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Sydney Centre for the Foundations of Science
The Fortunes of the Speculative Sciences in the Early Modern Period


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Workshop

The category of the Speculative Sciences has a long pedigree going all the way 
back to Aristotle. However, in the seventeenth century the status and 
classification of the speculative sciences underwent significant change. 
Natural philosophy, for example, moved from being a speculative science to an 
experimental or practical science. Furthermore, in some quarters there was 
increasing hostility to ‘speculative philosophy’ and a general devaluing of the 
epistemic status of the speculative sciences. This workshop will examine the 
causes and implications of such changes, the defenders of the speculative 
sciences, and the various reconfigurations of this category in the seventeenth 
and eighteenth centuries.

Program

  *   9.00–9.50
James Franklin (UNSW)
‘Late scholastic successes in the speculative sciences’

  *   10.00–11.00
Mordechai Feingold (Caltech)
‘Experimental philosophy in seventeenth-century England’

  *   11.10–12.00
Paul Oslington (Alphacrucis)
‘Speculation about economic order in 18th century Britain’

  *   12.00–2.00
Lunch in the Philosophy Common Room,
Quadrangle

  *   2.00–2.50
John Gascoigne (UNSW)
‘The teaching of natural philosophy and natural history in the dissenting 
academies of the late 17th and 18th centuries'

  *   3.00–3.50
Peter Anstey (Sydney)
‘The role of principles in the speculative sciences’

This workshop is being run in conjunction with the visit to the Centre of 
Professor Mordechai 
Feingold<https://www.hss.caltech.edu/content/mordechai-feingold> from Caltech.


Friday 30 October 2015
9:00am-3:50pm

Rogers Room,
Woolley Building A22
The University of Sydney
Click here for map<http://sydney.edu.au/arts/about/maps.shtml?locationID=A22>




RSVP

More information
For more information please contact Professor Peter Anstey
E peter.ans...@sydney.edu.au<mailto:peter.ans...@sydney.edu.au>


RSVP
Click here to 
RSVP<http://sydney.edu.au/foundations_of_science/events/index.shtml#speculativescience>

Image: William Hogarth, The Analysis of Beauty, Plate I, 1753
original copper engravings on thick wove paper, 39 x 50 cm
University of Sydney Art Collection
Donated by Lynette Jensen in honour of the Philosophy Department, the 
University of Sydney 2015








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Peter Anstey | ARC Future Fellow & Professor of Philosophy
Department of Philosophy | School of Philosophical and Historical Inquiry
Main Quad A14 | University of Sydney | NSW | 2006
T +61 2 9351 2477 | F +61 2 9351 3918
E peter.ans...@sydney.edu.au<mailto:peter.ans...@sydney.edu.au>

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