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“Copenhagen”
At Carolina
Sunday January 23-Tuesday
February 8
Sponsored by the James M. Johnston Center
for Undergraduate Excellence
The College of Arts and Sciences
University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill
In January and February of 2005, PlayMakers
Repertory Company will stage the 2000 Tony Award winner
for Best New Play-- Michael Frayn’s “Copenhagen.”
Frayn’s play dramatizes the 1941 meeting between
two giants of atomic physics, Niels Bohr and Werner
Heisenberg, and explores the impact their conversation
may have had in determining the outcome of World War
II. The play takes as its ostensible subject the atomic
bomb, but really uses the 1941 meeting between Bohr
and Heisenberg to explore issues of motive, morality
and the betrayal of memory.
The James M. Johnston Center for Undergraduate Excellence,
in collaboration with PlayMakers, and the Departments
of History, Philosophy, Physics and Astronomy, English,
Dramatic Arts, and The Parr Ethics Center, will celebrate
“Copenhagen” with a thought-provoking series
of programs. While designed especially for undergraduates
in the College of Arts and Sciences, all
events are free, open to the public, and take place
in the Kresge Foundation Common Room (039) of the James
M. Johnston Center for Undergraduate Excellence in Graham
Memorial, unless otherwise noted.
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Please join us for the following:
Sunday January 23, 2pm: Paul Green Theater.
“'Copenhagen' at Playmakers: Performance and Talk-Back
For Students.”
Watch the play and join the actors at the closing
curtain for lively conversation about the play. Students
who plan to see the play on another day are welcome
to join the discussion; contact the Box Office for exact
start time of the Talk-Back session. Box Office: 962-PLAY.
Tuesday, January 25, 2005, 6 pm: Greg Flaxman,
Assistant Professor, Department of English. “How
I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb.”
Dr. Flaxman discusses and screens “Dr. Strangelove
(1964)” Pizza and beverages at show-time.
Wednesday, January 26, 2005, 7 pm: “'Copenhagen'
From Philosophy to Physics”
Featuring:
Dmitri Khveshchenko, Associate Professor, Physics
and Astronomy: "Quantum Mechanics: 70+ Years in
the Making."
This talk, aimed at a general audience, reviews the
basic principles and notions of quantum mechanics. Professor
Khveshchenko describes some of the earlier paradoxes
that, in his words, “not only have been resolved
but have greatly advanced our understanding of a number
of fundamental concepts and facilitated further experimental
discoveries.”
Marc Lange, Professor, Philosophy: "'Copenhagen'
and Quantum Metaphysics."
The quantum- mechanical picture of the world contains
several famously weird features, such as the indeterminacy
of particles' states. The play mentions these often
and uses them as metaphors for the limits to our understanding
of Heisenberg's purposes in visiting Bohr in 1941. Professor
Lange will examine the metaphysical implications of
quantum mechanics and try to draw out the parallel that
the play suggests between Heisenberg's scientific work
and this episode in his life.
Thursday February 3, 4 pm: Alan Beyerchen, 2004-2005
Hillard Gold ’39 Lecturer. “Heisenberg and
the German Physics Community Under the Third Reich.”
Alan D. Beyerchen, Associate Professor of History at
Ohio State University, teaches and researches in nineteenth
and twentieth century German history. His graduate students
have completed dissertations on a variety of topics
in cultural, socio-economic and political history. He
is personally interested in cultural history. His research
focuses on the relationships among science, technology,
and modern values as reflected in the economic and political
developments of nineteenth- and twentieth-century Germany.
Presently writing a study of social responsibility in
science, he also is doing research on the implications
of nonlinear dynamical systems for the liberal arts.
His most recent publications include articles on Nazism
and science, the unpredictability of warfare, and the
technology of racism.
The Hillard Gold ’39 Lecture series was established
by Carolina alumni James and Jonathan Gold as a memorial
to their father and his commitment to liberal arts education.
Hillard Gold lecturers interact with students both inside
and outside the classroom. Alan Beyerchen is the fifth
Hillard Gold ’39 Lecturer.
Tuesday, February 8, 7pm: Hanes Art Center
Auditorium: “'Copenhagen' and the Certainty of
Uncertainty”
Michael Frayn's enormously successful play "Copenhagen"
raises some hotly debated questions about historical
events in Europe during World War II, about moral choices,
and about the limits of personal knowledge. The discussion
both in the play and by this panel deals with the atomic
bomb, the weirdness of quantum physics, and the ambiguities
of human behavior. Join faculty members from History,
Physics and Astronomy, Dramatic Arts, and Philosophy
for a thought provoking interdisciplinary discussion
about the certainty of uncertainty.
Featuring:
Christopher Browning, Frank Porter Graham Professor,
Department of History
Karen Blansfield, Assistant Professor, Dramatic Arts
Eugen Merzbacher, Kenan Professeor Emeritus, Physics
and Astronomy
Douglas McLean, Professor, Philosophy, and Director,
Parr Ethics Center
For More Information, please visit the Johnston Center
web site: www.johnstoncenter.unc.edu or call 966-511 |
Participants’ Biographies:
Karen Blansfield, Assistant Professor,
Dramatic Arts
Dr. Blansfield’s scholarly interests and research
has primarily been on contemporary British dramatists,
with a particular focus on Michael Frayn. She wrote
her dissertation on his plays and has published articles
examining his work in South Atlantic Review and other
journals based in part on interviews conducted with
Frayn himself. She is currently finishing up a Research
and Production Sourcebook on Frayn. Her other publications
include articles, essays, and reviews in many books,
journals, magazines, and newspapers.
Christopher Browning, Frank Porter
Graham Professor, Department of History
Dr. Browning is one of world’s leading authorities
on the history of the Holocaust. His publications include:
Ordinary Men: Reserve Police Battalion 101 and the Final
Solution in Poland (1992); The Path to Genocide (1992);
Fateful Months: Essays on the Emergence of the Final
Solution (1985); and The Final Solution and the German
Foreign Office (1978). In the Spring of 1999, he gave
the George Macaulay Trevelyan Lectures at Cambridge
University, which recently have been published under
the title Nazi Policy, Jewish Labor, German Killers
(2000). In the spring of 2001 he delivered the first
George Mosse Lectures at the University of Wisconsin,
which have been published as Collected Memories: Holocaust
History and Postwar Testimony (2003). He just completed
The Origins of the Final Solution: The Evolution of
Nazi Jewish Policy, September 1939-March 1972 (2004).
Dr. Browning’s current project is a case study
of the Jewish factory slave labor camps in Starachowice
in central Poland, based on nearly 235 survivor testimonies.
Greg Flaxman, Assistant Professor,
Department of English
Gregory Flaxman is assistant professor of English at
the University of North Carolina, where he teaches film
and critical theory. The editor of The Brain is the
Screen: Deleuze and the Philosophy of Cinema, he has
published articles on a wide variety of subjects ranging
from the philosophy of Kant to the films of Stanley
Kubrick. Currently, he is working on a book about the
relaitonship between aesthetics and lying.
Dmitri Khveshchenko, Associate Professor,
Physics and Astronomy
Dr. Khveschenko was previously an Assistant Professor
at the Nordic Institute for Theoretical Physics in Copenhagen.
He is now Associate Professor of Condensed Matter Theory.
His research interests include electronic properties
of novel superconducting, magnetic and carbon-based
materials; interaction and localization effects in nanoscale
and mesoscopic systems; common problems in condensed
matter and field theory; and solid-state quantum computing.
He has published numerous papers in several academic
journals, such as "Ghost Excitonic Insulator Transition
in a Layered Graphite", Phys.Rev.Lett., v.87, p.246802
(2001) and "Magnetic Field-Induced Semimetal-Insulator
Transition in Highly Oriented Pyrolitic Graphite,”
Phys.Rev.Lett., v.87, p.206401 (2001).
Marc Lange, Professor, Philosophy
Dr. Lange specializes in the philosophy of science and
related areas of metaphysics and epistemology. He is
author of two books: Natural Laws in Scientific Practice
(2000) and An Introduction to the Philosophy of Physics:
Locality, Fields, Energy, and Mass (2002). Professor
Lange has also published numerous articles in a range
of journals, including “Would Direct Realism Resolve
the Classical Problem of Induction,” Nous (2004);
“Bayesianism and Unification,” Philosophy
of Science (2004); “A Note of Scientific Essentialism,
Laws of Nature, and Counterfactual Conditionals,”
Australasian Journal of Philosophy (2004).
Douglas MacLean, Professor, Philosophy,
and Director, Parr Ethics Center
Dr. MacLean has research interests in moral theory,
public policy, and risk evaluation. He is editor of
Values at Risk and co-editor of, The Security Gamble:
Deterrence Dilemmas in the Nuclear Age, Liberalism Reconsidered,
Energy and the Future, Human Rights and U.S. Foreign
Policy: Principles and Applications. Other publications
include “The Ethics of Cost-Benefit Analysis:
Incommensurable, Incompatible, and Incomparable Values,”
in Democracy, Social Values, and Public Policy (1998)
and “Accentuate the Negative: Moral Theory, Avoiding
Harms, and Pursuing Ideals,” in Rationality, Rules,
and Ideals (2002).
Laurie McNeil, Professor and Chair,
Astronomy and Physics
Dr. McNeil is Professor of Experimental Condensed Matter
Physics. Her research interests include optical spectroscopy
of semiconductors and insulators; Raman and Brillouin
scattering; photoluminescence; high-pressure physics;
and physics and music. She has published numerous papers
in several scholarly journals, including L.E. McNeil
and R.H. French, “Light Scattering from Red Pigment
Particles: Multiple Scattering in a Strongly-Absorbing
System” J. Appl. Phys. 89, 283 (2001) and M.J.
Peters, L.E. McNeil, Jian Ping Lu and Daniel Kahn, “Structural
Phase Transition in Carbon Nanotube Bundles Under Pressure,”
Phys. Rev. B 61, 5939 (2000).
Eugen Merzbacher, Kenan Professor
Emeritus, Physics and Astronomy
Dr. Merzbacher joined the faculty of the University
of North Carolina at Chapel Hill in 1952, eventually
becoming a Kenan Professor. His research has concentrated
on collision theory in nuclear and atomic physics. For
several years he served as chair of the Department of
Physics (and Astronomy), and he retired in 1991. Merzbacher
received the Thomas Jefferson Award at UNC-CH in 1972,
a Senior Scientist Humboldt Award in 1977, and the Oersted
Medal from the American Association of Physics Teachers
in 1992. In 1990 he served as president of the American
Physical Society. In 1959-60 he was a visiting member
of the Niels Bohr Institute for Theoretical Physics
in Copenhagen. At Chapel Hill, he was instrumental in
the creation of the Triangle Universities Nuclear Laboratory
(TUNL). He is the author of a textbook on Quantum Mechanics
(third edition 1998).
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A complete listing of all events at the
James M. Johnston Center for Undergraduate Excellence is available
at our Event
Calendar.
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