ORLANDI (Univ. Estadual de Campinas, Brazil), Le Discours en tant
qu´objet spécifique dans l´histoire des Sciences du Langage / Discourse
as a specific object in the history of Language Sciences
Dan SPERBER (CNRS, Paris, France) Relevance theory: Pragmatics and beyond
Ruth WODAK (Inst. für Sprachwissenschaft, Univ. of Vienna, Austria),
European language policies and European identities
PANELS:
* Oeuvre panels
Jan BLOMMAERT (University of Ghent), Pierre Bourdieu: The ethnographic
turn
This panel is devoted to the work of Pierre BOURDIEU and its relevance
for pragmatics.
Charles BRIGGS (University of California at San Diego), Pragmatics of
institutional discourse
This panel is devoted to the work of Aaron CICOUREL and its relevance
for pragmatics.
Jenny COOK-GUMPERZ (Univ. of California at Santa Barbara), Basil Bernstein
and pragmatics: class, code and language
This panel is devoted to the work of Basil BERNSTEIN and its relevance
for pragmatics.
* Special topic panels
Peter AUER (Univ. Freiburg), Acts of identity: Language indexing social
membership
Adriana BOLIVAR & Paola BENTIVOGLIO (Univ. Central de Venezuela), Changing
attitudes to lesser languages in Latin America
James COLLINS (State Univ. of New York - Albany), Class, Identity, and
Literacy: Ethnographic and Discourse-Analytic Perspectives
Werner KALLMEYER & Inken KEIM (Inst. für Deutsche Sprache, Mannheim),
Sociostylistic perspectives on language and identity
Normand LABRIE (Univ. of Toronto), Enjeux de santé dans des sociétés
plurilingu
es
Yaron MATRAS (Univ. of Manchester), The mixed language debate: Natural
evolution and structural manipulation
Donna PATRICK (Brock Univ.), Indigenous language stability and change
Kanavillil RAJAGOPALAN (Univ. Estadual de Campinas) & Marilyn MARTIN-JONES
(Univ. of Wales), Politics of language and the linguist
Tomek STRZALKOWSKI (State Univ. of New York - Albany), Building automated
multilingual call centers
* General interest panels
Jean-Paul BRONCKART & Laurent FILLIETTAZ (Univ. de Genève), L'analyse
des actions et des discours en situation de travail
Robyn CARSTON (Univ. College London), Relevance theory and word meaning
Yrjö ENGESTRÖM (Univ. of California at San Diego), Activity theory,
pragmatics
and the study of language at work
Katarzyna JASZCZOLT (Cambridge Univ.), Temporality and post-Gricean
pragmatics
Asa KASHER (Tel Aviv Univ.), Revisiting philosophical pragmatics:
Implicatures
and speech act theory
Michael PERKINS (Univ. of Sheffield), Pragmatics and language pathology
Corinne ROSSARI & Eddy ROULET (Univ. de Genève), Les nouveaux développements
dans les recherches sur les relations de discours et leurs marqueurs
Scott SCHWENTER (Ohio State Univ.), Current issues in the diachronic
micropragm
atics of Romance languages
Anna-Brita STENSTRÖM & Karin AIJMER (Univ. of Bergen & Univ. of Gothenburg),
Conversation analysis: Different approaches to spoken interaction
CALL FOR PAPERS
There is one submission deadline for paper and panel proposals: 1 November
2002
A call for papers with complete instructions is to be found on the IPrA
website (address below). Paper versions can be requested from Ann Verhaert
(ann.verhaert(a)ipra.be)
GO TO: http://ipra-www.uia.ac.be/ipra/
Department of HISTORY AND PHILOSOPHY OF SCIENCE
Eotvos University, Budapest
Pazmany P. setany 1/A Budapest
Phone/Fax: (36-1) 372 2924
Department's Home Page:http://hps.elte.hu
Philosophy of Science Colloquium
Room 6.54 (6th floor) Monday 4:00 PM
____________________________________
27 May 4:00 PM 6th floor 6.54
(Language: English)
Counterfactuals and the Second Law
Barry Loewer
Department of Philosophy, Rutgers University
Counterfactuals e.g. "if the match had been struck it would have lit",
are temporally asymmetric -- the future typically coutnerfactually
depends on the past but (typically) not the the past on the future. The
second law of thermodynamics is also temporally asymmetric. It says,
roughly, that the entropy of an isolated system (the universe as a
whole) never decreases. So the idea has occurred to some philosophers
and physicists including Einstein, Reichenbach, Lewis, Sklar, Horwich
(among others) that there is a connection between counterfactuals and
thermodynamics second law, and more generally statistical mechanics. But
none of these spell out what that connection is. Lewis remarks that he
"does not know how to connect the several asymmetries ...and the famous
asymmetry of entropy." We will fill in part of the story here.
___________________________________
The 60-minute lecture is followed by a 5-minute break. Then
we held a 30-60-minute discussion.The participants may comment the talks and
initiate discussion on the Internet. The comments should be written in the
language of the presentation.
The organizer of the colloquium:
Laszlo E. Szabo (email: leszabo(a)hps.elte.hu)
--
Laszlo E. Szabo
Department of Theoretical Physics
Department of History and Philosophy of Science
Eotvos University, Budapest
H-1518 Budapest, Pf. 32, Hungary
Phone/Fax: (36-1)372-2924
Home: (36-1) 200-7318
Mobil/SMS: (36) 20-366-1172
http://hps.elte.hu/~leszabo
MEGHIVO
HERNAD ISTVAN
az MTA kulso tagja
2002 majus 27-en, hetfon 15 orakor szekfoglalo eloadast tart az
MTA Szekhaz Felolvaso termeben (Bp. Roosevelt ter 9 I. emelet)
Darwin, Skinner, Turing és az elme
cimmel.
Az ulesre mindekit szeretettel varunk.
The Rector
and Permanent Fellows of
COLLEGIUM BUDAPEST
Institute for Advanced Study invite you to a
Public Lecture
by
Robin Dunbar
School of Biological Sciences
University of Liverpool
Liverpool, UK
Evolution of the Social Brain
on
Thursday
23 May 2002
5.30 p.m.
at
Collegium Budapest
1014 Budapest
Szentháromság u. 2.
ABSTRACT
Language and conversation are distinctively human behaviours. But why should they
be unique to our species? The explanation lies in the phenomenon known as the
"social brain", a distinctively primate adaptation. Primates are characterised by two
unusual features: brains that are bigger for body size than is the case for any other
group of animals and some highly developed social skills. I shall show that these
features are correlated: primates' large brains have evolved because they are needed
to allow the animals to engage in more complex calculations when interacting
socially. This leads us to ask what it is that primates are doing that is so complicated
as to need a larger brain. The answer lies in aspects of social cognition like "theory of
mind" - the ability to understand how another individual sees the world. Pulling these
two themes together then allows us to see why and how language might have evolved
in the human lineage - and not anywhere else. Language is needed to supplement
social grooming (the main way in which primates bond their social groups) when
group size exceeds a certain limit. In effect, language is a form of grooming at a
distance that allows us to enlarge the circle of individuals that we can interact with.
CV of Robin Dunbar
Robin Dunbar graduated in Philosophy and Psychology from the University of
Oxford, and went on to do a PhD in animal behaviour at the University of Bristol.
During the last 30 years, he has studied the behaviour of wild primates and antelope in
various parts of Africa. More recently, his research has focussed on three main areas:
developing mathematical models of socio-ecological and reproductive decision-
making in primates, human behavioural ecology (with a particular emphasis on mate
choice strategies and parental investment decisions), and the cognitive mechanisms
that underpin these kinds of decisions in primates and humans. He leads a group of 3
faculty staff and around 15 postgraduate students working on a broad range of
subjects within these areas. His most recent books include: The Trouble with Science
(1995), Grooming, Gossip and the Evolution of Language (1996), The Evolution of
Culture (1999), Primate Conservation Biology (2000) and Human Evolutionary
Psychology (2002).
Csaba Pleh, Professor of Psychology
Budapest U. of Technology and Economics, Center for Cognitive Science
Presently at Collegium Budapest, Budapest, Szentharomsag u 2 H-1014
cspleh@ colbud.hu, T: 3612248323, Fax: 3612248310 Mobile: (06)303500431
Csaba Pleh, Professor of Psychology
Budapest U. of Technology and Economics, Center for Cognitive Science
Presently at Collegium Budapest, Budapest, Szentharomsag u 2 H-1014
cspleh@ colbud.hu, T: 3612248323, Fax: 3612248310 Mobile: (06)303500431
----- Original Message -----
From: Nyiri Kristof <nyiri(a)phil-inst.hu>
To: <nyiri(a)helka.iif.hu>
Cc: <bangha(a)helka.iif.hu>
Sent: Tuesday, May 07, 2002 7:33 PM
Subject: Regisztracio
Kedves Kollégám!
Amennyiben részt kívánsz venni a
www.fil.hu/mobil/konferencia
rendezvényen, de még nem regisztráltattad magad, kérem, tedd ezt meg. A
program végén található a jelentkezési lap. A regisztrációnak az a célja,
hogy megtudjuk, kinek csináltassunk kitûzõt, finom szendvicseket, stb.
Köszönettel és szívélyes üdvözlettel,
Nyíri Kristóf
BOUNCE koglist(a)www.cogpsyphy.hu: Non-member submission from [Laszlo
Ropolyi <ropolyi(a)caesar.elte.hu>]
---
Date: Sat, 11 May 2002 02:43:44 +0200 (METDST)
From: Laszlo Ropolyi <ropolyi(a)caesar.elte.hu>
To: koglist(a)cogpsyphy.hu
Subject: Problems in Philosophy of Science eloadasok
Ertesitjuk az erdeklodoket, hogy az ELTE Tudomanytortenet es
Tudomanyfilozofia Tanszeken angol nyelvu tudomanyfilozsfiai
kurzus folyik (minden erdeklodo szamara):
Problems in Philosophy of Science cimmel
Eloadok: Bojan Borstner (Maribor), Lilia Gurova (Sofia),
Mihail-Radu Solcan (Bucharest) is Borut Cerkovnik (Ljubjana)
Az eloadassorozat korabbi meghirdetese ota megvaltozott az eloadasok
sorrendje. A kurzus soronkovetkezo eloadasai:
15 May, 18.00: Borut Cerkovnik: What is a picture theory of meaning?
17 May, 14.00: Borut Cerkovnik: Wittgenstein on vagueness
22 May, 18.00: Borut Cerkovnik: Quine's and Wittgenstein's accounts of
the nature of meaning
Az eloadasok idopontja: szerda 6 - fel 8, valamint pentek 2 - fel 4
(kizarolag a fent megjelolt napokon)
Az eloadasok helye: Budapest, ELTE Lagymanyos, Eszaki tomb, 686. terem
Tovabbi informaciok megtalalhatok a kovetkezo web cimen: http://hps.elte.hu/
Minden erdeklodot szeretettel varunk!
Ropolyi Laszlo
ELTE Tudomanytortenet es Tudomanyfilozofia Tanszek
1518 Budapest Pf. 32.
tel: 372 2949
The Many Faces of Personality:
An International and Interdisciplinary Symposium on
Theory and Research of Personality
organised by
Department of History and Philosophy of Science
Eötvös Lóránd University
Budapest
and
Austrian Society for Organismic-Sytemic Research and Theory
Vienna
via support of
Austrian Science and Research Liaison Office
Budapest
13-15 May 2002
Eötvös Lóránd University
Lágymányos Campus - Dékáni tanácsterem
1117 Budapest, Pázmány sétány 1
Északi tömb 1.129
Time Schedule
Every speaker has 60 minutes for presentation plus for discussion.
Schedule planed for 16 presentations (6 Austrian, 8 Hungarian, 3 Guests),
15 minutes coffee break after each presentation.
Programme
Monday, 13th of May
15.00 László ROPOLYI, Budapest & Günther FLECK, Vienna:
Opening
15.00 to 16.00 Ferenc HUORANSZKI, Budapest:
Indeterminism and Free Will
16.15 to 17.15 Karl EDLINGER, Vienna:
Aggressivity versus Peaceableness: A Genetic Interaction?
17.30 to 18.30 Csaba PLÉH, Budapest:
The Different Approaches to Personality Research in W. Stern
18.45 to 19.45 Márta FEHÉR, Budapest:
Lakatos on Rearing Scholars
Tuesday, 14th of May
09.00 to 10.00 Manfred FRAUNLOB, Vienna:
Personality - Expression and Presentation of an Individual Self or Function
of
Society and Culture ? An Intercultural Approach
10.15 to 11.15 Giselher GUTTMANN, Liechtenstein:
Ergopsychometry - Replacing Trait with State
11.30 to 12.30 Katalin MARTINÁS, Budapest:
Psychology of Homo Economicus
12.30 to 15.00 Lunch
15.00 to 16.00 Markus PESCHL, Vienna:
Person - (Constructed) Personality - Artificial Personality
16.15 to 17.15 István MÉSZÁROS, Budapest:
Hypnotic Alteration: Trait or State?
17.30 to 18.30 Shulamith KREITLER, Tel-Aviv:
The Psychosemantic Approach to Personality
18.45 to 19.45 Kristóf KOVÁCS, Budapest:
Different Approaches to the Study of Human Intelligence: The Differential
and
the Universalist Tradition
Wednesday, 15th of May
09.00 to 10.00 Rainer BORN, Linz:
Games and Rules: The Distributed Personality or: "Net" - Results
10.15 to 11.15 Karl LEIDLMAIR & Ulrike STUMPF, Innsbruck:
Being inthe Net: The Gradual Habituation to the Chatroom
11.30 to 12.30 Attila KRAJCSI, Szeged:
The Stability and Flexibility of Personality in New Technological
Environment
12.30 to 15.00 Lunch
15.00 to 16.00 Günther FLECK, Vienna:
Varieties of Postmodern Individuality: Fragmentation of Self versus Personal
Growth
16.15 to 17.15 Mircea MICLEA, Cluj-Napoca:
Toward an Integrative Theory of Defence Systems
17.30 to 18.30 László ROPOLYI, Budapest:
Shaping the Postmodern Personality
18.30 Günther FLECK, Vienna & László ROPOLYI, Budapest:
Closing
--
Laszlo E. Szabo
Department of Theoretical Physics
Department of History and Philosophy of Science
Eotvos University, Budapest
H-1518 Budapest, Pf. 32, Hungary
Phone/Fax: (36-1)372-2924
Home: (36-1) 200-7318
Mobil/SMS: (36) 20-366-1172
http://hps.elte.hu/~leszabo
Tisztelt Tanszek/Intezet vezeto!
Az ELTE Elettani es Neurobiologiai
Tanszeke, valamint az ELTE-MTA
Neurobiologiai Kutatocsoport 2002.
majus 8-9-en Nyilt Napot szervez. A
rendezveny celja kotetlen lehetoseget
biztositani a rokon-tanszekeken es
intezmenyekben dolgozo munkatarsaknak
arra, hogy a Lagymanyosi Oktatasi
Tombbel, a Tanszek es Kutatocsoport uj
helyevel, laboratoriumaival, oktatasi
felteteleivel megismerkedjenek, es
kotetlen formaban betekintest
nyerjenek az oktato es kutato munkaba.
A Tanszek es Kutatocsoport munkatarsai
mindket napon reggel 9-tol delutan 5
oraig a latogatok rendelkezesere
allnak, szivesen megmutatjak a
kornyezetet, illetve beszamolnak
munkajukrol.
A Nyilt Napon Ont, es valamennyi
munkatarsat tisztelettel es
szeretettel latjuk a Tanszeken,
illetve Kutatocsoportban. Kerjuk,
tajekoztassa errol munkatarsait is!
Cimunk: 1117 Budapest, Pazmany Peter
setany 1/c, VI. emelet
Tovabbi informaciok: Dr. Bardos
Gyorgy egyetemi docens
Gottfried Tiborne
titkarsagvezeto
Budapest, 2002. majus 2.
Kollegialis udvozlettel:
Dr. Juhasz Gabor Dr. Detari Laszlo
kutatocsoport vezeto tanszekvezeto
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Gyorgy Bardos, PhD, CSc
dr.habil, associate professor/lecturer
Department of Physiology and Neurobiology
Eötvös Loránd University, Faculty of Sciences
Pázmány Péter sétány 1/C, Budapest H-1117, Hungary
Phone:2090-555/8373
Fax: (36-1) 381-2182
E-mail: bardosgy(a)ludens.elte.hu
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