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News

  • The Institute of Philosophy of the Czech Academy of Sciences wishes you a Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year 2021

    21. 12. 2020
  • Locating and Timing Matters: Significance and Agency of STS in Emerging Worlds

    29. 11. 2020

    Have you held an international conference in uncertain Covid times? Have you challenged a sequence of decisions whether to move it online or cancel it? Then you had to quickly re-order all the organizational ordering and to give a hard thought how to “translate normal physical conference“ into a virtual meeting of hundreds of people…?! Share experiences of your colleagues in a reflection written by Filip Vostal who talks about the preparations of this years´ conference entitled “Locating and Timing Matters: Significance and Agency of STS in Emerging Worlds.”

  • Contradictions included in Scopus

    24. 11. 2020

    CONTRADICTIONS, billingual journal dedicated to professional research and discussions about history and presence of critical social thought in Central and Eastern Europe was included in Scopus, the largest index database of reviewed literature. The Scopus brings a complex overview of world´s research outcomes in science, technology, medicine, social sciences and humanities.

  • Petr Pavlas on the list of 2020 Josef Hlávka Award laureates

    18. 11. 2020

    The Hlávka Foundation published today the list of 2020 Josef Hlávka Award laureates. It is our pleasure to announce that one of the five awarded young talented scholars from the Czech Academy of Sciences is Dr Petr Pavlas from the Department of Comenius Studies and Early Modern Intellectual History. Congratulations!

  • The Whole World Reads Comenius

    10. 11. 2020

    Continuous online reading from the works of John Amos Comenius called “Reading Comenius Universally”, which starts on Saturday night, is an original way of commemorating 350 years since this thinker’s death. Academics and enthusiasts promised to support this 24-hour initiative by their reading. Passages from Comenius’s philosophical and educational treatises but also personal correspondence will be read in 17 languages, thus accentuating this thinker’s world-wide renown.

    A full-day marathon will launch on 14 November at midnight CET in Prague. Each fifteen minutes, the relay will be taken over by the next reader. Participating readers come from the Czech Republic, Germany, United Kingdom, Poland, Hungary, the Netherlands, United States, Japan, Colombia, Russia, Israel, and a number of other countries. Most are representatives of universities, academic institutions, museums, but the group also includes for instance students and teachers from five continents. Just in the Czech Republic, there are readers from Brno, Olomouc, Ostrava, Pardubice, Uherský Brod, and Přerov.

    Seventeen languages, included Kashubian
    ‘For the introduction, we selected a fragment from the Panegersia, or Universal Awakening, in which Comenius turns to citizens of the whole world,’ explains Comenius scholar Vladimír Urbánek of the Institute of Philosophy of the Czech Academy of Sciences, who organises this marathon together with his colleagues from the Department for Comenius Studies and Intellectual History of Early Modern Era. Alongside Czech and Latin, two languages which Comenius spoke and wrote in, his texts will also be read in German, English, Russian, Japanese, but even Esperanto, Kashubian, and other languages. Texts were selected from well-known philosophical and educational treatises such as Labyrinth of the World and Paradise of the Heart, Didactica Magna, The School of Infancy, from his textbook Orbis Sensualium Pictus or his pansophic works related to the idea of universal reform, such as Via Lucis and the General Consultation on the Improvement of Human Affairs.

    This virtual journey of Comenius’s thoughts through the world will end at midnight CET of 15 November again in Prague. The event will be streamed throughout. Listeners can enjoy it live at Comenius online Youtube channel Comenius.

    Time schedule: https://bit.ly/Time_schedule

    John Amos Comenius (1592–1670) won world-wide renown with his pioneering works on didactic methods and education, which won him the epithet ‘Teacher of nations’. Still valued are also his writings on philosophy and theology.

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