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WMA Graduate Research Seminar, 2023/2024

Research seminar run in conjunction with the WMA Research Centre and open to all philosophy postgraduate students.
If you would like to receive email notifications about the seminar, please email h dot lerman at warwick dot ac dot uk
 
In Summer Term the seminar will take place on Wednesdays, weeks 4-7 and 9, at 14:00-16:00, in room S1.39. (WEek 8's session will be scheduled shortly)
 

In preparation for MindGrad we will dedicate the first 3 sessions to 3 papers by Matt Soteriou and the following 3 session to background reading for Lea Salje's talk.

Week 4: Matt Soteriou, ‘Determining the Future’ [pdf]

Week 5: Matt Soteriou, ‘The past made present: Mental time travel in episodic recollection’ [pdf]

Week 6: Matt Soteriou, ‘Waking Up and Being Conscious' [link]

Week 7: Eli Alshanetsky, Articulating a Thought, Introduction [link] and Chapter 2 'A Puzzle' [link]

Week 8: TBA

Week 9: Alex Byrne, TBA

 

Previous Seminars

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Philosophy Christmas Lecture 'Myself and my selfie.'

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Location: L3

The talk takes two arguments from Perfect Me – that beauty is a dominant value framework and that our bodies are ourselves – and extends them into the virtual world of social media. In the shift to the virtual our ‘self’, who we are, moves from our ‘inner life’ (our character, feelings and thoughts) to our bodies ‘the outer’, to our curated images on TikTok and Instagram. This dislocation of the self has some features which are continuous with identifying ourselves with our bodies. For example, appearance is paramount on social media and only some faces and bodies make the grade, also, like body work in the ‘real’ world, ‘doing the gram’ takes extraordinary effort. However, the selfie-self, unlike the transforming and imagined self, is a concrete object, an ‘end point’, which we know is fake. While we know in theory that no one looks like their Instagram, in practice we compare our actual bodies with everyone else’s ideal selfie. Even those who look like they succeed on social media, are liked and followed by thousands, cannot close the gap between their ‘real’ selves and their selfie.

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