Online: 29. Wiener Kreis Vorlesung | 29th Vienna Circle Lecture 2021 | Alisa Bokulich (Boston University) | C.S. Peirce, Gravity Measurements, & the Philosophy of Metrology

Prof. Alisa Bokulich (Boston University)

"C.S. Peirce, Gravity Measurements, & the Philosophy of Metrology"

December 10th, 2021

4 pm CET

 

29th IVC Lecture

Prof. Alisa Bokulich

Department of Philosophy
Center for Philosophy & History of Science
Boston University
and
Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study
Harvard University


Date:  December 10th, 2021

Time:16h00-18h00

Online access via ZOOM

https://univienna.zoom.us/j/95738643015?pwd=UFFsKzFxaHJVUEtWc1dPWEFrWmxyUT09

You can also log into the meeting through the Zoom application (rather than by clicking the link above), by using the following credentials:

Meeting-ID: 957 3864 3015

Password: 559398

Abstract

Although Charles Sanders Peirce is widely recognized as a founder of American Pragmatism, what is lesser known is that his primary career was with the U.S. Coast and Geodetic Survey, working as a geodesist to improve the precision and accuracy of gravity measurements (gravimetry). My aim in this talk is threefold: First, I examine Peirce's contributions to gravimetry and metrology and argue that this is a critical but surprisingly unappreciated source for his pragmatic philosophy, in particular his views on truth and inquiry. Second, I trace two possible routes of influence from this work of Peirce’s: one to the “first” Vienna Circle and another to more recent work in the philosophy of metrology related to the periodic adjustment of fundamental physical constants. Finally, I show the continuing relevance of Peirce's program of model-corrected gravity measurements to the recent redefinition of the kilogram.  

CV

Alisa Bokulich is Professor of Philosophy at Boston University and Director of the Center for Philosophy & History of Science.  She is an Associate Member of the History of Science Department at Harvard University, series editor for Boston Studies in History & Philosophy of Science, and an elected member of the Governing Board of the Philosophy of Science Association.  She is author of the book Reexamining the Quantum-Classical Relation: Beyond Reductionism and Pluralism (CUP 2008) and is currently writing a new book on the Philosophy of the Geosciences, focusing on data, models, & uncertainty, which is supported by a fellowship for the 2021-22 academic year at the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study at Harvard University. 

 

 

 

 

Organiser:
Institut Wiener Kreis | Wiener Kreis Gesellschaft
Location:
Via ZOOM