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Logical Empiricism in North America (LENA)
7-9 May, 1998
Science Center 226
Harvard University
WWW Page:
http://www.phil.vt.edu/lena
(here you will find more information about LENA, including directions
and the opportunity to register on-line)
Description:
From the 1930s through the 1960s, Logical Empiricism
provided North
American intellectuals with the dominant philosophical framework
within
which to understand science. Yet Logical Empiricisms hegemony was not
inevitable. It was a result of historical, sociological, intellectual,
and political factors that Logical Empiricism came to influence North
American thinking about science so deeply.
Logical Empiricism in North America (LENA) aims to promote historical,
philosophical, and sociological understanding of the transmission of the
people and ideas associated with Logical Empiricism to North America in
the 1930s and 1940s. LENA extends recent efforts to understand Logical
Empiricism and related intellectual movements in their historical and
intellectual contexts. Participants in LENA include:
Program:
All sessions are in the Cohen Seminar Room, Science Center 226, Harvard
University
Thursday May 7, 1998
2-2:10
Preliminary Remarks
I 2:10-5:30 PM
Chair: Susan Lanzoni (Harvard University)
Friedrich Stadler (Institute Vienna Circle)
Transfer and Transformation of Logical Empiricism: Quantitative and
Qualitative Aspects
Robert S. Cohen (Boston University)
Encounters With LENA: On Blumberg, Carnap, Feigl, Frank, Hanson,
Kaufman, Margeneau, Nagel, Neurath, and Reichenbach
Alan Richardson (University of British Columbia)
Linguistic and Pragmatic Aspects of Unified Science: Carnap, Morris,
and the Rapprochement between Logical Empiricism and American
Pragmatism
II 7-9:00 PM
Chair: TBA
Peter Galison (Harvard University)
Relativity: Time and Again
Friday May 8, 1998
III 9-11:20 AM
Chair: Jimena Canales (Harvard University)
Gerald Holton (Harvard University)
The Americanized Vienna Circle and B.F. Skinner
Mitchell Ash (University of Vienna)
Psychology, Migration, Unity, Change: Gustav Bergmann, Egon Brunswik
and Other Imigris Between Logical Empiricism and Neo-Behaviorism
11:20-1:00
Lunch
IV 1-3:15 PM
Chair: Michael Gordin (Harvard University)
Gary Hardcastle (Virginia Tech)
C.I. Lewis and Logical Positivism
Richard Creath (Arizona State University)
Carnap, Quine, and Logical Truth
3:15-3:30 PM
Break
V 3:30-6:30 PM
Chair: Christian Fleck (Universitdt Graz)
Ronald Giere (University of Minnesota)
"The Minnesota Center and the Institutionalization of Logical Empiricism
in North America: A View From the Archives"
Rudolf Haller
"On Herbert Feigl"
Alfred Schramm
A New Home for Logical Empiricism: Feigl and the MCPS
Eckehart Koehler
Normative Psychology, Pure Pragmatics and Intuition: The Black Hole of
Logical Empiricism
6:30-9:00 PM
Dinner
9:00-11:30 PM
Reception, Inn at Harvard
Saturday May 9, 1998
VI 9-11:20 AM
Chair: Bob Brain (Harvard University)
Thomas Ricketts (University of Pennsylvania)
"Languages and Calculi"
Hans-Joachim Dahms
(Universitdt Gvttingen)
How to Become An Endangered Species: Pragmatists and Pragmatism in
Neuraths International Encyclopedia of Unified Science
11:20-1:00
Lunch
VII 1-3:15 PM
Chair: Sherri Roush (Harvard University)
George Reisch (Illinois Institute of Technology)
Disunity in the International Encyclopedia of Unified Science
Thomas Uebel (London School of Economics)
Frank's History of the Vienna Circle: A Programmatic Retrospective
3:15-3:30 PM
Break
VIII 3:30-6:30 PM
Chair: Matt Price (Harvard University)
Diederick Raven
Zilsel In America: A Case Study
Don Howard (University of Notre Dame)
The End of the Science and Values Debate in 1950s Philosophy of
Science
Michael Friedman (Indiana University)
Hempel and the Vienna Circle
Registration:
There is no registration fee for LENA, but registration is required for
all attendees. Registrants will receive a nametag, program, and LENA
materials and are invited to LENA sessions and reception at the Inn at
Harvard, 9-11:30 PM, Friday, May 8th.
You may register for LENA via the WWW at
http://www.phil.vt.edu/lena or
by emailing or faxing your name, address, affiliation (as you wish it to
appear on your name tag) and any special instructions to
Gary Hardcastle
Department of Philosophy, 0126
Virginia Tech
email: garyh(a)vt.edu
Fax: (540) 231-6367
Sponsors:
LENA is made possible by The National Science Foundation, the Institut
Wiener Kreis, and the Zentrum f|r Internationale und Interdisziplindre
Studien at the Universitdt Wien, and by the Department of History of
Science at Harvard University, the Austrian Cultural Institute New York,
and Virginia Tech.