World Knowledge Dialogue
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The World Knowledge Dialogue Entire Programme

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Thursday, 14 September

1:00 p.m. Registration
3:00 / 3:05 p.m. Opening
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André Hurst, President, WKD Foundation
3:05 / 3:15 p.m. Introduction to the Symposium
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Pascal Couchepin, Swiss Federal Councillor, Head of the Department of Home Affairs
3:15 / 3:25 p.m. Bridging the Knowledge Cultures in the Age of Innovation
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Jàn Figel', European Commissioner for Education, Training, Culture and Multilingualism
Scientific session 1 Chair: Hiroyuki Yoshikawa, President, National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology, Japan
3:25 / 3:35 p.m. Introduction: "Two Cultures, one Human Mind"
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Francis Waldvogel, President Emeritus of the Swiss Polytechnical Institutes, Program Director of the WKD
3:35 / 3:45 p.m. Address (video)
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Edward O. Wilson, Pellegrino Research Professor in Entomology, Harvard University, USA
3:45 / 4:00 p.m. "The Rules of the Game" of the first Symposium: Objectives and Importance of the Dialogue
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Dame Julia Higgins, Professor of Polymer Sciences at Imperial College, London, Foreign Secretary and Vice President of the Royal Society, UK
4:00 / 4:15 p.m. Break
4:15 / 5:15 p.m. Keynote Lecture I: From Brain Dynamics to Consciousness: How Matter Becomes Imagination
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Gerald M. Edelman, Nobel Laureate, Director of the Neurosciences Institute and President of Neurosciences Research Foundation, Professor and Chairman of the Department of Neurobiology, The Scripps Research Institute, USA
5:30 p.m. Welcome cocktail and networking

Friday, 15 September

9:00 a.m. / 12:15 p.m. Scientific session 2
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Main topic I: New Discoveries Defining Complexity
Moderator: Dame Julia Higgins
9:00 / 9:30 a.m. Searching for Simplicity in Complexity; Growth, Innovation, Economies of Scale, and the Pace of Life from Cells to Cities
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Geoffrey West, President and Distinguished Professor, Santa Fe Institute, USA
9:40 / 10:10 a.m. Understanding and Managing Planetary Complexity
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John Schellnhuber, Founding Director, Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research, Professor at Potsdam and Oxford Universities, Distinguished Science Adviser of the Tyndall Centre for Climate Change Research, UK
10:20 / 10:30 a.m. Break
10:30 / 11:00 a.m. Why Physics is Easy and People are Hard
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Ian Hacking Professor Emeritus, Department of Philosophy, University of Toronto, Canada; Professeur au Collège de France, Paris, France
11:00 / 12:15 p.m. Discussion and short presentations
  Paul Cilliers: Knowing Complex Systems. The limits of understanding
Continuation of discussions
Ernest Hartman: Boundaries between Fields and Boundaries in the Mind
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12:30 / 1:30 p.m. Working lunch Round Table: 6 short presentations
  Markus Karner: Cross-disciplinary Dialogue in Academia: Debating Complexity and Organic Development at Singapore Management University
Veronica Boix Mansilla: Many Cultures of Academic Inquiry, Nurturing students' capacity to bridge
Akimasa Sumi: A new Initiative at the University of Tokyo - Integrated Research System for Sustainable Sciences(IR3S) and Transdisciplinary Initiative for Global Sustainability(TIGS)
Questions
KP Mohanan: Many Cultures of Academic Inquiry
Mark Freed: Toward a NonModern NonHumanism
Wei Wu: What Went Wrong? -- The losing battle of Confucian doctrine against cheating in science
Questions
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1:30 / 2:30 p.m. Keynote Lecture II: "Towards a Neuroscience of the Capable Person: Unity, Diversity and Oneself as Another"
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Jean-Pierre Changeux, Professeur au Collège de France, Professor & Chairman of the Department of Neurosciences at the Pasteur Institute, Paris, France
2:30 / 6:00 p.m. Scientific session 3 Main topic II: Origin and Migrations of Modern Humans
Moderator: Dame Julia Higgins
2:30 / 3:00 p.m. Human Migrations in Prehistory – the Cultural Record
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Ofer Bar-Yosef, Professor of Anthropology at Harvard and Curator of Paleolithic Archaeology, Peabody Museum, Harvard, USA
3:10 / 3:20 p.m. Break
3:20 / 3:50 p.m. The Origins of Modern Humans: Linguistic Issues
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Bernard Victorri, Director of research CNRS, Lattice Laboratory, France
4:00 / 4:30 p.m. A Genetic View of Human Origins
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Svante Pääbo, Director, Department of Genetics, Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, Leipzig, Germany
4:40 / 6:00 p.m. Discussion and short presentations
  Michael McCormick: Initiative for the scientific study of the past at Harvard University
Discussions (Cont'd)
Edward Slingerland: Who's Afraid of Reductionism? Consilience, Cognitive Science and the Humanities
Discussions (Cont'd)
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7:00 p.m. Cultural event and Gala dinner

Saturday 16 September

Scientific session 4
9:00 / 10:30 a.m. Workshops (parallel sessions)
9:00 / 10:30 a.m. Workshop 1: Dialogue driven by political instruments and respecting academic autonomy
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Chair: Ruth Dreifuss, Former Swiss Federal Councillor and former President of the Swiss Federal Council
9:00 / 10:30 a.m. Workshop 2: Dialogue driven by academic institutional governance
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Chair: Georges Haddad, Director, Division of Higher Education, UNESCO, Honorary President, University of Paris 1, Panthéon–Sorbonne, Paris, France
9:00 / 10:30 a.m. Workshop 3: Dialogue driven through education
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Chair: Richard R. Ernst, Nobel Laureate, Professor Emeritus of the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology Zürich
10:30 / 10:50 a.m. Break
10:50 / 12:05 a.m. Feedback from workshops and General Discussion
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12:05 / 12:35 p.m. Concluding Lecture: What have we learnt and where do we go from here? A perspective for the 2008 Symposium
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Dame Julia Higgins, Professor of Polymer Sciences at Imperial College, London, Foreign Secretary and Vice President of the Royal Society, UK
12:35 / 13:30 Farewell buffet
Quick Jump to
Dialogue between the sciences

I New Discoveries defining Complexity

II Origin and Migrations of Modern Humans

Special Focus


The World Knowledge Dialogue at a glance
The World Knowledge Dialogue Symposium 2006 is an institutional initiative to bridge the gap between the natural and the human/social sciences starting from new, revolutionary discoveries with potential impact at the scale of paradigmatic changes.Click for more information and summaries of sessions.

Focus on Young Scientists
"Learn from yesterday, live for today, hope for tomorrow. The important thing is not to stop questioning."
-- Albert Einstein

Thirty-eight Young Scientists were selected from around the world to actively participate in The World Knowledge Dialogue.

 
Towards a modern humanism