12.555, Calls: Interactivist Summer Institute, Balkan Language
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LINGUIST List: Vol-12-555. Tue Feb 27 2001. ISSN: 1068-4875.
Subject: 12.555, Calls: Interactivist Summer Institute, Balkan Language
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=================================Directory=================================
1)
Date: Mon, 26 Feb 2001 17:51:36 -0500
From: "Robert L. Campbell" <campber at CLEMSON.EDU>
Subject: Interactivist Summer Institute, Lehigh University, July 23-27, 2001
2)
Date: Mon, 26 Feb 2001 16:33:49 +0100
From: "Tomic, O." <O.Tomic at let.leidenuniv.nl>
Subject: Balkan Sprachbund Properties
-------------------------------- Message 1 -------------------------------
Date: Mon, 26 Feb 2001 17:51:36 -0500
From: "Robert L. Campbell" <campber at CLEMSON.EDU>
Subject: Interactivist Summer Institute, Lehigh University, July 23-27, 2001
The Interactivist Summer Institute 2001
July 23-27, 2001
Lehigh University, Bethlehem, Pennsylvania, USA
GENERAL INFORMATION
(This Call for Participation, along with related information, can
also be viewed at http://www.lehigh.edu/~interact/isi2001.html ).
It's happening: research threads in multiple fields scattered across
the mind-sciences seem to be converging towards a point where the
classical treatment of representation within the encodingist
framework is felt as an impasse. A rethinking of the methods,
concepts, arguments, facts, etc. is needed and, so it seems, is being
found in the interactivist approach. From research in human
cognition, motivation, and development, through consciousness,
sociality, and language, to artificial intelligence, post-behaviorist
cognitive robotics, and interface design, we are witnessing the
appearance of projects where the assumptions of interactivism are
embraced. More often then not, this is in an implicit manner, so that
at a superficial level those projects (the problems they deal with,
the methods they use) seem to be incommensurable. However,
underneath, one can feel their interactivist gist. The time is right
(and ripe) we felt, to articulate this "irrational" (in Feyerabendian
sense) pressure for change at a programmatic level, and this is what
we want to accomplish with the present workshop. The workshop will be
preceded by a Summer School in Interactivism featuring several
tutorials which are meant to provide the needed theoretical
background, based mainly on Mark Bickhard and his collaborators'
work. The intention is for this Institute to become a traditional
annual meeting where those sharing the core ideas of interactivism
will meet and discuss their work, try to reconstruct its historical
roots, put forward current research in different fields that fits the
interactivist framework, and define research topics for prospective
graduate students. People working in philosophy of mind, linguistics,
social sciences, artificial intelligence, cognitive robotics, and
other fields related to the sciences of mind are invited to send
their statement of interest for participation to the organizers (see
details below).
ORGANIZING COMMITTEE
Mark Bickhard <mhb0 at lehigh.edu>
John C. Christopher <jcc at montana.edu>
Wayne Christensen <plwdc at alinga.newcastle.edu.au>
Robert Campbell <campber at clemson.edu>
Georgi Stojanov <geos at cerera.etf.ukim.edu.mk>
Goran Trajkovski <gtrajkovski at alpha.wvup.wvnet.edu>
MAJOR THEMES
* Foundations of Interactivism
* Naturalism
* Emergence
* Process metaphysics
* Cognition and Representation
* Representation emergent in action systems
* Dissolution of problems of skepticism, error, Chinese room, etc.
* Concepts
* Memory
* Learning
* Heuristic learning
* Metaphor
* Rationality and negative knowledge
* Agents
* Interaction
* Motivation
* Emotions
* Autonomous agents
* Persons
* Development
* Consciousness
* Sociality
* Language
* Ethics
* Social processes and realities
ACADEMIC AND SCIENTIFIC CO-SPONSORS
Lehigh University, Bethlehem, PA, USA
Institute for Interactive Studies
Cognitive Science Program
Humanities Research Center
SS Cyril and Methodius University, Skopje, Macedonia
West Virginia University at Parkersburg
CALL FOR PARTICIPATION
Participation will be limited to 30 people and by invitation only;
People wishing to participate should submit a short curriculum vitae
and a statement of interest to Interactivist Summer Institute. Please
include e-mail address and/or fax number, if available. Applications
should be received by March 15, 2001. Notification of acceptance will
be provided by April 15, 2001.
The meeting will take place in the conference room The Governor's
Suite, Iaccoca Hall (tentative).
A small number of scholarships for partial financial support will be
provided by the organizers for graduate students or postdocs.
CALL FOR PAPERS
If you are interested in the issues mentioned above and wish to share
your thoughts and research results with like-minded people, please
submit an extended abstract or full paper via email with attached
files (in ASCII, RTF, or Word) to:
Interactivist Summer Institute (interact at lehigh.edu)
Abstracts and papers should be sent taking into account the following format:
1. Major theme of the paper, related to the major themes given above.
2. Paper title.
3. Extended abstract of 500 to 1500 words and/or paper drafts of 2000
to 5000 words, in English.
4. Author or co-authors with names, addresses, telephone number, fax
number and e-mail address.
All abstracts will be refereed by an independent panel of experts.
The judgments of the referees will determine the list of papers to be
presented at the conference.
DEADLINES
Applications: March 15
Submission of papers: March 15
Notification date: April 15
Receipt of registration fee: May 1
On campus housing reservation (see below): June 30
Off campus housing reservation (see below): June 22
CONFERENCE FEES
Standard registration fee: $150
Student registration fee: $100
Checks should be made out to: Interactivist Summer Institute.
Mail to:
Mark H. Bickhard
Interactivist Summer Institute
17 Memorial Drive East
Bethlehem, PA 18015
USA
For wire transfers:
Wire address:
First Union National Bank
Funds Transfer Department
Attention: NC0803
1525 West W.T. Harris Blvd.
Charlotte, NC 28288-0803
ABA # 031201467
Account # 2100012444293
Account Name: Lehigh University
For international wires, these additional identification numbers are required:
CHIPS Participant #0509
Swift TID #PNBPUS33
You must include your name and identify that the transfer is for the
Interactivist Summer Institute.
HOUSING
Housing is available both on campus and off campus.
Off campus housing is with Comfort Suites, and is within easy walking
distance of the main Lehigh campus. The rates are $80/night for a
single and $85/night for a double. Please contact:
Comfort Suites
120 W 3rd
Bethlehem, PA 18015
USA
610-882-9700
On campus housing is available both air-conditioned (Trembly Park)
and not air-conditioned (Gamma Phi Beta). For on campus housing,
please fill out and return the Interactivist Summer Institute housing
form. This can be obtained from the Web site as a PDF file or a Word
file.
TRAVEL
The easiest way to get to Bethlehem is to fly into Lehigh Valley
International Airport (known as ABE, from Allentown, Bethlehem,
Easton - LVI is already taken by Las Vegas International Airport).
There are direct flights from Chicago, for example, for those coming
from the west, and also flights from the South (e.g., Atlanta).
Flying into New York, particularly Newark Airport, also works well.
There are buses to Bethlehem from Newark Airport and from the Port
Authority Bus Terminal in Manhattan. So, from Kennedy or LaGuardia,
you first go the Port Authority, and then get a bus to Bethlehem. The
bus company is:
Trans Bridge Lines
2012 Industrial Drive
Bethlehem
610-868-6001
800-962-9135
The Industrial Drive terminal is the main bus terminal, and taxis are
available to the Lehigh campus.
Lehigh Valley Taxi: 610-867-6000
Quick Service Taxi: 610-434-8132
Airport Taxi Service: 610-231-2000
There is also a South Bethlehem terminal that is within walking
distance of Comfort Suites and of campus (though it would a little
long with luggage), but fewer buses make that stop. Philadelphia
airport is closer than Newark airport, but getting to Bethlehem from
there is harder than from Newark. You get to the Philadelphia bus
station (probably by taxi, though there is a train to downtown
Philadelphia), and then take a bus (Bieber Tours) to Bethlehem: it's
roughly the equivalent in complication of coming through Kennedy
airport
-
Robert L. Campbell
Professor, Psychology
Brackett Hall 410A
Clemson University
Clemson, SC 29634-1355 USA
phone (864) 656-4986
fax (864) 656-0358
http://hubcap.clemson.edu/~campber/index.html
-------------------------------- Message 2 -------------------------------
Date: Mon, 26 Feb 2001 16:33:49 +0100
From: "Tomic, O." <O.Tomic at let.leidenuniv.nl>
Subject: Balkan Sprachbund Properties
CALL FOR PAPERS
CONFERENCE ON THE BALKAN SPRACHBUND PROPERTIES
within the framework of the Spinoza Project,
http://www.let.leidenuniv.nl/spls
June 7-9 2001, University of Leiden, the Netherlands
Invited speakers: Zeljko Boskovic, Wayles Browne, Victor Friedman, Jouko
Lindstedt, Virginia Motapanyane Hill, Marisa Rivero, Arhonto Terzi, Zuzanna
Topolinska
The Balkan languages share sets of typological properties which have
contributed to the shaping of a uniform areal typological profile, referred
to as "Balkan language union" or "Balkan Sprachbund". A typological language
property is assumed to be areal if (a) shared by at least three languages of
the area, at least two of which belong to different genetic families, but
(b) not present in all the languages of the genetic family to which the
language of the area belongs (if it belongs to a language family, at all).
Since the amount, the extent and the limit of areal typological properties
necessary for granting membership into the Balkan Sprachbund, has not and
cannot be assessed independently, linguistic discussion on Balkan Sprachbund
membership has centered around specific properties.
Different analyses single out different arrays of Balkan Sprachbund
properties, though most of them agree on one phonological property - the
presence of the schwa phoneme - and six grammatical properties: (1)
substitution of the synthetic declension markers by analytic ones; (2)
grammaticalization of the category of definiteness through postpositive
definite articles; (3) pronominal doubling of objects; (4) analytic
expression of futurity; (5) analytic Perfect with an auxiliary verb
corresponding to have; (6) loss of the infinitive and its substitution by
subjunctive clauses. Two Balkan Slavic languages - Macedonian and Bulgarian,
two Balkan Romance languages - Aromanian and Megleno-Romanian, as well as
Albanian have been said to qualify for full membership; Romanian, Modern
Greek, Balkan Romani and a group of Serbo-Croatian, or rather Serbian
dialects - the Torlak ones - have been treated as peripheral members;
Standard Serbo-Croatian has been very marginally included; while Turkish has
been treated as a "donor" language.
Papers within any framework on any Balkan Sprachbund property, involving any
of the Balkan languages, as well as languages outside the Balkans which
exhibit areal properties encountered on the Balkans (e.g. the languages of
the Caucasus or the Volga area) invited. Papers dealing with more than one
language are strongly preferred.
Please send abstracts of no more than 500 words as attachments to an e-mail
message to o.tomic at let.leidenuniv.nl <mailto:o.tomic at let.leidenuniv.nl>.
Deadline March 15. Notification of acceptance by May 1.
Prof. Olga Miseska Tomic
Department of Linguistics (The Spinoza Project)
Faculty of Letters
University of Leiden
Postbus 9515
23000 RA Leiden
tel. +31 71 527 2112
fax. +31 71 527 2125
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