Dear philosophical friends and colleagues:

Excellent upcoming Cambridge conference on measurement: includes plenty of scope for philosophical work!

Best, Jeremy B

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Jeremy Butterfield:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jeremy_Butterfield
Homepage: http://trin-hosts.trin.cam.ac.uk/fellows/butterfield/
Trinity College, Cambridge CB2 1TQ

---------- Forwarded message ----------
Date: Wed, 07 Jan 2015 14:58:03 +0000
From: Dr E. Tal <[email protected]>
To: [email protected]
Subject: CFP: The Making of Measurement, Cambridge, 23-24 July 2015



Proposals are invited for individual papers and sessions for _The Making
of Measurement_ [1]_, _an interdisciplinary conference that seeks to
consolidate an emerging international community of scholars interested
in the history, philosophy and/or sociology of measurement. The
conference will be held at the University of Cambridge, hosted by the
Centre for Research in Arts Social Sciences and Humanities (CRASSH),
Alison Richard Building, 7 West Road, Cambridge CB3 9DT, on the 23rd and
24th July, 2015. Keynote addresses will be delivered by Nancy
Cartwright, Terry Quinn, and Graeme Gooday, and in addition a number of
sessions with contributed papers will be organized. The conference
webpage is located at: http://www.crassh.cam.ac.uk/events/25661 [1].

Inevitably, tensions exist between methodologically-diverse approaches
across the fields of philosophy, history, and sociology of science,
particularly with respect to whether measurement outcomes reflect facts
about nature, or about human tools and concepts. An important aim of
this conference is to bring together scholars to review recent advances
and to identify key issues for further development.

This decade is also seeing dramatic changes in the metric system because
four scientific units are being redefined in terms of fundamental
constants; the contemporary relevance of a systematic approach in the
humanities to the study of measurement is therefore particularly strong.


The new wave of humanistic scholarship concerning measurement is still
in an embryonic stage and no agreed general conceptual frameworks have
emerged. All proposals relating to the making of measurement will
therefore be considered, although contributors might choose to address
one or more of the questions listed under the following themes:

PHILOSOPHIES OF MEASUREMENT: Under what conditions is the world
justifiably deemed quantifiable? How do existing philosophies of
measurement, for example operationalism, fit specific historical cases?
Can measurements of the properties of macroscopic bodies and microscopic
entities be analyzed in the same way? When measuring instruments
disagree, is it always possible to ascertain which one is in error? Do
the relationships between measurement and theory in the natural sciences
hold true for the social and human sciences? How does measurement
function in areas of scientific enquiry where entities under study have
a dubious ontological grounding?

UNITS, STANDARDS, AND METROLOGY: Are measurement standards accurate by
virtue of fact or convention? What are the social, political, and
scientific aims for which units and standards are established? What are
the means of their establishment? What impact have specialized
metrological institutions had on processes of standardization?

PRACTICES OF MEASUREMENT: What kinds of conceptual approaches,
methodological and mathematical tools, and practical steps have been
necessary for ensuring sufficient reliability and precision? How have
these varied from sites ranging from the elite laboratory to the
workshop, factory, and home? What kinds of exchange (of personnel,
instruments, apparatus, techniques, and so on) have taken place between
these sites? What determines judgments of the level of acceptable error,
and how do these relate to the various purposes of measurement, and
economic and technological development?

Proposals for individual papers and sessions are both welcome. Sessions
comprising researchers from different stages in their career are
encouraged. Proposals for individual papers should include an abstract
of up to 500 words. Sessions in a standard format, of up to two hours,
should consist of three or four papers, with or without a commentator;
proposals for such sessions should include an overall description as
well as a 500-word abstract for each paper. All proposals should include
the names and institutional affiliations of all participants, and
contact details (including e-mail address) of one person who will serve
as the main point of contact.

The conference organizers would be delighted to receive proposals for
innovative and unconventional session formats. With this in mind, we
offer the following templates:

        * _Classic work_: contributors prepare responses to a classic work
before opening up discussion to the audience.
        * _Review of the field: _between them, contributors offer a critical
review of a particular aspect of the field for scrutiny by the audience.
        * _Pre_-_circulation: _contributors pre-circulate their draft papers,
leaving the majority of the session for open-ended discussion.
        * _Round table: _panelists present briefly on a prescribed theme and
then discuss questions from the audience (but round table sessions can
take many formats).

The formats above, however, are only suggestions, and proposals of any
format, including 'conventional' ones and adaptations of the above, will
be considered on equal footing. Please send all proposals to Dr. Daniel
Jon Mitchell ([email protected]) and feel free to contact the organizers
with any questions.

The deadline for proposals is 28TH FEBRUARY 2015.

Students will receive a discount on the registration fee and may be
granted travel bursaries depending on the availability of funds.

Daniel Jon Mitchell ([email protected])

Eran Tal ([email protected])

Hasok Chang ([email protected])

Links:
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[1] http://www.crassh.cam.ac.uk/events/25661
...brought to you by HPS-discussion.  



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