A session led by Monika Brenišínová In various theoretical discussions on architecture, we may notice that there is not a singular way of approaching it. From the classical perspective of the history of art classical art historical perspective, it is possible to identify at least three basic methods of inquiry: archaeological building survey („Bauforschung“, A. … Continue reading Architecture and Art as Historical Sources: On the Borders of Humanities and Social Sciences →
A session led by Lara Bonneau It is possible to conceive transdisciplinarity as sharing of objects or methods by several disciplines. Besides objects and methods, it can also be – and this might be its first form – the sharing of a common lexicon. The tendency of certain human sciences – philosophy in particular – … Continue reading The Uses of Analogy in Human and Social Sciences →
A session led by Jana Vargovčíková ‘In olden days a glimpse of stocking was looked on as something shocking. Now, heaven knows, anything goes.’ (Cole Porter). Far from being anomalies or mere accidents, transgressions are conditioned and given meaning by norms. Subsequently, norms repeatedly reaffirm their legitimacy and meaning in contrast to transgressions. What is … Continue reading Studying the State through the Scandal: On the Epistemic Value of Transgression →
A session led by Mátyás Erdélyi The present seminar session investigates how social statistics were created, comprehended, and used for commercial and public purposes in Dualist Hungary. It explores different modes of quantification, the inter- or pre-disciplinary sights of scientific production, and power relations between competing expert and nascent professions. Central to this line of … Continue reading Inventing the Right Numbers: Social Statistics, Commercial Reason, and the Public Good →
A session led by Edita Wolf While grand narratives constructed by the means of metaphysical philosophy legitimate the modern condition of knowledge, incredulity toward metanarratives characterizes the postmodern condition. In his seminal text, Jean-François Lyotard explores the process of de-legitimation of knowledge claims vis-à-vis the end of grand narratives and the parallel emergence of a … Continue reading The Notion of Interdisciplinarity in The Postmodern Condition →
CEFRES Epistemological Seminar Where & When: at CEFRES library, Na Florenci 3, on Thursdays 3 and 24 March, 7 and 21 April, and 5 May 2016, from 4:30 to 6 PM. Convener: Filip Vostal (CEFRES & FLÚ AV ČR). Whereas in the Epistemological Seminar I, we reflected upon various perspectives on interdisciplinarity in a broad … Continue reading Exploring Interdisciplinarity II →