Tags / epistemology

Tagged with “epistemology” (6) activity chart

  1. The Value Of Ruins

    Between The Alexandrian War of 48 BCE and the Muslim conquest of 642 CE, the Library of Alexandria, containing a million scrolls and tens of thousands of individual works was completely destroyed, its contents scattered and lost. An appreciable percentage of all human knowledge to that point in history was erased. Yet in his novella “The Congress”, Jorge Luis Borges wrote that “every few centuries, it’s necessary to burn the Library of Alexandria”.

    In his session James will ask if, as we build ourselves new structures of knowledge and certainty, as we design our future, should we be concerned with the value of our ruins?

    http://2010.dconstruct.org/speakers/james-bridle

    With a background in both computing and traditional publishing James Bridle attempts to bridge the gaps between technology and literature. He runs Bookkake, a small independent publisher and writes about books and the publishing industry at booktwo.org. In 2009 he helped launch Enhanced Editions, the first e-reading application with integrated audiobooks.

    —Huffduffed by czgowchz 10 months ago

  2. Huxley Memorial Lecture: Johannes Fabian

    "CULTURAL ANTHROPOLOGY AND THE QUESTION OF KNOWLEDGE"

    Friday 4 February 2011 at 5.30pm in the Stevenson Theatre, Clore Education Centre, the British Museum, Great Russell Street, London WC1B 3DG.

    Abstract:

    Although it helps to be aware of what philosophers think about knowledge anthropologists can neither simply relegate their epistemological problems to, nor find solutions in, philosophy. In anthropology knowing what and how we know is a practical, not just a theoretical problem, one we face in all phases of our work, from field research to writing (and teaching). Historical recollections of debates since the nineteen-sixties are followed by giving attention to two aspects of the knowledge-question in our discipline: Knowledge of what? and Whose knowledge? Guided by reflections on knowledge and survival, the lecture will end with an attempt to assess the present and future state of the question.

    Huffduffed from http://backdoorbroadcasting.net/2011/02/johannes-fabian-cultural-anthropology-and-the-question-of-knowledge/

    —Huffduffed by RobertsonCrusoe one year ago

  3. Conversations from the Pale Blue Dot 72: Tyler Wunder – Why Plantinga’s Reformed Epistemology Fails

    Today I interview philosopher Tyler Wunder. We walk through the development of Plantinga’s attempt to show that Christian belief is rational and warranted, focusing especially on the failure of his latest attempts, which culminated in the 2000 book Warranted Christian Belief.

    —Huffduffed by tommorris one year ago

  4. Plato’s Euthyphro

    From http://librivox.org/euthyphro-by-plato/

    —Huffduffed by michaelrose 3 years ago

  5. In Defence of the Cognitivist theory of Perception

    D.M. Armstrong discusses the differences between cognitivist and non-cognitivist theories of perception and defends the former. See http://www.pufendorf.se/2004_lecture_2.asp

    —Huffduffed by tommorris 4 years ago

  6. The Scope and Limits of Human Knowledge

    "Where do we have knowledge and where do we fall short of knowledge?" asks the admired Australian philosopher D. M. Armstrong in his first 2004 Pufendorf-­föreläsningarna lecture.

    —Huffduffed by tommorris 4 years ago