Dear All,
The Philosophy Department of the Central European University, the Institute
Vienna Circle and the Unit for Applied Philosophy of Science and
Epistemology (of the Department of Philosophy of the University of Vienna)
are jointly organizing a series of talks this term.
On Thursday, June 23, 3-5pm (CET)
Prof. Hanne Andersen (University of Copenhagen)
will speak about
"Essential tensions in contemporary science" (abstract below)
The meeting will be online via ZOOM:
https://univienna.zoom.us/j/61475205762?pwd=akFBUW5sWktDZmNsQVN4cjVFR3lWZz09
Upcoming talks:
30 June 3-5 PM: Georg Schiemer
30 June 5-7 PM: Hans-Joachim Dahms
Abstract: Kuhn's The Structure of Scientific Revolutions has remained one of
the most influential accounts of the structure and development of science
for more than half a century. However, vested as it was in studies of
individual scientists performing basic research within their discipline, the
account that Kuhn developed was not prepared to accommodate the way in which
science developed during the latter half of the 20th and into the 21st
century. In this talk, I shall sketch some of the overarching systemic
forces that drive or halt the progress of contemporary science. I shall
argue that, similar to the 'essential tension' between tradition and
innovation that Kuhn described as the fundamental driver of progress for
small-scale research within disciplinary boundaries, similar tensions are
central for understanding progress and stagnation in collaborative,
interdisciplinary, strategic, and large-scale research. Further, I shall
describe how analyses of these tensions can provide new perspectives on
classical issues such as academic freedom, and give important guidance for
ongoing debates in science policy on the funding, organization and strategic
planning of research.
Everyone welcome!
On behalf of the organizers,
Iulian Toader