Vergangene Veranstaltungen nach Jahr
Dezember 2019
- 11:00 bis 12:00
- Early Career Seminar
Calendrical Reform and Functionalism: Engagement of Mathematical Astronomers in Executive Practices in the Early Islamic Period
Organizer(s)AdresseMPIWG, Boltzmannstraße 22, 14195 Berlin, Deutschland
RaumRoom 265Kontakt und Registrierung
All scholars throughout the Institute are encouraged to attend and contribute to the discussion. We do hope that many of you will take advantage of this wonderful opportunity for young researchers across the Institute to share their work in progress!
External participants should register in advance with Edna Bonhomme.
Über diese Reihe
The Early Career Seminar opens itself to early career researchers from across the Institute to discuss their work in a formal, yet friendly setting. We particularly welcome submissions of work in progress, such as dissertation chapters and drafts of papers intended for publication.
Sessions are held on Wednesdays, from 11:00 to 12:00, once a month.
Each session consists of a five-minute introduction by the presenter, followed by a discussion for the remainder of the hour concerning the presenter's pre-circulated paper. Pre-circulated papers should not exceed ca. 30 pages. Presenters are requested to submit their work to the organizers at least one week in advance of their session.
- 12:00 bis 13:00
- Digital Humanities Workshop
Digital Humanities in Action: Sociotechnical Challenges of Institutionalizing DH and of Collaborative Big Data History
- Mats Fridlund
AdresseMPIWG, Boltzmannstraße 22, 14195 Berlin, Deutschland
RaumRoom 215Kontakt und Registrierung
All are welcome to attend, regardless of prior experience of the digital humanities. Registration is required for external participants. To register, and for further information on the Digital Humanities Brown Bag Lunch series email Research IT Group.
Über diese Reihe
Brown Bag Lunch is a bi-weekly meeting of researchers at the MPIWG who use or want to learn more about digital research methods, broadly encompassed by the term Digital Humanities. In the Brown Bag Lunch meetings, researchers can discuss tools, share ideas and experiences (good and bad), and learn from each other. Each session explores a new topic; workshops are usually interactive, and we often invite external speakers. Please feel free to bring your lunch, and a laptop or notebook in order to participate!
- Conference
Geoanthropology. Comprehending the Human-Earth System
- Dept. I
- Mehrere Vortragende
- Julia Pongratz
- Friederike Otto
- Vasilis Dakos
- Ingrid van de Leemput
- Axel Kleidon
- Sabine Höhler
- Manfred Laubichler
- Franz Mauelshagen
- Dominic Boyer
- Felix Creutzig
- Laurence L. Delina
- Marina Alberti
- Johan Rockström
- Klaus Töpfer
- Susan Trumbore
- Sander van der Leeuw
- Geoffrey West
- Simon A. Levin
- Ulrich Pöschl
- Elena Rovenskaya
- Helga Weisz
- Jan Zalasiewicz
Organizer(s)AdresseHarnack-Haus, Ihnestraße 16–20, 14195 Berlin, Deutschland
RaumLise-Meitner-Saal- 15:15 bis 16:45
- Colloquium
Sounding Transatlantic Relations: The Making of Concert Pitch Between Europe and the United States (1863–1935)
Organizer(s)Kontakt und Registrierung
For registration and further information please contact: officeacoustics@mpiwg-berlin.mpg.de
- 14:00 bis 15:30
- Colloquium
A New Theory of Soul-Tuning?
Organizer(s)AdresseMPIWG, Harnackstraße 5, 14195 Berlin, Deutschland
RaumVilla, Room V005/Seminar RoomKontakt und Registrierung
For registration and further information please contact: officeacoustics@mpiwg-berlin.mpg.de
- 11:00 bis 12:30
- Reading Group
Troubling Epistemics and Postcolonialism
AdresseMPIWG, Boltzmannstraße 22, 14195 Berlin, Deutschland
RaumRoom 265Kontakt und Registrierung
Open to all, no registration required. Any questions about this or further sessions can be addressed by sending an email to Marianna Szczygielska at szczygielska@mpiwg-berlin.mpg.de or by speaking directly to Marianna, Edna Bonhomme, or Helen R. Verran in person.
Über diese Reihe
“Troubling Epistemics and Postcolonialism” is a monthly reading seminar interrogating "postcolonial" as an analytic concept in the history of science. The goal is to understand the ethics and mechanisms of our own epistemic practices as they relate to politics and power. We aim to examine the ways that epistemology is both historically contingent and actively produced within the history of science with the goal of troubling our disciplinary positions. For each meeting we list and circulate- a short ‘provocative text’ to carry the empirical element and to provoke us to go wider in attempting to attend to something that troubles. Everyone is expected to read that text
- two or three "theoretical" or descriptive papers that we feel might be useful in "attending to the trouble." These are optional readings. The idea is that everyone who attends the discussion will have read at least the short provocation paper and bring some "troubles" to the meeting
- 11:00 bis 12:30
- Colloquium
Rosemarie Trockel’s Rorschach-Bilder
Organizer(s)AdresseMPIWG, Harnackstraße 5, 14195 Berlin, Deutschland
RaumVilla, Room V005/Seminar RoomKontakt und Registrierung
For registration and further information please contact: officeacoustics@mpiwg-berlin.mpg.de
- 16:00 bis 18:00
- Cold War Seminar Series
Margaret Thatcher, the Cold War, and International Science in the 1980s
- Changing Contexts and Practices of Basic Science during the Twentieth Century
- The Renaissance of General Relativity in the Post-World War II Period
- The Role of Institutions and Commissions in Forming Research Agendas: Networks …
- Networks, Network Science, and Knowledge Graphs
- IV. Knowledge in and of the Anthropocene
- Anthropocene Knowledge: Earth History in the Making
- Ecologizing Borderlands, Racializing Border People: The International Biologica…
- Pugwash Conferences on Science and World Affairs
AdresseMPIWG, Boltzmannstraße 22, 14195 Berlin, Deutschland
RaumMain Conference RoomKontakt und Registrierung
Open to all, no registration required. Please contact the organizers if you have any questions about the event.
Über diese Reihe
The seminar series "Science, Technology and Diplomacy During the Cold War and Beyond: Frameworks, Perspectives, and Challenges" aims to provide a forum that takes account of exciting developments within recent scholarship on science during the Cold War—especially, but not limited to, the approaches of transnational and global history. Read more about the series here.
- 14:00 bis 15:30
- Colloquium
Touched Nature: Building in, with, and against the Environment in Norway after 1960
AdresseMPIWG, Boltzmannstraße 22, 14195 Berlin, Deutschland
RaumRoom 265Kontakt und Registrierung
Attendance is mandatory for Department III members. We additionally have room for ten guests and welcome those who wish to join us from other Departments and Research Groups. Please register in advance by emailing EVENT_DEPT3@MPIWG-BERLIN.MPG.DE with subject heading "RSVP Dept III Colloquium" and the date of the colloquium you wish to attend.
- 12:00 bis 13:30
- Digital Humanities Workshop
Digital Humanities Brown Bag Lunch
AdresseMPIWG, Boltzmannstraße 22, 14195 Berlin, Deutschland
RaumRoom 215Kontakt und Registrierung
All are welcome to attend, regardless of prior experience of the digital humanities. Registration is required for external participants. To register, and for further information on the Digital Humanities Brown Bag Lunch series email Research IT Group.
Über diese Reihe
Brown Bag Lunch is a bi-weekly meeting of researchers at the MPIWG who use or want to learn more about digital research methods, broadly encompassed by the term Digital Humanities. In the Brown Bag Lunch meetings, researchers can discuss tools, share ideas and experiences (good and bad), and learn from each other. Each session explores a new topic; workshops are usually interactive, and we often invite external speakers. Please feel free to bring your lunch, and a laptop or notebook in order to participate!
- Workshop
Animal Materialities: Compositions and Practices in the History of Science
Organizer(s)AdresseMPIWG, Boltzmannstraße 22, 14195 Berlin, Deutschland
RaumMain Conference RoomKontakt und Registrierung
If you would like to attend, please register by emailing event_dept3@mpiwg-berlin.mpg.de before November 30, 2019.- 09:00 bis 17:30
- Conference
Alexander von Humboldt: Circulation of State Knowledge in Europe and Latin America
Organizer(s)- Helge Wendt
- Jakob Vogel
- Barbara Göbel
AdresseMPIWG, Boltzmannstraße 22, 14195 Berlin, Deutschland
RaumRoom 219Kontakt und Registrierung
Information: Helge Wendt or Diana von Römer
Conference registration: anmeldung@cmb.hu-berlin.de
Keynote Lecture registration: registration@iai.spk-berlin.de- 14:00 bis 15:30
- Colloquium
Epistemology of the Zoological Closet: Curating (Dis)Order
AdresseMPIWG, Boltzmannstraße 22, 14195 Berlin, Deutschland
RaumRoom 265Kontakt und Registrierung
Attendance is mandatory for Department III members. We additionally have room for ten guests and welcome those who wish to join us from other Departments and Research Groups. Please register in advance by emailing EVENT_DEPT3@MPIWG-BERLIN.MPG.DE with subject heading "RSVP Dept III Colloquium" and the date of the colloquium you wish to attend.
- 11:30 bis 18:00
- Workshop
Alchemy between Practices and Theories
AdresseMPIWG, Harnackstraße 5, 14195 Berlin, Deutschland
RaumVilla, Room V005/Seminar RoomKontakt und Registrierung
If you would like to attend the workshop, please register separately for the program and the keynote before Dec 2, 2019, 12:00 via email to Chaonan Zhang.
- 14:00 bis 16:00
- Seminar
Lessons from the Case of the Life Sciences: Thinking toward Philosophy of Science as Interdisciplinarity
- Max Planck Research Group (Final Theory Program)
- Charles Pence (Université catholique de Louvain, Belgium)
Organizer(s)AdresseMPIWG, Harnackstraße 5, 14195 Berlin, Deutschland
RaumVilla, Room V005/Seminar RoomKontakt und Registrierung
All welcome, no registration required.
Über diese Reihe
Further information: email officeblum@mpiwg-berlin.mpg.de
November 2019
- 18:15 bis 19:45
- Colloquium
Nicola Vicentino's Archicembali and the Keyboarding of the Ars Perfecta
Organizer(s)Kontakt und Registrierung
For registration and further information please contact: officeacoustics@mpiwg-berlin.mpg.de
- 15:00 bis 17:00
- Seminar
Localizability and vacuum entanglement in (non-)relativistic QFT
- Max Planck Research Group (Final Theory Program)
- Maria Papageorgiou (University of Waterloo, Canada)
Organizer(s)AdresseMPIWG, Harnackstraße 5, 14195 Berlin, Deutschland
RaumVilla, Room V005/Seminar RoomKontakt und Registrierung
All welcome, no registration required.
Über diese Reihe
Further information: email officeblum@mpiwg-berlin.mpg.de
- 11:00 bis 12:00
- Early Career Seminar
A Physicist Road to Emergence: A Revisited Story of “More Is Different”
Organizer(s)AdresseMPIWG, Boltzmannstraße 22, 14195 Berlin, Deutschland
RaumRoom 265Kontakt und Registrierung
All scholars throughout the Institute are encouraged to attend and contribute to the discussion. We do hope that many of you will take advantage of this wonderful opportunity for young researchers across the Institute to share their work in progress!
External participants should register in advance with Edna Bonhomme.
Über diese Reihe
The Early Career Seminar opens itself to early career researchers from across the Institute to discuss their work in a formal, yet friendly setting. We particularly welcome submissions of work in progress, such as dissertation chapters and drafts of papers intended for publication.
Sessions are held on Wednesdays, from 11:00 to 12:00, once a month.
Each session consists of a five-minute introduction by the presenter, followed by a discussion for the remainder of the hour concerning the presenter's pre-circulated paper. Pre-circulated papers should not exceed ca. 30 pages. Presenters are requested to submit their work to the organizers at least one week in advance of their session.
- 12:00 bis 13:30
- Digital Humanities Workshop
Networks and Network Analysis as Heuristic Tools in the Humanities
AdresseMPIWG, Boltzmannstraße 22, 14195 Berlin, Deutschland
RaumRoom 215Kontakt und Registrierung
All are welcome to attend, regardless of prior experience of the digital humanities. Registration is required for external participants. To register, and for further information on the Digital Humanities Brown Bag Lunch series email Research IT Group.
Über diese Reihe
Brown Bag Lunch is a bi-weekly meeting of researchers at the MPIWG who use or want to learn more about digital research methods, broadly encompassed by the term Digital Humanities. In the Brown Bag Lunch meetings, researchers can discuss tools, share ideas and experiences (good and bad), and learn from each other. Each session explores a new topic; workshops are usually interactive, and we often invite external speakers. Please feel free to bring your lunch, and a laptop or notebook in order to participate!
- 11:00 bis 12:30
- Reading Group
Troubling Epistemics and Postcolonialism
AdresseMPIWG, Boltzmannstraße 22, 14195 Berlin, Deutschland
RaumRoom 265Kontakt und Registrierung
Open to all, no registration required. Any questions about this or further sessions can be addressed by sending an email to Marianna Szczygielska at szczygielska@mpiwg-berlin.mpg.de or by speaking directly to Marianna, Edna Bonhomme, or Helen R. Verran in person.
Über diese Reihe
“Troubling Epistemics and Postcolonialism” is a monthly reading seminar interrogating "postcolonial" as an analytic concept in the history of science. The goal is to understand the ethics and mechanisms of our own epistemic practices as they relate to politics and power. We aim to examine the ways that epistemology is both historically contingent and actively produced within the history of science with the goal of troubling our disciplinary positions. For each meeting we list and circulate- a short ‘provocative text’ to carry the empirical element and to provoke us to go wider in attempting to attend to something that troubles. Everyone is expected to read that text
- two or three "theoretical" or descriptive papers that we feel might be useful in "attending to the trouble." These are optional readings. The idea is that everyone who attends the discussion will have read at least the short provocation paper and bring some "troubles" to the meeting