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Philosophy and Mission
The Utah Symposium in Science and Literature brings together major figures--in the sciences; in poetry, fiction, creative nonfiction, and literary theory; and in the humanities, fine arts, and social sciences--to examine topics of interest across disciplines. During the first symposium, roboticist Rodney Brooks, novelist Richard Powers, and theologian Anne Foerst considered how our technology has made us reconsider what it is to be human. During the second symposium, neurologist Antonio Damasio, poet Jorie Graham, and philosopher Thomas Metzinger discussed emotion, cognition, and the construction of self. During this upcoming symposium, novelist Leslie Forbes, paleontologist Michael Novacek, and visual artist Rachel Berwick will examine the topic of restoration in its largest sense.
The foundational idea behind the symposium is that there is an important reciprocal influence between the sciences, the arts, and the humanities, though the ways in which current ideas are expressed and manifested, especially in our age of specialization, may be so different that the connections between themas well as the ability to trace precedencemay not always be clear. Historically, for example, it is almost impossible for anyone who has even a basic understanding of Einstein to read much of Virginia Woolf's work without considering the impact of his ideas on her thinking, while chaos theory may have been predicted in the works of various 19th century writers. For both participants and observers, the third symposium will underscore the ways in which ideas are both generated and enriched by communication across disciplines. Symposium participants will discuss not only the scientific ideas embodied in literary and artistic works but also whyor whetherit is useful or necessary to communicate these ideas in works that are primarily literary or artistic rather than pedagogical or informational, and whether such communication actually furthers scientific exploration. |