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Science and Magic: Ways of Knowing in the Renaissance, April 29-30, 2011full name / name of organization: Princeton University Renaissance Studies Program contact email: smfranci@princeton.edu, jlit@princeton.edu In his Oration on the Dignity of Man, Pico della Mirandola described two forms of magic. There was that branch of sorcery consisting “wholly in the operations and powers of demons,” as well as a more benign craft pertaining to none other than “the highest realization of natural philosophy.” To many Renaissance thinkers, magic was a legitimate field of study as well as a potential threat to established orthodoxies. Inspired by this formulation, this interdisciplinary conference aims to consider scientific thought alongside magic and domains that modern vocabulary would describe as pseudoscience, such as alchemy and astrology, and invites papers related to diverse ways of magical and scientific knowing in the early modern world. Possible topics include, but are not limited to: • Distinctions between magic, science and pseudoscience in theory and practice. This conference is conducted under the auspices of the Renaissance Studies Program at Princeton University. Please submit abstracts of no more than 350 words to Scott Francis (smfranci@princeton.edu) and Jebro Lit (jlit@princeton.edu) by January 15, 2011. Papers should be no longer than 20 minutes. cfp categories: graduate_conferences interdisciplinary religion renaissance science_and_culture
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