Sunday, 21 December 2025

Acta Baltica Historiae et Philosophiae Scientiarum ABHPS Vol. 13, No. 1 (Spring 2025)

 Acta Baltica Historiae et Philosophiae Scientiarum

ABHPS Vol. 13, No. 1 (Spring 2025)


OA: https://www.bahps.org/acta-baltica/abhps-13-1/


Articles

Ave Mets. What Does 'φ-Scientificity' Mean? III. Material quantities.

Juho Lindholm. Cybernetic epistemology and skepticism.

Miguel López-Astorga. The White Horse Paradox and Inheritance Logic.

Agita Lūse, Anna Elizabete Griķe. ‶An intelligent cog in a machine″? Latvian ethnologist Ziedonis Ligers (1917-2001) on a French mission.

Gulnara T. Oruzbaeva. The historical aspects of the formation of material culture among the ancient Kyrgyz.

Svitlana Nyzhnyk. Academician Oleksiy Sozinov's school of geneticists and breeders.

Ihor Annienkov, Nataliia Annienkova. Development of electrical engineering research at Kharkiv Electromechanical Plant in the framework of the implementation of the Soviet Big Fleet Program (1936-1941).

Halyna Zvonkova, Halyna Doronina. Marine research at leading academic institutions in Crimea: a historical essay.


Review

Lyubov Sukhoterina, Svetlana Kolot. Psychological research by Ukrainian scholars in exile in Prague (1920s-1930s).

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Wednesday, 17 December 2025

CFP: Epistemic Passages: Knowledge in Translation

 The board of the Society for the History of Science, Medicine, and Technology (GWMT) invites you to the 2026 annual conference in cooperation with the Masaryk Institute and Archives of the Czech Academy of Sciences, the Faculty of Social Sciences of Charles University and the Prague department of the Leibniz Institute for the History and Culture of Eastern Europe (GWZO).


The conference will take place 9–11 September 2026 in Prague and will focus on the theme:


Epistemic Passages: Knowledge in Translation


Taking the opportunity of convening in a city that over centuries experienced has the positive as well as the negative aspects of the encounter of different cultures, confessions, ideologies, or nations, the GWMT annual conference will focus on scholarly translation practices and their consequences. While translation is usually associated with so-called natural languages, our conference will extend beyond this to include knowledge moving across time, space, ideologies, religions and confessions, technical and media environments or between scholars and laypeople.


We want to focus on the dynamics of knowledge in transit and its interrelations with the settings it traverses and/or newly creates as it travels. How does knowledge become rewritten and reconceptualized to new contexts after years of being forgotten in dusky libraries? How does it change when it is appropriated into new confessional, social or ideological contexts? How does it change while travelling from discipline to discipline (as, e.g. from medicine to the humanities or vice versa)? How do scholars rewrite the knowledge of laypeople – and how do non-academics transform academic knowledge into one that is accessible for them and their networks? How does (academic) knowledge change when it is applied into practice? How is translation of knowledge technically mediated and informed?


Not only practices, but also specific understandings of translation are consequential. Assumed universality of scholarly knowledge, that only changed its attire while in transit, with facts or theories supposedly travelling without changing their content through languages, cultures, or disciplinary dialects, has long informed the politics of science’s propagation and popularisation, prioritising the academic content of communicated science over its potential to be understood by the non-academic public. Various linear models of how knowledge travels across languages and cultures underlie the modernisation-theory-based approaches to the “spread” and “communication” of science, linking thus science’s history with its present.


Therefore, the conference equally asks about the different modes of understanding translation and scholarly thinking about translation (termed ‘translation knowledge’ by Lieven D’hulst and Yves Gambier) and their repercussions. Which different ‘translation knowledges’ exist in different disciplines and how do they change over time? Which different vocabularies of translation exist, and how do they resonate with those in other fields and disciplines? Which consequences do different ‘translation knowledges’ have for the understanding of science in science-reflexive disciplines (philosophy, history, sociology of science, etc.)? How do changes of ‘translation knowledge’ impact the politics of science, science communication, discussions on technology acceptance, or the involvement of laypeople into the knowledge production labelled as citizen science? Which new conceptual or technical tools are developed, or old tools adjusted, to accommodate the changes to ‘translation knowledge’?


We welcome applications for entire panels as well as individual contributions. Presentations should not exceed 20 minutes in length. Sections consist of either four presentations or three presentations with commentary and last 120 minutes, including discussion. Applications for round-tables – a discussion-oriented format focusing on a common theme, consisting of up to five speakers and a moderator, allowing at least 60 minutes for general discussion – are explicitly encouraged. Please submit abstracts of approximately half a page in length using our submission form. For sections, a short introduction to the section should be submitted in addition to the abstracts of the individual presentations. If of equal quality, sections that span academic generations will be given preference. While the preference will be given to the applications that relate to the overall topic, we will accept applications on all topics of history of medicine, science, and technology.


Languages of the conference will be English and German.


Please submit proposals by 15 February 2026, using the online submission form on the GWMT website (www.gwmt.de). Please note: This is an in-person conference; exceptions are only possible for accessibility purposes.


Sunday, 14 December 2025

CFP: The Long Shadow of “Ostforschung”: Continuities, Ruptures, Perspectives.

 CFP: The Long Shadow of “Ostforschung”: Continuities, Ruptures, Perspectives. Lüneburg, 08.10.2026

To mark its 25th anniversary, the Nordost Institute will host an international workshop on 8 October 2026 that examines the historical impact of “Ostforschung,” its ideological foundations, and the continuities and ruptures that shape its legacy into the present. The event also explores the political, epistemic, and societal conditions of this knowledge production and invites scholars from various disciplines to contribute their perspectives on the enduring significance of “Ostforschung” in contemporary Eastern European studies.

At the same time, the workshop will reflect on how closely scientific knowledge production , political interests, and social power relations were intertwined within “Ostforschung.” Confronting this past should help to make current research practices more sensitive to their own assumptions and possible distortions.

“Ostforschung” was closely linked to national, imperial, and colonial projects. Its concepts and categories shaped academic disciplines as well as state and social perceptions. The workshop examines how these knowledge systems emerged, how they became institutionally entrenched, and which continuities and ruptures characterize their histories and their impact. The aim is to reveal the ideological and epistemic influences of “Ostforschung” and to discuss the problems, distortions, and blind spots it has inscribed into contemporary research on Eastern Europe.

The workshop is interdisciplinary in nature and explicitly invites researchers from various fields of the humanities, political science, or economics.

Possible questions include:

- How can historical and interdisciplinary forms of “Ostforschung” be assessed in terms of their political, scholarly, and societal impact?

- Which continuities and breaks characterize the transition from classical “Ostforschung” to contemporary forms of research on Eastern European ?

- What role did individual personalities, academic institutions, and state actors play in constructing and legitimizing “knowledge about the East”?

- How do postcolonial, global, and transnational perspectives influence the critical reassessment of “Ostforschung”?

- What epistemic, ethical, and methodological challenges arise from the continuing legacy of “Ostforschung”?

The workshop will be held in German and English. Please send an abstract (approx. 300 words) and a short CV by March 1, 2026 to: sekretariat@ikgn.de

Kontakt

a.pufelska@ikgn.de




17th Forum Literature and the History of Science

17th Forum Literature and the History of Science

The Max Planck Institute for the History of Science and the Friedrich Schlegel Graduate School of the Freie Universität Berlin invite early career scholars to take part in the 17th Forum on Literature and the History of Science, also known as Studientag Literatur und Wissenschaftsgeschichte, which will be held on 19 June 2026, 10 am – 7 pm, at the Max Planck Institute for the History of Science.

The Forum on Literature and the History of Science offers early career scholars an opportunity to discuss their work-in-progress themed on the history of literature and science, as well as other closely relevant topics. To maximize the impact of our discussion for participants, we especially encourage presentations of unfinished projects in various stages of development. Feedback is provided by experts in the respective field.

In this view, all accepted speakers will be requested to pre-circulate papers of 10–20 pages among all registered participants. The papers can be written in English or German. The discussion of all papers will start with comments by experts appointed by the organizers and followed by responses of the authors, each paper receiving about an hour of discussion time.


All interested early career scholars are warmly invited to apply for participation in the Forum by 16 February 2026 with a title, an abstract of up to 500 words of the proposed paper, and an indication of academic affiliation. Accepted speakers will be requested to pre-circulate their papers in PDF format by 21 May 2026. Please register to participate in this event also by 21 May 2026.


Dr. Donatella Germanese, Max-Planck-Institut für Wissenschaftsgeschichte Berlin

Prof. Dr. Jutta Müller-Tamm, Freie Universität Berlin

Prof. Dr. Christina Brandt, Friedrich-Schiller-Universität Jena

Prof. Dr. Bernhard Kleeberg, Universität Erfurt

Dr. Johanna Bohley, Friedrich-Schiller-Universität Jena

Prof. Dr. Jenny Willner, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München

Dr. Hansjakob Ziemer, Max-Planck-Institut für Wissenschaftsgeschichte Berlin


For registration and questions please contact:

dgermanese@mpiwg-berlin.mpg.de


Call for Papers: Environment and Society in East-Central Europe Conference (ESIEE), University of Ostrava, Czechia, 28-29 May 2026

Call for Papers: Environment and Society in East-Central Europe Conference (ESIEE), University of Ostrava, Czechia, 28-29 May 2026

 

The Environment and Society in East-Central Europe Conference 2026 invites scholars from history, environmental studies, sociology, geography, and related disciplines to explore how humans have shaped—and been shaped by—the environment in the East-Central European region. Does East-Central Europe have a distinguished environmental past? If so, how? 

To answer these pressing questions, this conference provides a forum for interdisciplinary exchange, encourages collaboration, and fosters new approaches to understanding the historical and contemporary environmental challenges of the region. 

The 2026 ESIEE Conference welcomes papers and panels addressing a wide range of topics, including but not limited to:

 

Environmental change and resource use

Urban and rural transformations

Environmental activism and civil society

Borders, cross-border regions, and environmental cooperation

Rivers, floods, droughts, and water regimes in long-term perspective

Forests, woodlands, and commons management

Industrialization and the environment beyond pollution

War, militarization, and ecological transformations

Socialist environmentalism: concepts, actors, and strategies

Technology and nature: envirotechnical systems in history

Historical geography and environmental history interactions

Environmental knowledge and the Enlightenment revolution in forestry

“The State Against Nature”: governance and transformation in the 18th–19th centuries

Narratives of “slow hope” in times of crisis

Tracing the roots of East-Central European environmental history

Environmental well-being in East-Central Europe

 

Keynote speakers: Stephen Brain, Mississippi State University, USA, and Doubravka Olšáková Charles University, Czechia

Submission Information:

Individual Papers: Submit your 300-word abstract and page-long bio by 31.1.2026 to cesh(at)osu(dot)cz

Complete Sessions, Workshops, and Interventions: Submit your 300-500 word session abstract with information on approach, goal, contributors’ role, and page-long bio by 31.1.2026 to cesh(at)osu(dot)cz

ESIEE 2026 is supported by the European Society for Environmental History, Slovak Historical Society, University of Ostrava, and the Department of History at the University of Ostrava


Wednesday, 10 December 2025

Robert Shields Mevissen: The Danube Empire An Environmental History of Habsburg State Building and Civic Engagement.

  Robert Shields Mevissen: The Danube Empire An Environmental History of Habsburg State Building and Civic Engagement.  Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh Press, 2025.  ISBN 9780822967798.


In the nineteenth century, changes to the environment, driven by ideology, natural forces, and burgeoning fossil fuel power, shifted the course of the Habsburg Empire. Along the Danube—Europe’s second longest river—hydraulic engineering projects ranging from bridges to embankments and shipping hubs affected the river’s dynamics, as did new activities related to trade, industrialization, sanitation, recreation, and agriculture. Taking a unique environmental perspective to explore questions of transnational solidarity and identity, The Danube Empire argues that the Danube River served as both a catalyst and a tool for institution building. Drawing on primary sources in German and Hungarian, Robert Shields Mevissen reconstructs how various communities throughout the empire viewed and shaped river engineering works as a means to promote material wellbeing and economic vitality. As they negotiated their conflicting and overlapping interests, they engaged government at all levels, from the imperial to the local, through democratic and civic avenues. Offering new insights into the state’s normative development and robust civil society, Mevissen shows how an empire, in reshaping a river, reshaped itself.

More Praise

 This book is more than just an account of a great river running through an empire in decline. Mevissen makes clear that all human affairs—may they be political, economic, or cultural—must not be separated from the environments they affect and in which they are embedded. Martin Schmid, BOKU University


 The Danube River ran through the Habsburg Monarchy for 850 miles—offering a vast, life-giving artery from one end of the empire to the other. But the promise of irrigation, fishery, navigation, and transportation could only be met if people from Linz to Vienna to Budapest to Bucharest could agree on its use and regulation. This book, written by a fresh new voice in environmental history, traces the work done to make sure the Danube was a source of common good rather than endless conflict. It’s a model of investigating the complex network of economic, social, cultural, and environmental forces at work in managing one of the most critical ecosystems in Central Europe. Alison Frank Johnson, Harvard University


about the author

Robert Shields Mevissen is assistant professor in the Department of Civic Engagement and Leadership at Culver–Stockton College.


Hybrid event: The Letter and the Landscape: Early-Soviet Plant Hunting in Buryat-Mongolia

 Presenter: Maria Pirogovskaya (LMU Munich)


Discussant: Nikolai Erofeev (Free University Berlin)


Organizer and moderator: Anna Mazanik (Max Weber Network Eastern Europe)


December 16, 16:00 CET


Abstract: In this talk, Maria Pirogovskaya will discuss how Buryat Tibetan medicine of Transbaikal Buddhist monasteries became a lucrative source of ethnobotanical and ethnopharmacological knowledge in Soviet natural sciences and medicine during the interbellum period. Mining this knowledge as an archive and a mapping tool to unlock the 'productive forces' of Eastern Siberia, Soviet scientists sought to fight ‘pharmaceutical hunger’ and to discover new items for state exports. The presentation draws on the documentation of scientific expeditions to Transbaikal monasteries and natural habitats to reveal how attempts to adapt Tibetan knowledge for Soviet needs contributed to epistemological translations between heterodox and orthodox medicine, while also highlighting specific environments and the people associated with them. 


Maria Pirogovskaya is a researcher at LMU Munich and a PI in the DFG-funded research project "Socialist Panaceas" that focuses on socialist health and medical heterodoxies in the long Soviet era. Before that, she worked as associate professor at the European University at St. Petersburg in 2016-2021 and a researcher at the Max Planck Institute for the History of Science in 2021-2023. She has received her PhD from the Peter the Great Museum of Anthropology and Ethnography in 2016.


Nikolai Erofeev is a researcher at Free University Berlin. His current research focuses on the transnational history of mining industries in Inner Asia and their social-environmental impacts. He has received his PhD in history from the University of Oxford in 2020.


Please register to get the Zoom-link: https://forms.gle/1xQBsa4oUFMgtWSw7. The link will be sent on the day of the event. If you have not received the link one our before the event, please contact Anna Mazanik directly at anna.mazanik@mws-osteuropa.org


Acta Baltica Historiae et Philosophiae Scientiarum ABHPS Vol. 13, No. 1 (Spring 2025)

 Acta Baltica Historiae et Philosophiae Scientiarum ABHPS Vol. 13, No. 1 (Spring 2025) OA: https://www.bahps.org/acta-baltica/abhps-13-1/ Ar...