There is a widely-held belief that most achievements in science and the humanities have little or no relationship to the characteristics of particular social groups. That is, scientific accomplishments are "impersonal." Thus "Jewishness" does not affect any scientific or scholarly methods or practice. However, some facts appear to challenge this view: for instance above-average representation of Jews in the sciences and the humanities when compared to their numbers in the general population and their exceptionally strong contribution to particular disciplines. To give but one example: in the 1920s and 1930s the large number of Jewish biochemists studying the intermediate metabolism of sugar was quite disproportionate to their participation in other scientific fields. Similar phenomena can be identified in numerous other areas of intellectual inquiry and activity.
This workshop will examine the tensions created by these two apparently contradictory intuitions. The aim is to provide material on whether the "Jewishness" of scientists and scholars-that is Jewish traditions and/or social and psychological mechanisms that are specific to Jews-have any impact on questions concerning approaches to problem-solving, such as:
- Choice and development of themes and topics
- Range of research-guiding questions
- Types of scientific or scholarly practice
- Types of argument
- Relationship to other areas of research
- Institutional organisation
- Individual competence
- Attitudes towards application
Programme
Monday, 4 October 2004
Raphael Gross (Centre for German Jewish Studies, Sussex) Welcome address
Ulrich Charpa (London) Introduction
Moritz Epple (Frankfurt) An Unusual Career between Cultural and Mathematical Modernism: Felix Hausdorff, 1868-1942
Anthony Travis (Jerusalem) The Cultural Foundation of Colorant Science and Technology, 1850-1920
Gabor Pallo (Budapest) Antisemitism and the 'Modernity' of Jewish Scientists
Simon Baumberg (Leeds) Some Jewish Biologists' Views on Evolution
Ute Deichmann (London, Köln) 'Jewish biochemistry'? Leonor Michaelis (1875-1949) and Emil Abderhalden (1877-1950) as Representatives of their Jewish and non-Jewish Peers in Germany
Emile G. L. Schrijver (Amsterdam) What motivated Moritz Steinschneider (1816-1907)? On the Research Agenda of the Father of Modern Jewish Bibliography
Ulrich Charpa (London) Torah, Talmud, and Harry Bresslau's Historical-philological Work
Tuesday, 5 October 2004
Nurit Kirsch (Tel Aviv) Human Population Genetics in the Young State of Israel: Values, Themes and Biases
Yael Hashiloni-Dolev (Tel Aviv) Genetic Diagnosis and the Effect of Religion: Comparison between Israel and Germany
Frank J. Leavitt (Beer Sheva) Science and Religion in the Brain Death Controversy in Israel and Japan
Ute Deichmann Concluding remarks
Closing general discussion
Held by Leo Baeck Institute London at the Centre for German Jewish Studies (University of Sussex)