Workshop: Early Modern Experimental Philosophy, Metaphysics, and
Religion
University of Warwick, 10-11 May 2016
Speakers
Keith Allen (York), Cavendish on Colour and Experimental
Philosophy
Peter Anstey (Sydney), Experimental Philosophy and Corpuscular
Philosophy
Philippe Hamou (Paris-Ouest Nanterre), John Locke and the
Experimental Philosophy of the Human Mind
Dana Jalobeanu (Bucharest), Francis Bacon’s ‘Perceptive’
Instruments
Dmitri Levitin (Oxford), Metaphysics, Natural Philosophy, and
the Soul: Rethinking Kenelm Digby’s Philosophical Project
Elliot Rossiter (Concordia), From Natural Philosophy to Natural
Religion: Teleology and the Theologia Rationalis
Tom Sorell (Warwick), Experience in Hobbes’ Science of Politics
Alberto Vanzo (Warwick), Experimental Philosophy and Religion in
Seventeenth-Century Italy
Koen Vermeir (Paris-Diderot), Magnetic Theology
Catherine Wilson (York), What was Behind the Rejection of
Hypotheses in Newtonian Science?
The full programme is available on the workshop webpage: http://bit.ly/EMExper
Registration
- Full fee excluding workshop dinner (includes two buffet
lunches and coffee breaks): £20
- Discounted fee excluding workshop dinner: £10
- Full fee including workshop dinner: £49
- Discounted fee including workshop dinner: £39
The discounted fee is available to students, under-employed recent
postgraduates and unemployed.
To register, please email [log in to unmask]
first to ensure that spaces are still available and, if so, please
send a cheque, payable to the University of Warwick, to Dr Alberto
Vanzo, Department of Philosophy, Social Sciences Building,
University of Warwick, Coventry CV4 7AL.
Registration closes on Monday 25th April. You are
advised to register early as space is limited.
Childcare support
We hope to provide some financial support to those who would
like to attend, but require childcare. If you are interested, please
email [log in to unmask].
Accessibility information
Available at http://bit.ly/EMExper.
Sponsors
We gratefully acknowledge the support of the Aristotelian
Society, the Arts and Humanities Research Council, and the British
Society for the History of Science.