"Who Won the Scientific Revolution?"
Summer Seminar Plan and Schedule

The Summer Seminar runs from Monday afternoon, June 9th, through Friday afternoon, June 15th. The schedule of lectures, discussions, events, and related readings are as follows. Sessions will start promptly (please be on time!).

A note on readings links and file formats: Direct links from titles of books are to the appropriate Amazon page. Direct links from titles of articles or essays are to web-based documents in HTML format. Links to Adobe PDF format documents are noted in a parenthetical after the document; a few documents are referenced both ways. Particularly large PDFs (those more than 2MB in size) are noted so that users with a slow Internet connections can plan accordingly. Because different browsers handle PDFs differently, we suggest you right-click on PDF links (or Ctrl-click on a Mac) and choose the option of downloading them to your local disk.

(As of April 30, 2008, all but one session's readings are now posted. We hope to have that last one posted soon.)

Monday

3:00-3:30pm

Preliminary Discussion (tea).

3:30-4:30pm

Welcome and Introduction by Mark Ryland:

Plan and Purpose of the Summer Seminar

Reading: Alexander Koyre, "The Significance of the Newtonian Synthesis,"  Newtonian Studies, Chapter 1 [4.6MB PDF].

4:30-5:00pm

Break

5:00-6:20pm

Session 1, Seminar led by Lee Perlman:

What is Nature in Aristotle?

Reading: Aristotle, Physics II.1-3 [PDF].

7:00pm

Dinner gathering for fellowship and discussion in location TBA.

Tuesday

9:00-10:20am

Session 2, Lecture by Lee Perlman:

Greek Mathematics and Plato's Conception of Knowledge

Reading: Plato, Theaetetus 142a-148c, 196d-end [PDF].

10:20-10:40am

Break

10:40-12:00n

Session 3, Seminar led by Michael Augros:

What is a Cause? What is an Explanation?

Reading: Aristotle, brief selections and Physics II.3 [PDF].

12:00n-3:00pm

Lunch and study break.

3:00-3:40pm

Pre-session discussion (tea).

3:40-5:00pm

Session 4, Seminar led by Bernhardt Trout:

How Do Bacon and Descartes Conceive Nature?

Readings:

  1. Bacon, selections from The Great Instauration [PDF].

  2. Descartes, Discourse on Method, part 6 [PDF].

5:00-7:30pm

Dinner break and unstructured discussions.

Wednesday

9:00-10:20am

Session 5, Seminar by Lee Perlman:

How Do Galileo and Newton Depict Motion?

Reading: selections from Newton, Principia [PDF].

10:20-10:40am

Break

10:40-12:00n

Session 6, Lecture by Michael Augros:

The Science of Common Experience:
Limits and Perennial Truths within Classical Thought

Reading: Decartes, Heraclitus, Aristotle [PDF].

12:00n-3:00pm

Lunch and study break.

3:00-3:40pm

Pre-session discussion (tea).

3:40-5:00pm

Session 7, Lecture by James Barham:

Whispers of Aristotle: Emergentism from Physics to Biology

Reading: Margaret Morrison, "Emergence, Reduction, and Theoretical Principles: Rethinking Fundamentalism," Philosophy of Science, 73 (December 2006): 876–887 [PDF and zipped PDF versions].

5:00-7:30pm

Dinner break and unstructured discussions.

Thursday

9:00-10:20am

Session 8, Lecture by Mark Ryland:

Standard Neo-Darwinism and Intelligent Design Theory:
A Thoroughly Modern Debate

Reading: TBA.

10:20-10:40am

Break

10:40-12:00n

Session 9, Lecture by Joseph Audie:

Natural Specified Complexity: The Curious Case of Nylonase

Readings:

  1. Thwaites, "New Proteins without God's Help," Creation/Evolution 5:2 (Summer 1985), 1-3 [PDF].

  2. Batten, "The Adaptation of Bacteria to Feeding on Nylon Waste," TJ 17:3 (December 2003), 3-5 [PDF].

  3. Negoro, "Biodegradation of Nylon Oligomers (Review)," Appl Microbiol Biotechnol. 2000 Oct;54(4):461-6. [PDF].

  4. Negoro, et al. "X-ray Crystallographic Analysis of 6-Aminohexanoate-Dimer Hydrolase: Molecular Basis for the Birth of a Nylon Oligomer-Degrading Enzyme," Journal of Biological Chemistry 280:47 (November 25, 2005), 39644–39652 [PDF].

  5. Prijambada, et al. "Emergence of Nylon Oligomer Degradation Enzymes in Pseudomonas aeruginosa PAO through Experimental Evolution," Applied and Environment Microbiology 61:5 (May 1995), 2020–2022 [PDF].

12:00n-3:00pm

Lunch and study break.

3:00-3:40pm

Pre-session discussion (tea).

3:40-5:00pm

Session 10, Lecture by James Barham:

Lessons from Slijper's Goat:
On the Convergence of Classical and Modern Biology

Reading: West-Eberhard, "Phenotypic Accommodation: Adaptive Innovation Due to Developmental Plasticity," Journal of Experimental Zoology (2005) [PDF].

6:30-9:30pm

Group dinner at local restaurant.

Friday

9:00-10:20am

Session 11, Lecture by Mark Ryland:

Do Laws of Nature Really Govern Material Reality?

Readings: Cartwright, selections from How the Laws of Physics Lie (1983)

  1. "Introduction" [PDF],

  2. "Essay 2: The Truth Doesn't Explain Much" [PDF].

10:20-10:40am

Break

10:40-12:00n

Session 12, Lecture by Joseph Audie:

Prediction and Explanation in Science: A Scientist's View

Readings:

  1. Grygiel, (2001) "Quantum Mechanics: A Dialectical Approach to Reality," The Thomist 65 (2): 223-238 [PDF].

  2. Brody, (1972) "Towards an Aristotelean Theory of Scientific Explanation," Philosophy of Science 39 (1): 20-31 [PDF].

12:00n-2:00pm

Lunch and discussion break.

2:00-3:20pm

Concluding Session led by ISN Staff

Closing Remarks and Discussion

Summer Conference

The Summer Conference follows the Summer Seminar at 4:00pm on Friday, June 13th, continuing through Saturday, June 14th.

 

This page last updated on May 2, 2008