Research Seminar in Post-Kantian European Philosophy, 2019/2020
Unless otherwise stated, Post-Kantian European Philosophy Research Group seminars take place on Tuesdays, 5:30–7:30pm in Room S0.11 (ground floor of Social Studies). All welcome. For further information, please contact tbc
Fri 4 Oct, '19 |
Workshop on Expression and Self-Knowledge with Dorit Bar-On and Lucy CampbellExpression and Self-knowledge Warwick University, Friday 4th October 2019 Humanities H0.03
Programme
11.00 – 12.30
12.30 – 2.00 Dorit Bar-On (University of Connecticut)
3.00 – 4.30 Cristina Borgoni (Bayreuth University) ‘Primitive forms of first-person authority and expressive capacities’
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Mon 7 Oct, '19- |
WMA Graduate Research SeminarH4.22/4Reading: Soteriou, M. 'Cartesian Reflections on the Autonomy of the Mental'. [pdf] |
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Mon 14 Oct, '19- |
WMA Graduate Research SeminarH4.22/4.Readings: Week 2: Soteriou, M. 'Cartesian Reflections on the Autonomy of the Mental'. [ pdf] Week 3: Eilan, N. 'On the Paradox of Gestalt Switches: Wittgenstein’s Response to Kohler'. [ pdf] Week 5: Roessler, J. 'The Silence of Self-Knowledge'. [pdf] Week 7: Campbell, J. 'Sense, Reference and Selective Attention' [pdf] |
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Mon 28 Oct, '19- |
WMA Graduate Research SeminarH4.22/4.Readings: Week 2: Soteriou, M. 'Cartesian Reflections on the Autonomy of the Mental'. [ pdf] Week 3: Eilan, N. 'On the Paradox of Gestalt Switches: Wittgenstein’s Response to Kohler'. [ pdf] Week 5: Roessler, J. 'The Silence of Self-Knowledge'. [pdf] Week 7: Campbell, J. 'Sense, Reference and Selective Attention' [pdf] |
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Mon 11 Nov, '19- |
WMA Graduate Research SeminarH4.22/4.Readings: Week 2: Soteriou, M. 'Cartesian Reflections on the Autonomy of the Mental'. [ pdf] Week 3: Eilan, N. 'On the Paradox of Gestalt Switches: Wittgenstein’s Response to Kohler'. [ pdf] Week 5: Roessler, J. 'The Silence of Self-Knowledge'. [pdf] Week 7: Campbell, J. 'Sense, Reference and Selective Attention' [pdf] |
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Mon 25 Nov, '19- |
WMA graduate research seminarS2.64 |
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Thu 28 Nov, '19 |
London-Warwick Mind Forum: LondonThe forum will take place at LSE, London. The event is free and does not require registration. CFA details and updates about the event will be published here: https://lwmindforum.wordpress.com/. For further info, email: m.corrado@warwick.ac.uk |
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Sat 7 Dec, '19 - Sun 8 Dec, '1910am - 11am |
MindGrad 2019MS.03Runs from Saturday, December 07 to Sunday, December 08. MINDGRAD 2019: OURSELVES AND OTHERS Warwick Graduate Conference in the Philosophy of Mind 7th-8th December 2019, University of Warwick (UK) Invited speakers: |
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Wed 8 Jan, '20- |
WMA Graduate Research Seminar - Reading Michael Ayers' Knowing and SeeingS1.39 |
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Wed 29 Jan, '20- |
WMA Graduate Research Seminar - Reading Michael Ayers' Knowing and SeeingS1.39 |
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Wed 19 Feb, '20- |
CANCELLED: WMA Graduate Research Seminar - Reading Michael Ayers' Knowing and SeeingS1.50. |
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Wed 4 Mar, '20- |
WMA Graduate Research Seminar - Reading Michael Ayers' Knowing and SeeingS1.39 |
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Mon 9 Mar, '20 |
Workshop with Richard MooreDetails TBC |
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Wed 18 Mar, '20- |
CANCELLED: Bart Geurts: First saying, then believingFirst saying, then believing: the pragmatic roots of folk psychologyBart Geurts, Nijmegen
Cowling room, 18th March, 3 pm
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Tue 24 Mar, '20 |
POSTPONED / Enquiry WorkshopS2.81 |
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Mon 30 Mar, '20 |
CANCELLED: On being a Believer: Workshop with David HunterWorkshop with David Hunter on his forthcoming book On being a believer. Further info TBA Contact: Johannes Roessler |
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Tue 14 Apr, '20 - Wed 15 Apr, '20All-day |
CANCELLED: Knowledge and Belief ConferenceMS.04, Zeeman Building, University of WarwickRuns from Tuesday, April 14 to Wednesday, April 15. Philosophy and Empirical Perspectives Interdisciplinary conference Speakers: |
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Thu 16 Apr, '20- |
CANCELLED: Katalin Farkas: The Unity of Knowledge |
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Mon 27 Apr, '20- |
CANCELLED: Conference: The Cultural Origins of Human Mind-Reading
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Wed 6 May, '20- |
Commitment lab meetingContact: Matt Chennels
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Fri 8 May, '20- |
The Communicative Mind reading groupContact: Richard Moore
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Fri 8 May, '20- |
Truth and Truthfulness Webinar: Chapter 2: Geneology - All Students WelcomeBy ZoomText: 'Truth and Truthfulness' by Bernard Williams (2002) |
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Mon 11 May, '20- |
WMA WIP Daniel Vanello "Moral understanding, moral individuality, and the irreplaceability of the individual” via TeamsDaniel Vanello: "Moral understanding, moral individuality, and the irreplaceability of the individual”
Abstract: The paper tackles a fundamental puzzle about our moral understanding. On the one hand, we take it as a requirement of our moral understanding that its content be generalisable. On the other hand, we give moral significance to particular relationships we enjoy only with a select few. The puzzle has been widely discussed in debates between impartialists and partialists, in particular regarding the status of special obligations. Although I tackle the puzzle of moral understanding by remaining within a framework familiar to the debate between impartialists and partialists, I focus on a less discussed topic: moral individuality and the irreplaceability of the individual. To this effect, I set up a debate between Bernard Williams, David Velleman and Raimond Gaita. I argue that both Williams and Velleman fail to give an account of the irreplaceability of the individual. I then argue that Gaita’s work allows us to diagnose both Williams’ and Velleman’s failure. I also argue that it provides us with an understanding of the irreplaceability of the individual and of moral individuality that explains both why we give special moral significance to our particular relationships and that at the same time is generalisable, thus furthering our understanding of the puzzle. Contact: Lucy Campbell |
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Wed 13 May, '20- |
Commitment lab meetingContact: Matt Chennels
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Wed 13 May, '20- |
Philosophy Department Colloquium: Richard Moore: 'The Communicative Foundations of Propositional Attitude Psychology'By ZoomSpeaker: Richard Moore The Communicative Foundations of Propositional Attitude Psychology |
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Fri 15 May, '20- |
The Communicative Mind reading groupContact: Richard Moore
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Fri 15 May, '20- |
Truth and Truthfulness Webinar: Chapter 3: The State of Nature - A Rough GuideBy ZoomText: 'Truth and Truthfulness' by Bernard Williams (2002) |
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Wed 20 May, '20- |
Commitment lab meetingContact: Matt Chennels
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Fri 22 May, '20- |
Truth and Truthfulness Webinar: Chapter 4: Truth, Assertion and BeliefBy ZoomText: 'Truth and Truthfulness' by Bernard Williams (2002) |
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Mon 25 May, '20- |
WMA WIP Jack Shardlow “Time and temporal experience, through Russell and Moore” via TeamsJack Shardlow: “Time and temporal experience, through Russell and Moore”
Abstract: This paper develops the account of our experience and knowledge of time put forward by Russell in his Theory of Knowledge manuscript. Although Russell abandons the project after it receives severe criticism from Wittgenstein (though several chapters derived from it appear as articles in Monist), in producing this manuscript ‘time’, and particularly the notion of ‘the present time’, gave Russell much pause for thought. As he was notorious for changing his mind on various philosophical issues, in the present discussion I propose to focus largely on Russell’s writing in 1912-3, comparing and contrasting this with some of the remarks made about memory and about the transparency of experience by Moore. My motivation is twofold. First as a matter of scholarship, because Russell’s expressed view over this period has often been misinterpreted and misconstrued. Second as a matter of philosophical curiosity. With an increase in interest in discussions of temporal experience in contemporary discussions, from the philosophy of memory to the temporal aspects of perceptual experience, Russell’s writing in 1912-3 provides us with an interesting (and rarely explicitly offered or defended) position in logical space, making this an independently fruitful and worthwhile undertaking. Contact: Lucy Campbell |