clariah arianna betti_keynote
TRANSCRIPT
Enabling the Revolution Or prospects for & challenges of a sound computational turn elucidated by an example from the history of ideas
@ariannabetti (UvA/ILLC)
Case Creating a Computational History of Ideas
Methodology Models in the History of Ideas
Challenge History of Ideas as a discipline
10
Concepts in Motion ¢ The idea of science has changed through
time.
£ When and Where did these changes take place?
£ Who started disagreeing?
£ Who influenced whom?
Topic modelling in Martha Ballard’s Diary
(1785-1812)
1. house work clear knit wk home wool removd washing kinds pickt helping banking chips taxes picking cleaning pikt pails 2. home clear washt baked cloaths helped washing wash girls pies cleand things room bak kitchen ironed apple seller scolt
COMPUTER methods
Philosopher’s stone? ¢ build a certain well-delimited
amount of interpretation in the tools from the offset;
¢ work closely with computational experts to set up these very tools
¢ build a certain well-delimited amount of interpretation in the tools from the offset; £ make your interpretation
explicit! £ balance between framing
existing knowledge and allowing discovery
¢ work closely with computational experts to set up these very tools
Philosopher’s stone?
¢ build a certain well-delimited amount of interpretation in the tools from the offset; £ make your interpretation
explicit! £ balance between framing
existing knowledge and allowing discovery � For this, use models!
¢ work closely with computational experts to set up these very tools
Philosopher’s stone?
go to http://twitter.com/ariannabetti
click on the CLARIAH link
keep the handout open on your screen
Tarski’s Revolution: A New History ERC Starting Grant, 2008-2013
¢ History of the methodology of the deductive sciences + biology (history-of-ideas approach)
£ traced the development of concepts (1740-1940)
� mathematical/logical e.g. axiom, consequence / grounding / explanation, variable, truth, domain
ERC: Main Hypothesis
Bolzano
Frege Tarski’s revolution
1837 1879
Lesniewski
1920s early 1930s
specific way in which Tarski understood truth
in the context of an axiomatic ideal of science
Alfred Tarski The concept of truth in the
languages of the deductive sciences
(1929-1933)
Stanisław Leśniewski, Fundamentals of a New
System of the Foundations of Mathematics
(1929)
Alfred Tarski The concept of truth in the
languages of the deductive sciences
(1929-1933)
Stanisław Leśniewski, Fundamentals of a New
System of the Foundations of Mathematics
(1929)
taught
Eigentliche Wissenschaft kann nur
diejenige genannt werden, deren Gewissheit apodiktisch ist; Erkenntnis, die bloß empirische Gewissheit enthalten kann, ist ein nur uneigentlich so genanntes Wissen. Dasjenige Ganze der Erkenntnis, was systematisch ist, kann schon darum Wissenschaft heißen und wenn die Verknüpfung der Erkenntnis in diesem System ein Zusammenhang von Gründen und Folgen ist, sogar rationale Wissenschaft. (AA 4: 468)
Die “eigentlichen” Wissen-
schaften zerfielen dann in apriorische Wissenschaften und in angewandte, in empirische, aber durchaus aus a priorischen Prinzipien “erklärende“ und sich selbst rechtfertigende. In allen eigentlichen Wissenschaften herrschte volkommene , d.i., denkbar größte Rationalität […]
Einleitung in die Philosophie: 296-297.
Kant 1786 Husserl 1922-23
A newspaper is better than a magazine / A seashore is a better place than the street / At first, it is better to run than to walk / You may have to try several times / It takes some skill but it's easy to learn / Even young children can enjoy it / Once successful, complications are minimal / Birds seldom get too close / Rain however, soaks in very fast / Too many people doing the same thing can also cause problems / One needs lots of room / If there are no complications, it can be very peaceful / A rock will serve as an anchor / If things break loose from it, however, you will not get a second chance. (Bransford & Johnson 1972)
Huh? A newspaper is better than a magazine / A seashore is a better place than the street / At first, it is better to run than to walk / You may have to try several times / It takes some skill but it's easy to learn / Even young children can enjoy it / Once successful, complications are minimal / Birds seldom get too close / Rain however, soaks in very fast / Too many people doing the same thing can also cause problems / One needs lots of room / If there are no complications, it can be very peaceful / A rock will serve as an anchor / If things break loose from it, however, you will not get a second chance. (Bransford & Johnson 1972)
Making and flying a kite! A newspaper is better than a magazine / A seashore is a better place than the street / At first, it is better to run than to walk / You may have to try several times / It takes some skill but it's easy to learn / Even young children can enjoy it / Once successful, complications are minimal / Birds seldom get too close / Rain however, soaks in very fast / Too many people doing the same thing can also cause problems / One needs lots of room / If there are no complications, it can be very peaceful / A rock will serve as an anchor / If things break loose from it, however, you will not get a second chance. (Bransford & Johnson 1972)
Four Objections to Lovejoy
i holism Spitzer, Hintikka ii conceptual change Mink
iii scope Bevir iv arbitrariness & biases Skinner