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Date: Tue, 08 Apr 2003 10:42:51 +0200
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From: Laura Manetti <[log in to unmask]>
Subject: Conference on Science Teaching
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Science Teaching in Early Modern Europe
International Conference

  Florence, Educatorio del Fuligno
5 - 7 June 2003

FIRST ANNOUNCEMENT

Institutional history of science is a well-established area of
research. Historians have produced valuable studies on scientific
societies and academies, and, as part of the on-going interest in
scientific patronage, a growing number of scholars are now
investigating the transmission of scientific knowledge at court.
Studies of colleges have shed more light on science teaching outside
the universities. General histories of universities and case studies
on single universities and on professors have contributed to revise
the old view of universities as hostile to scientific change.
Historians of science no longer dismiss the study of university
teaching as irrelevant to the development of scientific knowledge,
and a more nuanced account of the role of science in universities has
become to emerge. Thanks to Charles Schmitt's reassessment of
Renaissance Aristotelianism, science historians are now investigating
early modern university curricula, though scientific textbook is
still a rather neglected subject. The last decades saw a substantial
amount of research in science teaching in Jesuit colleges and
detailed studies on the Jesuits' contribution to science. A strong
impulse to research in science teaching came from the publication of
various journals devoted to the history of universities, and in
particular from History of Universities, which saw the light in 1981.
The conference is planned in response to the increasing interest in
science teaching among historians of science and aims at offering
scholars an opportunity to present the results of their work and to
discuss current research in the field.
The conference will address issues relating to teaching in
universities, religious orders, colleges, and courts, as well as
scientific curricula, dissertations and textbooks. The focus will be
on natural philosophy, mathematics, astronomy, physics, geography,
and chemistry. Medicine teaching will not be included - being too
large a subject in itself. The period covered will be approximately
from the mid-sixteenth century to the early decades of the eighteenth
century.

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We suggest that those who are interested in attending the conference
fill and send back via email ([log in to unmask]) or fax (+39 055
2653130) the registration form available on the Internet within May
15th. Due to space limitations we can host a maximum of 90 persons.

The official language of the conference is English.

For questions and information, please contact:
Laura MANETTI
Istituto e Museo di Storia della Scienza, Piazza dei Giudici 1, 50122
Florence (Italy)
Phone: +39 055 22653128; fax +39 055 2653130
E-mail: <mailto:[log in to unmask]>[log in to unmask]

Programme of the conference, registration form and further
information at: http://www.imss.fi.it/sci_teaching/index.html.