BOSTON COLLOQUIUM

for
PHILOSOPHY OF SCIENCE
1996-1997

37th Annual Program

THE FUTURE OF BIOLOGY October 2-3
THE TRANSCENDENTAL AND THE EMPIRICAL IN KANT'S FIRST AND THIRD CRITIQUES October 16
ASSESSING PAUL FEYERABEND: A MEMORIAL COLLOQUIUM November 20
A Symposium in Memory of Hao Wang December 2
The Poles of Health: Biological and Social Approaches Disordered Minds December 18-19
Dreams as Reasons; the Reason of Dreams February 5-6
EINSTEIN IN BERLIN: THE FIRST TEN YEARS March 3-4
FROM FREGE TO WITTGENSTEIN April 17


The Boston University Center for Philosophy and History of Science began as an informal inter-university collaboration of colleagues in philosophy, the natural and social sciences, history, psychology, religious studies, and the arts, to stimulate exchange concerning all aspects of the philosophy and history of science, mathematics, and logic. The Center seeks to examine, in the broadest humanistic and social context, the factors that govern the theory and practice of science. The Colloquium, reflections the Center;s multifaceted agenda, is an eclectic program that attempts to foster interdisciplinary and international scholarly dialogue concerning the intellectual and social open to the public. Selected proceedings of the Colloquium appear in Boston Studies in the Philosophy of Science (Kluwer Academic Publishers; a list is available from the Center). In addition, the Center sponsors postgraduate Research Fellow, who have come from thirty-five countries. Alfred I Tauber, Director; Robert S. Cohen, Director Emeritus.

For further information, contact Alfred I Tauber, Center for Philosophy and History of Science, Boston University, 745 Commonwealth Avenue, Boston, Massachusetts 02215. Telephone: 617/353-2604. Fax: 617/353-6805.

E-mail: atauber@acs.bu.edu


This page was authored by Catherine Salomone