BEGIN:VCALENDAR PRODID:-//Grails iCalendar plugin//NONSGML Grails iCalendar plugin//EN VERSION:2.0 CALSCALE:GREGORIAN METHOD:PUBLISH BEGIN:VEVENT DTSTAMP:20240329T112042Z DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Rome:20220228T000000 DTEND;TZID=Europe/Rome:20220228T000000 SUMMARY:Philosophical roots of mathematical logic UID:20240329T112042Z-iCalPlugin-Grails@philevents-web-6f97df9687-7c6q9 TZID:Europe/Rome LOCATION:Torino\, Italy DESCRIPTION:
Nineteenth-century logic is known to have relied heavily on the background of post-Kantian philosophy to address issues such as the investigation of the conditions of thought\, the characterization of abstract objects\, the delimitation of objective from subjective knowledge\, \; \;the systematic of scientific methodologies. The philosophical tradition of logic overlapped with the development of modern mathematical logic from the first versions of the algebra of logic in the mid nineteenth-century until inquiries into the logical foundations of mathematics from the early 1930s. This very fact strongly suggests that there might have been significant intersections between what appear now as separate disciplines\, and raises the question of whether philosophical roots can be traced in the development of mathematical logic. Several studies have shed light on the philosophical background of key figures in the history of modern logic\, including Richard Dedekind\, Gottlob Frege\, Charles Sanders Peirce. And it has been shown that even some of the main proponents of the modern conception\, such as Russell and Carnap\, engaged with philosophical conceptions of logic in the wake of the nineteenth-century tradition at least for part of their works. However\, much remains to be investigated.
\nThe aim of this conference is to foster further exchanges between those who are doing scholarly research on the history of logic in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries from various perspectives\, including those who focus on the philosophical tradition of the nineteenth century and its developments in neo-Kantianism and phenomenology\, historians of logic and of related mathematical disciplines\, as well as philosophers who are interested in the epistemological issues surrounding modern mathematical logic.
\nWe welcome abstract proposals (max 500 words) prepared for blind review. Possible topics include:
\nInvited speakers: \;
\nArianna Betti\, \;Guido Bonino\, \;Stefania Centrone\, \;Laura Crosilla\, \;Luca Guidetti\, \;Leila Haaparanta\, Mirja Hartimo\, \;Jeremy Heis\, \;An­\;nika Kanckos\, \;Nikolay Milkov\, \;Pierluigi Minari\, \;Erich Reck\, \;Georg Schiemer\, \;Wilfried Sieg\, \;Gö\;ran Sundholm
\nImportant dates:
\nDeadline: 28 February 2022
\nNotification of acceptance: 10 March 2022
\nConference: 4-6 April 2022
\nPlease send your submissions to: francesca.biagioli@unito.it
\nVenue and format:
\nThe conference will take place at the University of Turin\, Italy. It is planned as a hybrid event with face-to-face sessions and one online session. When submitting an abstract proposal\, please specify in the accompanying email whether you are currently planning to attend in person or online.
\nPlease address any questions about the CFA or the \;conference \;to one of the organizers: Francesca Biagioli (francesca.biagioli@unito.it)\, Paola Cantù\; (paola.cantu@univ-amu.fr)\, Paolo Maffezioli (paolo.maffezioli@unito.it)
ORGANIZER;CN=Francesca Biagioli;CN="Paola Cantù";CN=Paolo Maffezioli: METHOD:PUBLISH END:VEVENT END:VCALENDAR