21 Jan

Utopia!

VeranstaltungsortUniversität KlagenfurtHörsaal AVeranstalter Öffentlichkeitsarbeit & Kommunikation (UNI Services)Österreichische Akademie der Wissenschaften (ÖAW)BeschreibungVortrag von Barbara Stollberg-Rilinger, Rektorin des Wissenschaftskollegs zu Berlin: Die Aufklärung und ihr ambivalentes Erbe. Im 18. Jahrhundert wurden aufklärerische Utopien auf vielerlei Weise politische Realität – mit höchst ambivalenten Folgen. Das lässt sich unter anderem an den ambitionierten politischen Reformprogrammen des „Aufgeklärten Absolutismus“ studieren, die den Staat als perfekte Maschine verstanden. An einem Beispiel aus der Habsburgermonarchie, dem österreichischen Staatsrat, möchte ich zeigen, woher der Rationalitätsoptimismus der aufgeklärten Minister kam, wohin er führte, woran er scheiterte und was man daraus heute möglicherweise lernen kann.Vortragende(r)Barbara Stollberg-RilingerKontaktAnnegret Landes (annegret.landes@aau.at)

22 Jan
22 Jan

wiwi aktuell_Vortrag: The Past, Present and Future of Econometrics – Implications of Big Data

VeranstaltungsortS.0.05Veranstalter Institut für VolkswirtschaftslehreBeschreibungWe present a short review of the history of econometrics over the last 150 years: From the analysis of sunspot numbers, of the Beveridge wheat price index to Tinbergens’ early macromodels and the subsequent Cowles Commission models to the “Oil Crisis of Econometrics” and the methodological reactions to this crisis. The important role of computers. Widening the focus from macroeconomics to financial and business econometrics. We discuss the present and future challenges: Big data and appropriate methods; evidence-based economic policy.Vortragende(r)em.o.Univ.-Prof. Dr. Manfred DeistlerKontaktChristina Kopetzky (vwl2@aau.at)

22 Jan

Vattimo’s Hermeneutic Realism as an Act of Political Resistance

VeranstaltungsortN.1.71AAU KlagenfurtVeranstalter Institut für PhilosophieBeschreibungHow can hermeneutics be a form of ethical-political resistance on behalf of reality? In this presentation, I examine Italian philosopher Gianni Vattimo’s critique of the “temptation of realism” and his claim that hermeneutics, and not the so-called new realisms, constitutes the most realistic approach to reality. Vattimo’s hermeneutic position (known as “weak thought”) represents the realistic realization that weak thought is the condition to which the very history of philosophy has committed (or destined) us. Additionally, Vattimo’s ontology of actuality emerges as the realistic response to such a historical condition insofar as it is the hermeneutic formulation of a non-metaphysical ontology focused on a weakened form of reality that finds its manifestation in historical traces rather than in absolutes. Ultimately, I explore Vattimo’s philosophical position understood as hermeneutic resistance against metaphysical realism on behalf of the reality of the weak. This resistance invests hermeneutics with an ethical-political commitment that renders it more revolutionary than the conservativism of all realisms.Vortragende(r)Dr. Sivlia Benso (RIT, USA)Silvia Benso is Professor of Philosophy at Rochester Institute of Technology, USA where she is also Director of the Women’s and Gender Studies Program. KontaktAsso.-Prof.Dr. Martin Weiß (martin.weiss@aau.at)