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INSAP VI
Publications |
INSAP VI - Venice (Italy), October 18-23, 2009
For conference information, including the call for papers and registration,
please go to http://www.astro.unipd.it/insap6/ .
The INSAP Conferences
The INSAP Conferences are
a series of international meetings, held every three years
or so, that explore the effect on humanity and human culture of the glorious
spectacles
we see in the sky by night and by day. To measure the power that our
ever-changing sky has on us, try to imagine the poverty of our lives
were we to live on a perpetually cloudy planet. But since we often
take the sky and its effects for granted, bringing these effects out
explicitly
has been particularly productive.
The first INSAP meeting
was based on four themes: the influence of astronomical phenomena on
art, literature, myth and religion, and history. However, the definition
and success of a meeting are determined as much by those who actually
participate in the meeting as by the a priori plans. We have been most
fortunate to have at the INSAP meetings an increasingly diverse group
of attendees who brought with them a broader range of ideas,
all still involving the basic theme of the meetings. Often the best ideas
for presentations have taken the organizers by surprise. Later meetings
have had a correspondingly broader range of topics. The common bond between
attendees — coming from the full range of the humanities and the social
and physical sciences — was that each had a strong interest
in one aspect of the broad study, and each had something different to
say about mankind's long and deep fascination with the lights in the
sky. This common interest was the bridge that led to many contacts, both
formal and informal, during the meeting, and gave a common ground for
discussion bounded by the reality of astronomy.
Although
each presentation at the meetings usually lies within one discipline,
the overall range of disciplines represented has made the meetings
truly interdisciplinary in nature. The attendees have come from a broad
range of studies and activities: astronomy, art and art history, social
and political history, literature, music, mythology and religion, to
name the main ones. INSAP has allowed people from all these lines of
study to get together and share common interests, where before they were
often the only ones in their
immediate fields with this sometimes-odd interest in the astronomical
aspects of their work. The publications resulting from the meetings
(listed here) give an idea of the range of topics presented. They
deserve a close reading, because the points made are varied and important.
The meetings do not exceed
a hundred attendees, and have been structured to allow opportunities
for both formal and informal exchanges of ideas. They have included a
variety of invited and contributed talks and poster presentations. Some
attendees are welcome to participate fully in the meetings as observers
but not give formal presentations. We have been fortunate to hold the
INSAP meetings in particularly appropriate places that have reinforced
the collegial nature of the gatherings. One day is usually devoted to
tours of nearby places of great interest. Several meetings have had original
art work and music created for the occasion, and others have had exhibits
of works by attending artists. A self-renewing International Executive
Committee maintains continuity between meetings, and Local Organizing
Committees handle the affairs of the meetings.
The membership of these committees is found here.
One note: The INSAP meetings
have in general excluded material that falls principally in such sub
disciplines of anthropology and archaeology as ethnoastronomy and archaeoastronomy.
These subjects are better handled by other, more specialized meetings.
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