Logic List Mailing Archive

"The Making of the Humanities"

23-25 October 2008
Amsterdam, The Netherlands

The Making of the Humanities
First International Conference on the History of the Humanities
23-25 October 2008, University of Amsterdam, Netherlands
http://www.illc.uva.nl/MakingHumanities/

We aim at bringing together scholars and historians of the various 
humanities disciplines to draw the outlines for a comparative history of 
the humanities. We are especially keen on understanding the mutual 
interplay between the humanities and how they developed from the artes 
liberales, via the studia humanitatis, to (early) modern disciplines. 
Although there exist separate histories of single humanities disciplines, 
a comparative history would satisfy a long-felt need, and fill a 
conspicuous gap in intellectual history. An edited book with a prominent 
publisher is planned, with the provisional

We invite submissions that explore the connections between different 
disciplines in the history of the humanities. While the focus is on the 
early modern period when the humanities started to emerge (roughly 
1400-1800), we also welcome proposals for papers exploring interesting 
links with earlier or later periods. Topics include all aspects of the 
history of philology, linguistics, logic, rhetoric, music theory, ?ars 
historica? and ?ars poetica?, with an emphasis on their interrelations as 
well as their impact on the natural sciences, philosophy and theology, and 
on the broader cultural and political context.

Sample questions of interest are the following:

What was the role of the humanities in the development of the natural 
sciences and the scientific revolution?

How were different humanities disciplines integrated in different periods, 
e.g. in Lorenzo Valla's discovery that the Donatio Constantini was a 
forgery?

Did developments in historiography lead to a Copernican turn in the 
humanities?

Can the origins of empiricism be traced back to philology?

What were the major discoveries and inventions in the humanities that 
"changed the world"?

How did the combined presentation of naturalia and artificialia in 
cabinets of curiosities influence the development of the humanities?

Who are the key figures of the humanities in different periods -- e.g. 
Alberti, Valla, Ramus, Erasmus, Scaliger, Reuchlin, Kircher, Holder etc.

Deadline for abstract submissions: 1 July 2008
Send abstract of maximally 400 words to: HistoryHumanities@gmail.com
Notification of acceptance: 20 July 2008
Date of the conference: 23-25 October 2008

Auspices: European Science Foundation (ESF), Netherlands Organization for 
Scientific Research (NWO), Institute for Logic, Language and Computation 
(ILLC)