schedule and abstracts
If you are among the 8 students who attended the event the full two days, please, write to anomalies2023@gmail.com with your information so we can give you an attendance certificate.
October 5, 2023
10:00-11:30 (KEYNOTE) “A way to see anomalies and how to live with them”
Décio Krause (Federal University of Rio de Janeiro)
11:30-12:10 "Semantics of Thought Experiments"
C. Peter Hertogh (Chongqing University, VUB Brussels, Yulin Normal University)
12:10-14:00 LUNCH BREAK
14:00-15:30 (KEYNOTE) "How Anomalies Drive Scientific Discovery"
Carol Cleland (University of Colorado Boulder)
15:30 -15:50 COFFEE BREAK
15:50-16:30 "Connecting the Brains: Telepathy, Cybernetics, and Anomalous Cognition"
Maxim Miroshnichenko (Global Center for Advanced Studies, Dublin)
16:30-17:10 "The Newman Objection as a formal anomaly"
João Vitor Ferrari Rabelo (University of Sao Paulo)
October 6, 2023
10:00-10:40 "Logical Treatment of Anomalies"
Jean Yves Béziau (Federal University of Rio de Janeiro)
10:40 -11:00 COFFEE BREAK
11:00-11:40 "On the Continuum Fallacy: Is Temperature a Continuous Function?"
Aditya Jha (University of Cambridge)
11:40-14:00 LUNCH BREAK
14:00-15:30 (KEYNOTE) "When Inconsistencies Are Not (and When They Are) Anomalies"
Otávio Bueno (University of Miami)
15:30 -15:50 COFFEE BREAK
15:50-16:30 "Wonder Drugs for Cancer and COVID-19 in Brazil: Natural Theology, Intuition, and Reason"
Julio Michael Stern (University of Sao Paulo)
16:30-17:10 "The evolution of an anomaly: from contradictions to gaps and from gaps to contradictions"
María del Rosario Martínez Ordaz
(Federal University of Rio de Janeiro
National Autonomous University of Mexico)