Plenary Speakers
The Second International Conference on Science in Society will feature plenary sessions by some of the world’s leading thinkers and innovators in the field, as well as numerous parallel presentations, by researchers and practitioners.
| Fernando Broncano | Matthew Stanley |
| Jimena Canales | Jesús Zamora-Bonilla | Javier Echeverria |
| Javier Moscoso | |
| Javier Ordóñez |
Garden Conversation Sessions
Plenary Speakers will make formal 30-minute presentations. They will also participate in 60-minute Garden Conversations - unstructured sessions that allow delegates a chance to meet the speakers and talk with them informally about the issues arising from their presentation.
Please return to this page for regular updates.
The Speakers
- Dr. Fernando Broncano
Fernando Broncano is a Tenured Professor in Philosophy of Science and Technology at the Universidad Carlos III de Madrid (UC3M <http://www.uc3m.es/portal/page/portal/home>). His current work is focused on rationality and human identity, on the Philosophy of Technology, as well as promoting overcoming the division between scientific, technologic and humanistic cultures. He also is participating in the Science and Culture Programme launched by the Universidad Autónoma de Madrid (UAM <http://www.uam.es/ss/Satellite/en/home>). He has been visiting scholar at Brown University (Providence, RI) for several years.
- Jimena Canales
Jimena Canales is an Associate Professor in the Department of History of Science, at Harvard University. She is the author of A Tenth of a Second: A History (Chicago University Press, 2010). She specialized in the history of science, architecture, media, and philosophy. Some of her works are the following: “El Duelo del Tiempo,” ABCD: Las Artes y las Letras, 16 Enero 2010, No. 932, p.18-19; “Pieles Criminales,” ABCD: Las Artes y las Letras (13 Septiembre 2008), pp. 6-7; “Movement before Cinematography: The High-Speed Qualities of Sentiment,” Journal of Visual Culture 5 (2006): 275-294; “Einstein, Bergson, and the Experiment that Failed: Intellectual Cooperation at the League of Nations,” Modern Language Notes, 120 (2005); y “Photogenic Venus: The ‘Cinematographic Turn’ in Science and its Alternatives,” Isis 93 (2002): 585-613.
- Dr. Javier Echeverria
Javier Echeverria, graduated in Philosophy (1970) and Mathematics (1970) and Ph.D. in Philosophy (1975) at the Universidad Complutense, in Madrid (Spain). In 1980, he obtained the grade of Docteur d’Etat-ès Lettres et Sciences Humaines, at the Université Paris I (Panthéon-Sorbonne), in Paris (France). He engaged as associate professor in the Universidad Politécnica de Madrid (Spain), at Arquitecture and Telecommunications studies (1972-74). Afterwards, he staged in research Centers in Paris (France), Brussels (Belgium), Hannover (Germany) and Urbana-Champaign (Illinois, USA). Since 1979 to 1986 he was Professor at the Universidad del País Vasco (Spain) and Full Professor of Logic and Philosophy of Science at the same University, in San Sebastian (Spain) since 1986 to 1996. As for the first October, 1996, he became Research Professor of “Science, Technology and Society” Area at the Instituto de Filosofía of the Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas (CSIC, Madrid, Spain).
He was President of the Sociedad de Lógica, Metodología y Filosofía de la Ciencia, in Spain (1993-2000), Vicepresident of the Sociedad Española de Historia de las Ciencias (1983-85) and Member of the Directing Council of the Fundación Española de Ciencia y Tecnología (FECYT, 2002-2005). He is Member of the International Academy of the Philosophy of Science and Vicepresident of the Sociedad Española Leibniz.He won the 1997 Research Prize Euskadi de Investigación in the Humanities and the Social Sciences, granted by the Basque Government to a lifelong research work. In 1995 he obtained the Anagrama Essay Prize and in 2000 the Spanish National Essay Prize, granted by the Spanish Ministry of Culture. His major research areas of interest are the Philosophy of Science and Technology, Science and Values, Ethics of Science, Science, Technology and Society Studies, New Technologies of Information and Communication, and Leibniz.
- Javier Moscoso
Javier Moscoso is a Research Professor in the History and Philosophy of Science at the CSIC (Spanish National Research Council). He was a postdoc at the Centre Alexandre Koyré in Paris, and an invited research scholar at the Wellcome Institute of History of Medicine in London for four years, at Harvard University for two years, as well as the the Max Planck Institute in Berlin. He is currently Head of the Humanities and Social Sciences Institutes at CSIC.
His research interests focus on the history of the life sciences, the development of a teratology science, as well as the history of pain. He has written several articles, compilations and monographics, and organized several exhibitions on these topics such as the “Monsters and Imaginary Beings” exhibition at the Spanish National Library in Madrid and the “History of pain” exhibition at the Science Museum in London. Also, he has written a forthcoming (2010) book commissioned by Macmillan-Palgrave titled /Cultural History of Pain/. As a curator, he is currently organizing SKIN, an exhibition launched on June 10, 2010, at the Wellcome Trust in London devoted to the cultural history of human skin.
- Javier Ordóñez
Javier Ordóñez is a Research Professor in History of Science at the Universidad Autónoma de Madrid. He graduated in Physics and Philosophy at the Universidad Complutense de Madrid. He has taught at the Universidad del País Vasco, the Universidad de Deusto, and the Instituto Tecnológico de Monterrey (Mexico). He has been visiting scholar at the City University of New York and the Max Planck Institute in Berlin. He has been awarded with the Ordre des Palmes Académiques on December 1, 1997, by the President of the Republic of France.
- Dr. Matthew Stanley
Matthew Stanley teaches and researches the history and philosophy of science. He holds degrees in astronomy, religion, physics, and the history of science, and is interested in the connections between science and the wider culture. He is the author of Practical Mystic: Religion, Science, and A.S. Eddington, which examines how scientists reconcile their religious beliefs and professional lives. Currently, he is writing a book that explores how science changed from its historical theistic foundations to its modern naturalistic ones. Professor Stanley is also developing a project on science in war, and he is part of a nationwide effort to use the humanities to improve science education in the college classroom. He has held fellowships at the Institute for Advanced Study, the British Academy, and the Max Planck Institute.
- Jesús Zamora-Bonilla
Jesús Zamora-Bonilla teaches philosophy and sociology of science, and philosophy of social sciences, at UNED (Madrid), where he also coordinates the science communication unit. His main research activity has concentrated on the problem of the rationality of scientific knowledge, a question he has studied from different points of view: the notion of ‘approximation to the truth’ or ‘verisimilitude’ of scientific theories, the application of game theory to the study of the epistemic norms of science, and the extension of scientific rationality to the general audiences and to public deliberation.




