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Monday, September 16
 

15:30 EDT

Opening Plenary Session / Session plénière d'ouverture
Monday September 16, 2024 15:30 - 17:30 EDT
Le français suit l'anglais

Welcome to Ingenium
Christina Tessier, CEO

Welcome to Algonquin Territory 
Anita Tenasco, Kitigan Zibi Anishinabeg Community

Welcome to SIC 2024
Roland Wittje, SIC President

Official launch of exhibit, Indigenous Ways of Knowing
Carolyn Holland with Joan Tenasco and Margaret Nazon

Precision in Practice: Challenges of an Arctic Expedition
Cassandra Marion, Canada Aviation and Space Museum

Keynote - The Virtues of Imprecision: Remaking Astronomy in the Nineteenth Century
Robert W. Smith, University of Alberta
In the early nineteenth century, astronomy, as practiced by professional astronomers in Europe, was a science of precision. Astronomers were committed to measuring and interpreting the movements of the heavenly bodies, and such were astronomy’s successes and its apparent perfection that it was widely believed that astronomy’s "tale of discoveries was told." Further advances, minor though they would be, would come from minute technical improvements. Professionals employed the latest instruments to make their observations of the positions of astronomical bodies, but this programme centred on precision was often barren. As Jim Bennett pointed out, there "was generally no clear theoretical aim to the exercise, and the observations themselves often remained unpublished, or if published remained unused." But, as I will argue, from the 1860s on, a quite different sort of astronomy emerged, a 'New Astronomy,' one which flourished because its practitioners were prepared to embrace the virtues of imprecision.

Conference Poem, Precision on the Rapids - Kwayàk pàwitig nìshibònòwin
Albert Dumont, Algonquin Elder

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Bienvenue à Ingenium
Christina Tessier, PDG

Bienvenue sur le territoire algonquin
Anita Tenasco, nation Kitigan Zibi Anishinabeg

Bienvenue au SIC 2024
Roland Wittje, président

Lancement officiel de l'exposition, Savoir autochtone
Carolyn Holland avec Joan Tenasco et Margaret Nazon

La précision dans la pratique : les défis d'une expédition dans l'Arctique
Cassandra Marion, Musée de l'aviation et l'espace du Canada

Allocution principale : Les vertus de l’imprécision – refaire l’astronomie au dix-neuvième siècle
Robert W. Smith, Université de l’Alberta
Au début du XIXe siècle, l’astronomie pratiquée par les astronomes professionnels européens était une science de précision. Les astronomes étaient résolus à mesurer et à interpréter les mouvements des corps célestes, et les succès de l’astronomie et son apparente perfection étaient tels qu’on croyait généralement que toute l’histoire des découvertes en astronomie avait été racontée. Tout autre progrès, aussi infime soit-il, serait attribuable à de toutes petites améliorations techniques. Les scientifiques utilisaient les instruments les plus modernes pour étudier la position des corps astronomiques, mais cette activité centrée sur la précision était souvent aride. Comme l’a souligné Jim Bennett, l’exercice « n’avait pas d’objectif théorique clair », et les observations n’étaient pas publiées, ou si elles l’étaient, elles n’étaient pas utilisées. Mais, comme je vais le démontrer, à partir des années 1860, une astronomie tout à fait différente a émergé, une « nouvelle astronomie », qui a prospéré parce que ses praticiens étaient prêts à accepter l’imprécision à bras ouverts.

Poème du symposium, précision sur les rapides -  Kwayàk pàwitig nìshibònòwin
Albert Dumont, aîné algonquin
Monday September 16, 2024 15:30 - 17:30 EDT
Auditorium - Canada Science and Technology Museum 1867 St. Laurent Blvd, Ottawa, ON, Canada
 
Friday, September 20
 

09:00 EDT

Knowing and Doing: In Memory of Jim Bennett (1947-2023) Hybrid Plenary Session / Savoir et faire : à la mémoire de Jim Bennett (1947-2023), séance plénière hybride
Friday September 20, 2024 09:00 - 11:30 EDT
Many of our community acknowledge Jim's broad and lasting legacy in the field of instrument studies and museums and beyond. On the occasion of the 43rd Symposium of the SIC in Ottawa, 16-22 Sept 2024, we would like to invite you to share your remembrances. For this we are imagining a hybrid session with contributions mainly by former students or collaborators of Jim's, of about 5 to 10 minutes – ideally combining a personal reminiscence with a reflection or specific example showing where Jim’s own studies or his methodology continue to influence your own work.

1. An acrobatic appreciation
Richard Dunn (Science Museum, London), Ph.D. (1992)

2. Remembering Jim: the particular and the universal
Stephen Johnston (History of Science Museum, Oxford), Ph.D. (1994)

3. An object is worth a thousand words: an editor’s take on instruments and texts
Hester Higton (Academic Editing, Durham), Ph.D. (1996)

4. Encounters around objects: History of science, museums, and beyond
Pedro Raposo The Academy of Natural Sciences of Drexel University, Philadelphia/PA), Ph.D. (2010)

5. From Oxford to Yale: Teaching, displaying, and researching instruments
Alexi Baker & Paola Bertucci (Yale University, New Haven/CT), MSc. (1997/2004)

6. From Museums to Marx
Jessica Ratcliff (Cornell University, Cornell/NY), MSc.

7. "I asked Jim to teach me about objects and instead got a lesson in how to be a curator."
Kristen Frederick-Frost (Smithsonian Institution, Washington/DC)

The session is organized by Samuel Gessner (Lisbon) and Michael Korey (Dresden).

To join the session remotely, please use the link: https://zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_-qEpR4BMTmSBNF8g4fsdnA
Friday September 20, 2024 09:00 - 11:30 EDT
Auditorium - Canada Science and Technology Museum 1867 St. Laurent Blvd, Ottawa, ON, Canada
 
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