Scientiae 2015 - day 1
Disciplines of Knowing in the Early Modern World
Scientiae 2015 is the fourth annual international conference on the emergent knowledge practices of the early-modern period (1450-1750) and will be taking place at Victoria University in the University of Toronto 27 to 29 May.
The major premise of this conference is that knowledge during the period of the Scientific Revolution was inherently interdisciplinary, involving complex mixtures of practices and objects which had yet to be separated into their modern “scientific” hierarchies. Our approach, therefore, needs to be equally wide-ranging, involving Biblical exegesis, art theory, logic, and literary humanism; as well as natural philosophy, alchemy, occult practices, and trade knowledge. Attention is also given to mapping intellectual geographies through the tools of the digital humanities. Always, our focus must be on the subject-matter at hand, rather than on the disciplinary performances by which we access it. Although centred around the emergence of modern natural science, Scientiae is intended for scholars working in any area of early-modern intellectual culture.
For more information, please see the website at: http://scientiae.co.uk/?page_id=740