Dear all,

Please see below in case you are interested.

Best wishes,

Luca

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   Foundations of the Formal Sciences VIII
   FotFS VIII: History and Philosophy of Infinity
   http://www.math.uni-bonn.de/people/fotfs/VIII/

   20-23 September 2013
   Corpus Christi College
   Cambridge, England

KEYNOTE SPEAKERS:
Haim Gaifman (Columbia University, U.S.A.)
Marcus Giaquinto (University College London, England)
Catherine Goldstein (Institut de Mathematiques de Jussieu, France)
Christian Greiffenhagen (University of Nottingham, England)
Luca Incurvati (University of Cambridge, England)
Matthew Inglis (Loughborough University, England)
Charles Parsons (Harvard University, U.S.A.)
Michael Potter (University of Cambridge, England)
Christian Tapp (Ruhr-Universität Bochum, Germany)
Pessia Tsamir (Tel Aviv University, Israel)
Dina Tirosh (Tel Aviv University, Israel)
Jean Paul Van Bendeghem (Vrije Universiteit Brussel, Belgium)

The concept of infinity has fascinated philosophers and mathematicians for 
many centuries: e.g., the distinction between the potential and actual 
infinite appears in Aristotle's Physics (in his treatment of the paradoxes 
of Zeno) and the notion was implied in the attempts to sharpen the method 
of approximation (starting as early as Archimedes and running through the 
middle ages and into the nineteenth century). Modern mathematics opened 
the doors to the wealth of the realm of the infinities by means of the 
set-theoretic foundations of mathematics.

Any philosophical interaction with concepts of infinite must have at least 
two aspects: first, an inclusive examination of the various branches and 
applications, across the various periods; but second, it must proceed in 
the critical light of mathematical results, including results from 
meta-mathematics.

The conference History & Philosophy of Infinity will emphasize 
philosophical, empirical and historical approaches. In the following, we 
give brief descriptions of these approaches with a number of questions 
that we consider relevant for the conference:

1. In the philosophical approach, we shall link questions about the
    concept of infinity to other parts of the philosophical discourse, such
    as ontology and epistemology and other important aspects of philosophy
    of mathematics. Which types of infinity exist? What does it mean to
    make such a statement? How do we reason about infinite entities? How do
    the mathematical developments shed light on the philosophical issues
    and how do the philosophical issues influence the mathematical
    developments?

2. Various empirical sciences deal with the way we as finite human beings
    access mathematical objects or concepts. Research from mathematics
    education, sociology of mathematics and cognitive science is highly
    relevant here. How do we represent infinite objects by finite means?
    How are infinite objects represented in the human mind? How much is our
    interaction with infinite concepts formed by the research community?
    How do we teach the manipulation of infinite objects or processes?

3. Infinity was an important concept in philosophy and theology from the
    ancient Greeks through the middle ages into the modern period. How did
    the concepts of infinity evolve? How did questions get sharpened and
    certain aspects got distinguished in the philosophical debate? Did
    important aspects get lost along the way?

Scientific Committee. Brendan Larvor (Hatfield, U.K.), Benedikt Loewe 
(chair; Amsterdam, The Netherlands & Hamburg, Germany), Peter Koellner 
(Cambridge MA, U.S.A.), Dirk Schlimm (Montreal, Canada).

FotFS VIII is sponsored by the ESF network INFTY: New frontiers of 
infinity.


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