Needham's Dialogical Vision: Understanding Science as a Multi-Civilizational Outcome

Needham Conference 2023
23/03/2023
Lecture Theater, The HKUST Jockey Club Institute for Advanced Study (IAS)
Large

The Needham Conference 2023 turns away from the traditional Needham’s so-called Grand Comparative Question “Why modern science developed in Europe but not in China?” which has been the subject of lively discussion and debate in many international forums over decades. Instead, it sets out to address his second, much under-explored, Grand Dialogical Question “Why and how did exchanges across multiple Eurasian civilisations lead to the birth and growth of modern science?”

 

The conference will be held at The HKUST Jockey Club Institute for Advanced Study (IAS) from 23 – 24 March 2023. With the theme “Needham’s Dialogical Vision: Understanding Science as a Multi-Civilizational Outcome”the two-day conference will bring together more than twenty leading scholars from across the world to address Needham’s dialogical question of how and why such exchanges across cultures came to enrich modern science today.

 

For more information and event registration, please visit here.

 

There are seven panels for Needham Conference 2023 focused on the following five themes:

  • Historical Sociology in Dialogue (Panel 1)
  • Cosmologies in Dialogue (Panels (Panels 2 & 3)
  • Natural Sciences in Dialogue (Panels 4 & 5)
  • Medical Traditions in Dialogue (Panel 6)
  • Modes of Inquiry in Dialogue (Panel 7)

 

Please register online HERE on or before 16 March 2023 (Thursday).

 

ORGANIZER:

Office of the Vice-President for Institutional Advancement

The Joseph Needham Foundation for Science and Civilisation (JNFSC)

The Needham Research Institute (NRI)

The Hong Kong University of Science and Technology (HKUST)

Jao Tsung-I Petite Ecole, The University of Hong Kong

Faculty of Asian and Middle Eastern Studies (FAMES), University of Cambridge

The Needham Conference 2023 turns away from the traditional Needham’s so-called Grand Comparative Question “Why modern science developed in Europe but not in China?” which has been the subject of lively discussion and debate in many international forums over decades. Instead, it sets out to address his second, much under-explored, Grand Dialogical Question “Why and how did exchanges across multiple Eurasian civilisations lead to the birth and growth of modern science?”

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