quarta-feira, 23 de maio de 2007
MATÉRIAS DE CIÊNCIA
Informação recebida do Centro de Estudos Sociais da Universidade de Coimbra
The First International Conference on
SCIENCE MATTERS: A Unified Perspective
Ericeira, Portugal, 28-30 May 2007
Aims of Conference
All earnest and honest human quests for knowledge are efforts to understand nature, which includes all human and nonhuman systems, the objects of study in science. Thus, broadly speaking, these quests (as well as the systems being studied) are science matters. The methods and tools used may be different; for example, the literary people use mainly their bodily sensors and their brain as the information processor, while natural scientists may use, in addition, measuring instruments and computers. Yet, all these activities could be viewed in a unified perspectivethey are scientific developments at varying stages of maturity and have a lot to learn from each other. In this conference, we invite experts from different disciplines worldwide to share their experience and outlooks, and hopefully plan the future together.
Many of the topics included in this conference are under the name of science and culture, science and art, science and society, etc. We do not think these descriptions are useful. For example, by saying “science and culture,” it implies that science and culture are two different things, which could be opposing each other. Instead, we view them as different aspects of the same thing the effort to understand nature, and a new word “science matters” is called for.
Invited Speakers:
Leonor Béltran (Portugal), The Nature of Dance
Paulo Borges (Portugal), Meditation & Science of Mind
Maria Burguete (Portugal), History & Philosophy of Contemporary
Chemistry
Paul Caro (France),Culture Through Science: A New World
of Images and Stories
Clara Pinto Correia (Portugal), Biology: Manipulation of Scientific
Information
Alfredo Dinis (Portugal), Have the neurosciences any theological consequences?
Isabel Empis (Portugal), Psychology & Life Quality
Gilbert Fayl (Belgium), Policy Fallacy: Stop Talking,Do It
Bernardo Herold (Portugal), Science & society
Brigitte Hoppe (Germany), Judging by the appearance of the
essential properties of natural body – the role of physiognomy in science and art
Lui Lam (USA), Histophysics: Merging history with physics
Daguang Li (China), Science Communication in China
Bing Liu (China), Philosophy of Science and Chinese Sciences: The Multicultural View of Science and Its Unified Ontological Model)
Dun Liu (China), The History of Science in Globalizing Time
Edgar Morin (France), Did a scientific revolution begin?
João Arriscado Nunes (Portugal), Unified science or ecologies of practices?
Maurizio Salvi (Italy), Science & ethics
Nigel Sanitt (UK), The Tripod of Science: Communication, Philosophy and Education
Michael Shermer (USA), The Science of Good and Evil
Cochairs:
Maria Burguete (Portugal), Email: mariaburguete@gmail.com
Lui Lam (USA)
Further Information: http://www.ces.uc.pt/science_matters_meeting/index.html
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O corpo e a mente
Por A. Galopim de Carvalho Eu não quero acreditar que sou velho, mas o espelho, todas as manhãs, diz-me que sim. Quando dou uma aula, ai...
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2 comentários:
Ora aqui está mais um tema bem interessante, vou ficar bem atento.
1 natural + 1 artificial = conhecimento
1 natural - 1 artificial = 2 x natural = + conhecimento
:)
Artur Figueiredo
Uma vergonha de conferência. É quase uma reunião do pior do nosso academísmo. Sempre quero ver como isto vai acabar.
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