Researchers working at the nexus of science and the humanities will convene for , a conference Oct. 21-22 in Goldwin Smith Hall’s Kaufmann Auditorium (G64). All sessions are free and open to the public.
“We want to open a robust dialogue between humanists and scientists around the very notion of ‘thought’ and ‘thinking,’ with a particular emphasis on philosophy (both ‘analytic’ and ‘Continental’), literary studies, and cognitive science,” said , professor of Romance studies and comparative literature in the College of Arts and Sciences (A&S), who is organizing the conference along with , the William R. Kenan Jr. Professor of Psychology (A&S).
The conference is a project of the , which fosters research at the interface of the sciences and the humanities. Conference sponsors are the French Studies Program, the Department of Romance Studies, the Department of Comparative Literature and the Cognitive Science Program.
Additional support comes from a from the College of Arts and Sciences with which Dubreuil and Christiansen have been conducting empirical research on poetry, connecting the humanities, AI and cognitive science.
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