Logic List Mailing Archive

BLC 2015: British Logic Colloquium

2-4 Sep 2015
Cambridge, England

BRITISH LOGIC COLLOQUIUM 2015
Cambridge, England
2-4 September 2015
https://www.newton.ac.uk/event/blc-2015

The 2015 meeting of the British Logic Colloquium will be held in
Cambridge on 2nd-4th September.  It will be preceded by BLC PhD day
(1st-2nd September).  This is a general Logic meeting covering a
variety of topics within mathematical, philosophical and computer
science logic.  The meeting will include ten invited talks (speakers
listed below) and a number of contributed talks.  Anyone wishing to
contibute a talk should send an abstract (of about 250 words) to
blc-2015@cl.cam.ac.uk by 15 July, 2015.

Invited speakers:

     Andreas Blass (Michigan)
     Victoria Gitman (New York)
     Ian Pratt-Hartman (Manchester)
     Alexander Kechris (Pasadena)
     Jonathan Kirby (East Anglia)
     Agi Kurucz (London)
     Itay Neeman (Los Angeles)
     Arno Pauly (Cambridge)
     Andrew Pitts (Cambridge)
     Mehrnoosh Sadrzadeh (London)


Bursaries

There is a limited number of bursaries available for students who wish
to attend.  A bursary will provide a subsidy for travel and
accommodation costs.  Applications for bursaries should be accompanied
by a short paragraph stating your affiliation, the name of your
supervisor and a brief description of your research; priority will be
given to those contributing a talk in either the PhD day or the main
BLC meeting. Deadline: 15 July.

PhD Day

The BLC PhD day provides an opportunity for postgraduates to meet and discuss 
their research or area of interest with fellow young logicians. If you wish to 
attend the PhD day, please email blc-2015-phd@maths.cam.ac.uk, including your 
Name, Affiliation and whether or not you would like to present a talk or a 
poster.


Programme Committee:
  Anuj Dawar (Cambridge, chair)
  Thomas Forster (Cambridge)
  Martin Hyland (Cambridge)
  Benedikt Löwe (Amsterdam/Hamburg)
  Dugald Macpherson (Leeds)
  Philip Welch (Bristol)

The meeting is supported by the London Mathematical Society, the Isaac
Newton Institute for Mathematical Sciences and Robinson College, Cambridge.