Organisers: Dr Stephen Clucas (s.clucas@bbk.ac.uk) and Dr Peter J. Forshaw (p.forshaw@english.bbk.ac.uk)
The purpose of EMPHASIS is to provide a London forum for scholars working in the history of philosophy, intellectual history and the history of science of Europe in the period 1400-1650. The term 'philosophy' is interpreted in its fullest Renaissance sense and includes such themes as: Neoplatonism, scholasticism and late Aristotelian philosophy, Epicureanism, stoicism, scepticism, cosmological theories, the classification of the disciplines, encyclopaedism, Lullism, the art of memory, the philosophy of mathematics, theories of the soul, theories of language and signs, and so forth. The
seminar also addresses Renaissance or Early Modern 'science' (or
natural philosophy), focussing on questions relating to epistemology,
conceptual innovation, social and cultural contexts and the relations
between 'science' and religion. The seminar
encompasses all the 'scientific' disciplines of the period, including
astronomy, medicine, natural history, cosmography and applied mathematics
(optics, mechanics, nautical and military engineering, etc). We
also include intellectually and historically rigorous approaches to
the 'occult sciences' (or 'occult philosophy') - that is to say: alchemy,
iatrochemistry, astrology, divination, Christian cabala, numerology
and the magical arts. The seminar particularly encourages work which
interrogates the continuities between mediaeval and Renaissance science
(or natural philosophy), the relationship between the 'sciences' and
the so-called 'pseudo-sciences', and problems relating to the historiography
of the Scientific Revolution.
EMPHASIS meets monthly on Saturdays 2pm - 4pm during the academic term, at
the Institute for English Studies, Senate House. Refreshments are provided. |
Venue: Institute of English
Studies, School of Advanced Study, 3rd Floor, Senate House, Malet Street,
London
WC1E 7HU. Enquiries to the Institute of English Studies
Tel: +44 (0) 20 7862 8675
Fax: +44 (0) 20 7862 8720
Email: ies@sas.ac.uk
Please check the IES website for the most up-to-date information regarding the seminar room
Click here to go to the Society for Renaissance Studies Home Page
© EMPHASIS 2006 EMPHASIS pages maintained by Peter Forshaw |