Tuesday November 24, 2009
08:00-09:00 Breakfast
09:00-11:00
Symposium V: Taxonomy
Chair: TBA
09:00-09:40
Mary Winsor (University of Toronto)
"Classification is a Census:" Huxley's Private Quarrel
with Darwin and its Public Consequences
09:40-10:20
Kevin Padian (University of California, Berkeley)
What is "Evidence for Evolution" to an Evolutionist?
10:20-11:00
Richard A. Richards (University of Alabama)
Context and Evidence in the History of Science
11:15-12:45
Session 4.i: Ancient Debates, Ancient Roots
Chair: Charissa Varma
11:15-11:45
P. William Hughes (Carleton University)
Aristotle contra Democritus: Anticipation of the Neutralist-Selectionist
Debate and a Haphazard Route Back to Darwin
11:45-12:15
Andreas Avgousti (Columbia University)
Pre-modern, Modern and Natural Understandings of Man:
Plato, Hobbes, and Evolutionary Theory
12:15-12:45
Robin Zebrowski (Beloit College)
The Evolution of Experience and the Experience of Evolution:
Revisiting Dewey's Analysis of the Influence of Darwin on Philosophy
11:15-12:45
Session 4.ii: The Devil’s Chaplain
Chair: David Smillie
11:15-11:45
Peter Sachs Collopy (University of Pennsylvania)
Naturalizing Calvinism: The Darwinism and Anti-Evolutionism
of George Frederick Wright
11:45-12:15
Stephen D. Snobelen (University of King’s College)
Theological Themes in Darwin's Origin of Species (1859)
12:15-12:45
Christopher diCarlo (University of Ontario Institute of Technology)
The Zing of Perceived Control: Memetic Equilibrium
and the Evolution of Religion
11:15-12:45
Session 4.iii: Laws of Evolutionary Economics
Chair: Mike Thicke
11:15-11:45
André Ariew (University of Missouri-Columbia)
Darwin’s Invisible Hand?
11:45-12:15
Eugene Earnshaw-Whyte (University of Toronto)
Breaking the Bonds of Biology: Natural Selection
in Nelson and Winter's Evolutionary Economics
12:15-12:45
Chris Haufe (Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University)
Darwin’s “Laws”
12:45-13:30 Lunch Break
13:40-15:40
Symposium VI: Evolution and Development
Chair: Jean-Bernard Caron
13:40-14:20
Manfred Laubichler (Arizona State University)
From Boveri to Davidson and Back
14:20-15:00
Jane Maienschein (Arizona State University)
From Epigenesis to Epigenetics and Back
15:00-15:40
Michael Dietrich (Dartmouth College)
From Goldschmidt to Gould and Back
15:50-17:20 Session 5.i: It's All in the Mind
Chair: Eugene Earnshaw-Whyte
15:50-16:20
Byron Kaldis (The Hellenic Open University)
Species-Qua-Individuals and the Modularity of the Mind: The Saving Grace for Humans
16:20-16:50
Alain Ducharme & Sheldon Chow (The University of Western Ontario
Keeping Darwin in Mind
16:50-17:20
Steve DiPaola (Simon Fraser University)
Darwin, Creativity, and Evoluionary Programming
15:50-17:20
Session 5.ii: International Receptions
Chair: Ari Gross
15:50-16:20
Paranbes Nath (Calcutta University)
Darwin and India
16:20-16:50
Alex Levine & Adriana Nova (University of South Florida)
The Fate of Darwinian Analogies in Latin America:
The Reception of Darwinism in 19th Century Argentina
16:50-17:20
Nolan Heie (Queen’s University)
Albert Kalthoff, Entwicklung and the "World View of Modern Man"
15:50-16:50
Session 5.iii: Fitness
Chair: Ellie Louson
15:50-16:20
Marshall Abrams (University of Alabama at Birmingham)
Individuals have no Fitnesses if Fitness Differences Cause Evolution
16:20-16:50
Kent A. Peacock (University of Lethbridge)
The Three Faces of Fitness
15:50-16:50
Session 5.iv: Language and Logic
Chair: S.J. Patterson
15:50-16:20
Alexander G. Yushchenko (Kharkov State Polytechnic University)
Logics & Ethics of Evolution from the Point of View of Evolutionary Theology
16:20-16:50
Justin Humphreys (New School for Social Research)
Darwin on Language
17:20-18:20
Keynote Address: Brian K. Hall (Dalhousie University)
Charles Darwin, Evolutionary Embryology and Evo-Devo
18:20-19:00 Break
19:00-19:45
Keynote Address: Spencer Barrett (University of Toronto)
Charles Darwin and Current Perspectives on the Evolution and Function of Plant Sexual Diversity
Wednesday, November 25, 2009
Origin of Species at 150: Day Three
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment