Dear all,


This is a remainder of the the 2022 CIUHCT Lectures' inaugural lecture, tomorrow evening:

Professor Simon Schaffer (University of Cambridge) will be giving the talk entitled “Astronomy colonized: British orientalism and astral sciences in northern India”, at 18h (Lisbon time).

The talk will be online (all welcome!): Click here to join



Abstract: In the wake of the East India Company’s assumption of power in Bengal in the later eighteenth century, British administrators and scholars were made aware of the sophisticated, complex and demanding traditions in astral sciences practised within northern Indian traditions. These practices generated predictions of planetary orbits and of conjunctions. The encounters’ contexts of colonising exploitation and extractive accumulation directed attention towards questions of the status and authority of these traditions. The model of an effective set of scientific practices that had been allegedly distorted and then suppressed by indigenous religious institutions was used by many British commentators and interlocutors to explain, and indeed to explain away, the fate of north Indian astral sciences. During the opening decades of the nineteenth century, with more extensive and active Company agency extended with military force across northern India, evidence from the relation between astral sciences and traditional religious forms was used to interpret the current condition of Indian learning, and, in response, to contest the authority both of European sciences and of the history of religion. Given the high status of astral knowledge and cosmology in all the cultures in interaction in northern India, these decisive debates had significant and revealing implications for much wider models of colonial relations in natural sciences and religious faith.

Simon Schaffer is Professor of History of Science in the University of Cambridge. His research addresses the practices, materials and organisation of scientific inquiry between the seventeenth and nineteenth centuries, including studies of astronomy, natural philosophy, technology and the physical sciences. He is the author of La fabrique des sciences modernes (Seuil, 2014) and has co-edited The material culture of Enlightenment arts and sciences (Palgrave, 2016); Aesthetics of universal knowledge (Palgrave, 2017); Nineteenth-century survey sciences (Royal Society, 2019) and A Book of the Body Politic (Cini Foundation, 2020). In 2005, Schaffer shared the Erasmus Prize with Steven Shapin for Leviathan and the Air-Pump: Hobbes, Boyle, and the Experimental Life (Princeton University Press, 1985). Schaffer was also awarded the Paul Bunge Prize (2017) and the Dan David Prize (2018). In 2013, he received the Sarton Medal, the most prestigious honor awarded by the History of Science Society, in recognition of his "lifetime of scholarly achievement". He is currently a member of the Leverhulme project Making Climate Histories.


Details about the talk can be found here: https://ciuhct.org/agenda/2022-1-simon-schaffer-university-cambridge-astronomy-colonized-british-orientalism-and-astral-sciences-northern-india

This talk is part of the CIUHCT (Interuniversitary Center for the History of Science and Technology, UL/UNL, Lisbon, Portugal) annual program of lectures for 2022. The program is available here.

We wholeheartedly invite you all to join us!


Clara Florensa and Bárbara Direito

Organizers of the CIUHCT Lectures 2022


-- 
Clara Florensa, PhD
Scientific Researcher
Department of History of Science and Technology (DHFC), FCUL
Center for the History of Science and Technology (CIUHCT)
https://ulisboa.academia.edu/ClaraFlorensa

Faculdade de Ciências da Universidade de Lisboa (FCUL)
Campo Grande, C4, Piso 3
1649-017 Lisboa PORTUGAL
E-mail: [log in to unmask]
T: +351 21 7500817


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