[SydPhil] Reminder: Alison Wylie @ Thu 8 May 2014 15:00 - 17:00 (Current Projects)
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Wed May 7 14:59:53 AEST 2014
This is a reminder for:
Title: Alison Wylie
How Archaeological Evidence Bites Back: Scaffolding, Critical Distance, and
Triangulation
In the mid-1950s a profoundly pessimistic discussion of "The Limitations of
Inference in Archaeology" appeared in the (British) Archaeological
Newsletter. The author, field archaeologist M. A. Smith, concluded that it
is "a hopeless task" to attempt to attempt to move from one to the other
"by argument"; between "the human activities we should like to know about"
and the "visible results which survive from them" there is "logically no
necessary link" (Smith 1955: 4). The standard of epistemic credibility that
to which Smith appeals is deductive certainty, and the focus throughout is
on the vagaries of isolated inferences from fragmentary material "finds."
Just a few years later Stephen Toulmin published Uses of Argument (1958), a
philosophical critique of the preoccupation, among logicians, with just the
kind of idealized (deductive) argument Smith had invoked. His central
objection: the formalism that had bewitched logicians led them to
systematically read out of account a wide range of warranting conditions
that are, in fact, crucial to justificatory argument. Although Smith's
conclusions were extreme, she made explicit premises that continue to
structure debate about the credibility of evidential reasoning in
archaeology. In this paper I explore the road not taken, outlining a model
of evidential reasoning in archaeology that focuses on the kinds of
scaffolding, and strategies for exploiting epistemic independence between
multiple lines of evidence that, in practice, put archaeologists in a much
stronger epistemic position than Smith, and many since, have been prepared
to recognize.
When: Thu 8 May 2014 15:00 - 17:00 Eastern Time - Melbourne, Sydney
Where: Eastern Avenue Lecture Theatre
Calendar: Current Projects
Who:
* Kristie Miller- creator
Event details:
https://www.google.com/calendar/event?action=VIEW&eid=XzZjcmoyZGhuNzEwazZiOWg3MHM0OGI5azhkMjRhYjlwNzRwamFiOW83MHFqZWdpMTg5MGphZ3E0OG8gZmV2MWxkcjRsa2h2MDM2b2U0aW4yanR0ZGdAZw
Invitation from Google Calendar: https://www.google.com/calendar/
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