How does change work? If a thing moves from one state to another, when does it exactly start being in its new state, and when does it cease being in its former one? Should one consider that there is an instant at which change takes place? And if one does, in what state should the thing be at that moment: the former one, the new one, neither, both? The first two options seem arbitrary; the third goes against the law of excluded middle; the forth against that of contradiction. And if one doesn’t, if there is no moment of change, how can there be change?
What is sometimes called the “limit decision problem” has its roots in Aristotle and has been intensely debated by late medieval philosophers, who explored the four options. It became popular again in the second half of the twentieth-century when, once more, each option was considered – as well as the possibility that there is no such thing as a moment of change.
The workshop will provide the occasion of a dialogue between medieval and contemporary perspectives and shall result in a volume on the instant of change in medieval and contemporary philosophy.
20.11.2015 | |
09:00 - 09:15 | Welcome |
09:15 - 10:00 | Is the concept of the continuum too fine-grained to be applicable? Niko Strobach |
10:00 - 10:45 | Walter Burley on the Incipit and Desinit of the present instant Cecilia Trifogli |
10:45 - 11:15 | Coffee Break |
11:15 - 12:00 | The instant of change, non-coinciding temporal limits, and four-dimensionalism Damiano Costa |
12:00 - 12:45 | Processes and the instant of change Philipp Blum |
12:45 - 14:00 | Lunch Break |
14:00 - 14:45 | Ockham on the Instant of Change Magali Roques |
14:45 - 15:30 | Limit decision problems and the Oxford Calculators, especially Walter Burley Edith Sylla |
15:30 - 16:00 | Coffee Break |
16:00 - 16:45 | Durandus of St. Pourçain’s Critique of the Principle “Instans Semper est Posterioris Passionis”, and Durandellus’s Defense Can Loewe |
16:45 - 17:30 | Nicholas of Autrecourt's Quaestio revisited: the schola auxoniensis and Parisian masters on limit-decision problems Gustavo Fernández Walker |
21.11.2015 | |
09:00 - 09:45 | Real Contradiction in Limit Decision Procedure: Some Medieval and Contemporary Views Simo Knuuttila |
09:45 - 10:30 | Quasi-Aristotelians, Semi-Averroists, and Proto-Scotists in the Fourteenth Century William Duba |
10:30 - 11:00 | Coffee Break |
11:00 - 11:45 | Contradiction and the Instant of Change Revisited Graham Priest |
11:30 - 12:30 | Contradictory change Greg Littmann |
12:30 - 14:00 | Lunch |
14:00 - 14:45 | Case intensional first order logic and the problem of change Florian Fischer |
14:45 - 15:30 | Marsilius of Inghen on Inferences de incipit and de desinit Graziana Ciola |
15:30 - 16:00 | Coffee Break |
16:00 - 16:45 | Criteria for Identity, Or, When are Two Incipit / Desinit Sophismata the Same Sara Uckelman |
16:45 - 17:45 | Round Table |