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Monday, April 29, 2024

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Law UG Study Station
Law School Student Hub (and FAB2.23)

If you need some extra motivation and accountability, come along to our group study session. This is a Pomodoro-style format with breaks in-between to help you structure your work.

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Economics Postgraduate Photoshoot
Main Campus

We are calling for postgraduate taught and research students from the Department of Economics to volunteer to take part in a photoshoot to feature in future marketing materials

Details

Date: Monday 29 April 2024
Time: 11:00 - 15:00 (1-hour slots)
Location: Main Campus

What's involved?

You will join a small group of fellow economics students to take a series of photographs across key locations on campus for up to one hour, guided by our professional and friendly photographer. These photos may be used in marketing materials including (but not limited to) email campaigns, webpages, brochures, flyers, leaflets etc.

By taking part, you will also receive 2-3 free professional headshots taken by our photographer, for your own personal use (e.g. for professional LinkedIn pages).

Volunteer Now

If you are a postgraduate student in the Department of Economics you can volunteer by completing the form below. Spaces are limited so please only volunteer for the times you are available to attend.

We will notify you if you have been randomly selected by sending you a calendar invite which will contain details of dress codes and meeting points.

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WMA Reading Group: Origins of Naturalised Intentionality
S2.84

We are pleased to welcome you to the WMA reading group, Origins of Naturalised Intentionality. In this reading group, we will go through five highly influential authors who seek to provide the grounds for a scientific account of mental content (the stuff we think about).

The reading is chosen to provide an accessible introduction to the naturalistic approach to mental content. We hope to have a relatively relaxed discussion of the (sometimes controversial) ideas on offer!

We will meet in S2.84 on Mondays of even weeks (starting 29/04/24) at 14:00-15:30. The sessions will be led by Johan Heemskerk. Feel free to reach out to Oscar North-Concar or Johan Heemskerk for any further information.

The group is open to absolutely everyone, so do come along if you are interested!

 

Week

Author

Reading

2

Fred Dretske

If You Can't Make One, You Don't Know How it WorksLink opens in a new window

4

Jerry Fodor

Chapter 4 of PsychosemanticsLink opens in a new window

6

Ruth Millikan

BiosemanticsLink opens in a new window

8

Karen Neander

Toward an Informational TeleosemanticsLink opens in a new window

10

Nicholas Shea

Chapter 1 of Representations in Cognitive ScienceLink opens in a new window

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Heidegger Reading Group
Online only

Heidegger turns Gadamer in this term: You are warmly invited to join the Heidegger Reading Group where we in this term read Hans-Georg Gadamer’s “Truth and Method” (1960).

Every Monday, 7.15-8.45 pm, online only.

For meeting details and the reading schedule, email fridolin.neumann@warwick.ac.uk.

Guided by Haley’s expertise, we will work through the entire book in this term. Gadamer is one of Heidegger's most influential students, not just in philosophy but in the humanities more generally (social thought, medical humanities, law, aesthetics, etc.). By way of outline, Gadamer's text is concerned with defending humanistic truth, and he achieves this by looking at three places this truth shows up in human life: aesthetics, history, and conversation. “Truth and Method” is, then, relevant to those of us concerned with epistemology, aesthetics, history as a philosophical topic (beginning with Kant and Hegel), philosophy of language, and ontology.

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