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Thu 26 Sep, '19
2-Day Workshop: Self-Knoweldge and Judgement in Early Modern Philosophy
The Cowling Room (S2.77), Social Sciences Building

Ursula Renz (Klagenfurt) will be visiting the Philosophy Department this Autumn Term as an IAS International Visiting Fellow. This 2-day workshop marks the beginning of her visit.

Funded by the IAS.

PROGRAMME

10:30-12:00 - Maria Rosa Antognazza (KCL), 'Knowledge and the First Person'

12:00-1:30 - Ioannis Evrigenis (Tufts). 'The Fly on the Axletree: Hobbes on Self-Knowledge and Judgement'

2:30-4:00 - Mark Philp (Warwick), 'Godwin and Wollstonecraft: Deliberation and Self-Knowledge'

4:30-6:00 - Ursula Renz (Klagenfurt/Warwick), 'Rousseau's Solution to a Rousseauean Problem'

7:15 - Dinner (Radcliffe Restaurant, UofW Campus)

Thu 26 Sep, '19
-
PG Induction
H0.64
Thu 26 Sep, '19
-
Information Fair
Warwick Arts Centre Studio
Fri 27 Sep, '19
-
2-Day Workshop: Self-Knowledge and Judgement in Early Modern Philosophy
The Cowling Room (S2.77), Social Sciences Building

Day 2

PROGRAMME

9:00-10:30 - Mario De Caro (Roma Tre/Tufts), 'Machiavelli's Naturalism'

10:30-12:00 - Guy Longworth (Warwick), 'Descartes on How the Mind is Better Known Than the Body'

12:00-1:15 - Johannes Roessler (Warwick), 'Judgement and Self-Understanding in Montaigne's Essays'

Fri 27 Sep, '19
-
PG Welcome Conference
H0.52
Tue 1 Oct, '19
-
CELPA: Sameer Bajaj (Philosophy, Warwick)

Papers are circulated prior to the seminar. Please contact Tom Parr (T.Parr@warwick.ac.uk) for further information.

Thu 3 Oct, '19
-
Department of Philosophy Undergraduate Welcome Party
Cryfield Pavilion
Fri 4 Oct, '19
Workshop on Expression and Self-Knowledge with Dorit Bar-On and Lucy Campbell

Expression and Self-knowledge

Warwick University, Friday 4th October 2019

Humanities H0.03

Programme

11.00 – 12.30
Lucy Campbell (Warwick)
‘Self-knowledge: expression without expressivism’

12.30 – 2.00

Dorit Bar-On (University of Connecticut)
‘No ‘How’ Privileged Self-Knowledge’

3.00 – 4.30

Cristina Borgoni (Bayreuth University)

‘Primitive forms of first-person authority and expressive capacities’

Sat 5 Oct, '19
Departmental Open Day
Philosophy Department
Tue 8 Oct, '19
-
CELPA: Annette Zimmerman (Princeton)

Papers are circulated prior to the seminar. Please contact Tom Parr (T.Parr@warwick.ac.uk) for further information.

Tue 15 Oct, '19
-
CELPA: Iason Gabriel (DeepMind)

Papers are circulated prior to the seminar. Please contact Tom Parr (T.Parr@warwick.ac.uk) for further information.

Tue 15 Oct, '19
-
Official Launch of the Post-Kantian Research Centre
Room S0.11, Social Sciences Building

Simon Critchley (New School for Social Research): Tragedy, the Greeks and Us

Response by Andrew Cooper (Warwick) and David Fearn (Warwick)

Wed 16 Oct, '19
-
Philosophy Department Colloquium
Room OC1.07. Oculus Buildng

Speaker: Ursula Renz (Klagenfurt)

Title: 'Socratic Self-Knowledge and the Concept of the Human Self: From Phenomenology to Metaphysics and Back Again'

Fri 18 Oct, '19
-
First Postgraduate Professional Development Workshop
S2.77, The Cowling Room

Programme:

2.00pm - Literature Search Skills and Tools (Kate Courage, Academic Support Librarian)

Group A (MA students and first year MPhil students): Room S2.77

2.30pm - Time Management/Deadlines/Mitigating Circumstances/Extensions (Johannes Roessler)

3.00pm - Writing MA/MPhil Essays (Tom Crowther)

3.45pm - Tea and Coffee (Cowling Room)

4.00pm - Planning your MA/Phil (Johannes Roessler)

Group B (PhD students and second year MPhil students): Room S2.79

2.30pm - Graduate Progress Committees, Teaching, Submitting Papers to Conferences, Conference Funding (Peter Poellner)

3.00pm - Writing an MA/MPhil Thesis (Johannes Roessler)

3.45pm - Tea and Coffee

4.00pm - Planning your PhD/MPhil (Peter Poellner)

Both Groups (Cowling Room, S2.77)

4.15pm - Appling for PhD Programmes and Scholarships (Peter Poellner)

5.00pm - Drinks in The Dirty Duck

Sat 19 Oct, '19
Open Day
Philosophy Department

Departmental Undergraduate events will be taking place throughout the day.

Tue 22 Oct, '19
-
CELPA: Ruth Chang (Oxford)

Papers are circulated prior to the seminar. Please contact Tom Parr (T.Parr@warwick.ac.uk) for further information.

Tue 22 Oct, '19
-
CRPLA Seminar
Room S0.11, Social Sciences Building

Speaker: Serge Trottein (CNRS/École Normale Supérieure/PSL Research University)

Title: 'Kant and Postmodern Aesthetics'

Wed 23 Oct, '19
-
MAP Round Table Discussion
Room S1.50, Social Sciences Building

Round Table Discussion on Inclusivity and Diversity in Philosophy at Warwick

Wed 23 Oct, '19
-
PG Work in Progress Seminar
S2.77, The Cowling Room

Speaker: Adam Neal

Title: 'Social Poverty'

Respondent: Simon Gansinger

ABSTRACT:

The paper explores the relationship between material deprivation, and our needs as social beings. It argues that those who suffer at that intersection do so in two distinct but sometimes overlapping ways: 1) their needs for friendship, human contact and intimacy; and 2) status driven harms. The paper then conceptualises these harms as social poverty and argues that any complete account of poverty should include the impact on our social needs and our social position. The paper explores the ways in which each aspect of social poverty can lead to a worsening of material conditions. These include the social capital we gain from our social relationships, the impact of social poverty on our ability to participate in the job market and the impact on our ability to make and sustain social connections. The paper contextualises social poverty by discussing studies on the residents of Chicago who died during the 1995 Heatwave, poverty in inner city areas and low-income pensioners. After assessing different accounts of poverty, the paper shows that assessing poverty using income fails to do justice to the many factors which determine the extent of one's deprivation, including people's environments, social situation, social norms, friends and family, unemployment and life expectancy. This leads to an assessment of poverty as capability deprivation which, the paper argues, is more effective in assessing deprivation in respect of our nature as social beings. However, the paper argues that capability deprivation goes too far from our ordinary understanding of poverty. Instead, the paper outlines a conception of social poverty and argues that should be prominent in our thinking about deprivation.

Thu 24 Oct, '19 - Fri 25 Oct, '19
10am - 6pm
2-Day Philosophy Taster Course at Warwick in London
Stanley Building, Pancras Square, Kings Cross, London

Runs from Thursday, October 24 to Friday, October 25.

Tutors:

David Bather Woods

Mat Coakley

Lucy Campbell

Thu 24 Oct, '19
-
Poetry Reading Event
Room R0.03, Ramphal Building

Speaker: Carlos Soto Román's Experiments in Poetry

An evening of poetic reading and discussion with the Poet.

Mon 28 Oct, '19
-
Poetry and Philosophy Reading Group
TBC

How does poetry defend itself in the court of philosophy? Does it have any say in the matter; or does someone, or something, speak on its behalf? Does philosophy, in a perverse inversion, ever get tried in the court of poetry? This reading group places itself in the thick of these trials, tracing the debates they wage and the judgements they provoke. Readings will include 21st century texts that have taken the challenging entanglement of poetics and philosophy forward. These texts will be read beside the poems they discuss or the poems that suggest themselves through the text. We invite students and Faculty members from Departments across the University to join us!

Session 1: The Affect of Poetry

Rei Terada, 'Looking Away: Phenomenality and Dissatisfaction', Kant to Adorno (p.35-73)

Adrienne Rich: 'What is Found There'

Samuel Taylor Coleridge: 'Constancy to an Ideal Object'

Vinod Kumar Shukla: 'I Toss a Bunch of Keys'

Guest Discussant: Dr Stacey McDowell

Tue 29 Oct, '19
-
CELPA: Michael Rabenberg (Princeton)

Papers are circulated prior to the seminar. Please contact Tom Parr (T.Parr@warwick.ac.uk) for further information.

Tue 29 Oct, '19
-
Post-Kantian European Philosophy Seminar
Room S0.11, Social Sciences Building

Speaker: Stephen Houlgate (Warwick)

Title: Kant and Hegel on the Antinomies of Reason

Wed 30 Oct, '19
-
MAP/Philosophy Society Event
Philosophy Common Room, 2nd Floor, Social Sciences Building

'Find Your Philosophy'

Wed 30 Oct, '19
-
Philosophy Department Colloquium
Room OC1.07. Oculus Buildng

Speaker: Sameer Bajaj (Philosophy, Warwick)

Title: TBC

Thu 31 Oct, '19
-
Maurice Blanchot Reading Group
Room S2.74, Social Sciences Building

Please contact Alex Obrigewitsch for further information (Alex.Obrigewitsch@warwick.ac.uk)

Tue 12 Nov, '19
-
CELPA: Liam Shields (Manchester)

Papers are circulated prior to the seminar. Please contact Tom Parr (T.Parr@warwick.ac.uk) for further information.

Tue 12 Nov, '19
-
CRPLA Seminar
Room S0.11, Social Sciences Building

Speaker: Joanna Zylinska (Department of New Media and Communications, Goldsmiths)

Title: 'Artificial Intelligence, Anthropocene Stupidity'

ABSTRACT

'My talk will engage with two defining apocalyptic narratives of our times: the Anthropocene and AI (Artificial Intelligence). Both of these narratives, in their multiple articulations, predict the end of the human and of the world as we (humans) know it, while also hinting at the possibility of salvation. Looking askew at the conceptual and aesthetic tropes shaping them, and at their socio-political contexts, I will be particularly interested in the way in which these two stories about planetary-level threats come together, and in the reasons for their uncanny proximity. Concurring with Marshall McLuhan that art works as a 'Distant Early Warning system' for all kinds of apocalypse, I will suggest that it can also serve as a testing ground for the making and unmaking of such apocalyptic scenarios. And it is in art that I will seek the possibility of envisaging a better and more prudent relationship with technology - and with the world - from within the Anthropocene-AI nexus. The talk will include a presentation of some visual work from my own art practice'.

Wed 13 Nov, '19
-
MAP Seminar
E0.23 (PAIS), Social Sciences Building

Speaker: Sameer Bajaj

Title: 'Protesting Injustice: Fairness, Sacrifice and Civility'

Abstract:

Recent democratic movements worldwide have put pressure on traditional views of the permissible ways of protesting injustice in democratic societies. These movements raise the following questions: Must principled disobedience of the law be civil as opposed to uncivil? Is rioting ever a permissible method of protesting injustice? What is the proper place of anger in protest movements? Can counterproductive forms of protest - forms of protest that predictably lead political majorities to respond with greater injustices - ever be justified? In this session, we will discuss these and related questions.

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