Daily Archives: 22 June 2016

ANZAMEMS Conference Panel: Alchemical Knowledge: Production and Transfer – Call For Papers

ANZAMEMS 2017 Panel CFP: Alchemical Knowledge: Production and Transfer

In the past decades, alchemy has been finally established as a legitimate subject of scholarly interest. Instead of arguing for its acknowledgement as such, research can now focus on details and aspects that have not yet been fully explored. Alchemy was pursued in a variety of ways by a variety of practitioners belonging to different social groups in Europe and beyond.

Proposals are invited for a panel on late medieval and early modern alchemy with a special focus on the ways alchemical knowledge was produced and transferred between geographical regions, practitioners of various disciplines and social groups.

The panel will convene at the ANZAMEMS Eleventh Biennial Conference at Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand, 7–10 February 2017.

Potential topics for papers include, but are not limited to:

  • Places of alchemical knowledge production: laboratory, households, purpose-built buildings, imaginary spaces
  • Material culture of alchemical experimentation: the tools of the alchemists
  • Transfer of knowledge between practitioners: humanists and artisans, princes and intellectual vagabonds
  • Knowledge transfer between geographical areas
  • From alchemical theory to practice, from bookish knowledge to hands-on experience
  • The transfer of medieval alchemical knowledge and its reception in the early modern period

If you would like to contribute a paper to this panel, please send the following to Dr. Dora Bobory, dora.bobory@gmail.com, by 1 August, 2016, with ‘Alchemical Knowledge’ in the subject line:

  1. Paper title
  2. Abstract (up to 150 words)
  3. Your name, affiliation, and email address
  4. A brief CV (2 pages maximum)
  5. An indication of AV requirements

Passions: Healthy or Unhealthy? Workshop @ The University of Melbourne

Passions: Healthy or Unhealthy?

A workshop that will consider ‘passion’ and ‘emotion’, exploring their significance for contemporary philosophy, psychology, psychiatry

Speaker: Louis C. Charland, Partner investigator, ARC Centre of Excellence for the History of Emotions, Professor, Departments of Philosophy and Psychiatry, School of Health Studies Western and Rotman Institute of Philosophy, Western University, London, Ontario, Canada.

Date: Tuesday 19 July, 2016
Time: 10:00am- 1:00pm
Venue: Fourth Floor Linkway room, John Medley Building, The University of Melbourne
Register: This is a free event. Register HERE.
More info: http://www.historyofemotions.org.au/events/passions-healthy-or-unhealthy/?date=2016-07&pastdates=1

The term and concept ‘passion’ no longer figures in contemporary scientific efforts to understand emotion or other related phenomena in the affective domain. ‘Emotion’ now is the keyword and paradigm theoretical posit of the affective sciences, although ‘feeling’, ‘mood’ and ‘affect’ also play a significant role. The verdict appears to be that ‘passion’ is now a matter of historical interest only, and can otherwise be ignored, although admittedly, the term is sometimes still employed in everyday discourse and some academic research, to refer to very intense and powerful emotional states.

With the help of detailed case studies that range from the history of emotion and the affective sciences to present day psychiatry and psychology, I have argued that this relegation of ‘passion’ to the proverbial ‘dustbin’ of history represents an important loss, not only for the history of ‘emotion’, but also for contemporary science and philosophy. In particular, the omission leaves us without adequate conceptual resources to properly describe and explain the nature and organisation of long term affective states and processes. ‘Passion’ has also proven helpful in understanding the nature of mental disorders such as anorexia nervosa, substance use disorders, gambling and other forms of addiction, as well as healthy long-term life projects that endow life with meaningful activities and purpose.

I argue that we must reinstate ‘passion’ into contemporary science and philosophy. No doubt, this is a call for reform on a grand scale. It is also a telling lesson on the importance of historical studies for present-day science and philosophy – and our common folk psychological understanding of ‘emotion’ in everyday life. Indeed, love and hate, two of the West’s most famous emotions, are better understood as passions rather than emotions.

The purpose of this workshop is to inquire into this distinction between ‘passion’ and ‘emotion’ and explore its significance for contemporary philosophy, psychology, psychiatry, and literary and historical studies. After some introductory remarks, participants will be invited to share their own examples of what they consider to be passions and how these might be judged healthy or unhealthy.


Louis Charland is a CHE International Partner Investigator. He is a Professor in the Department of Philosophy, a joint appointment with the Faculty of Health Sciences and a cross appointment in the Department of Psychiatry in the Faculty of Medicine and Dentistry at Western University in Ontario, Canada. He was previously a member of the Biomedical Ethics Unit and the Clinical Trials Research Group in the Faculty of Medicine at McGill University, Montreal.