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Philosophy events, week of 31st March

Research seminars next week (more information):

  • Stephan Torre (University of Aberdeen), “Anti-haecceitism and De Re Modality,” at St Andrews’ Philosophy Club on Wednesday, 2nd April.
  • Suilin Lavelle (University of Edinburgh), Xabier Barandiaran (University of the Basque Country), and Dan Hutto (University of Wollongong) at Edinburgh’s Philosophy, Psychology, and Informatics Reading Group on Wednesday, 2nd April.
  • Elizabeth Barnes (University of Leeds) at Stirling’s Visiting Speaker Seminar on Thursday, 3rd April.
  • Ellen Clarke (All Souls College, University of Oxford), “The multiple realizability of biological individuality,” at Edinburgh’s Philosophy of Science: Contemporary Debates on Thursday, 3rd April.

Other events next week (more information):

  • The Global Politics of LGBT Rights, Rules, and Responses, St Andrews, 4th April.  Speakers: John Anderson (University of St Andrews), Barbara Zollner (Birkbeck University), Matthew Waites (University of Glasgow), William Vlcek (University of St Andrews), Helga Varden (University of Illinois), Claudia Card (University of Wisconsin).
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Philosophy events, week of 24th March

(Sorry for the lateness of this announcement!)

Research seminars next week (more information):

  • John O’Dea (University of Tokyo) “Why, and in what sense, things look different in the shade: solving the puzzle of constancy,” at Glasgow’s Philosophy of Mind and Psychology Research Seminar on Monday, 24th March.
  • Catherine Rowett (University of East Anglia) at Edinburgh’s Epistemology Research Group on Wednesday, 26th March.
  • Steinvor Arnadottir (University of Stirling) at Glasgow’s Senior Seminar on Tuesday, 25th March.
  • Roman Frigg (London School of Economics), “The fiction view of modelling,” at Edinburgh’s Philosophy of Science: Contemporary Debates on Thursday, 27th March.

Other events next week (more information):

  • Scottish Centre for Continental Philosophy Launch Workshop, Dundee, 24th March.  Speakers: James Williams (Dundee), Daniel Whistler (Liverpool), Pascale Gillot (Paris 1), Yoni Van Den Eede (VUB), Wahida Khandker (MMU), Pierre Cassou-Noguès (Paris 8).
  • David Bain (University of Glasgow) at Edinburgh’s Philosophy Society on Thursday, 27th March.
  • A.E. Taylor Lecture, Edinburgh, 28th March.  Speaker: Catherine Rowett (University of East Anglia), “Truth and lies: why Plato’s philosopher kings will believe the Noble Lie, and believe it first, precisely because they know the truth.”
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EWIP Spring Workshop: Call for Respondents and Registration

The Edinburgh Women in Philosophy Group is proud to announce its annual Spring Workshop on Philosophical Methodologies on Friday the 16th of May 2014 at the University of Edinburgh.

We have decided to address the issue of philosophical methodology, following the success of previous EWPG Spring workshops, which have respectively focused on the under-representation of women in philosophy, the ethics and aesthetics of pornography, and implicit bias.

This issue of philosophical methodology has become a lively discussion point in philosophy departments and blogs due to the question of whether the nature of philosophical discourse is exclusionary either in the way philosophy is written or in the way it is done in more public events, such as conferences, seminars and workshops, not to mention in educational settings.

We hope this event will contribute to helping raise awareness about philosophical methodology and how it relates to both philosophical feminism and improving the situation of women in philosophy departments.

Confirmed speakers are:
Catarina Dutilh Novaes (Groningen)
Amia Srinivasan (Oxford)
Nancy Bauer (Tufts)
Eric Schliesser (Ghent)

For more information and for registration, see the following page:

http://www.ppls.ed.ac.uk/events/view/edinburgh-women-in-philosophy-group-11

We have a limited amount of Analysis Trust bursaries to cover postgraduate participation and accommodation, and we invite postgraduate students to submit expressions of interest to respond to the speakers’ talks. Please submit a short statement (max. 300 words) detailing your motivation to do so to the following address: ewpgspringworkshop@gmail.com. The deadline for submissions is the 15th of April.

We would like to acknowledge the generosity of the workshop’s sponsors: the Analysis Trust, the Scots Philosophical Association, the Society for Women in Philosophy – UK, and the School of Philosophy, Psychology and Language Sciences, University of Edinburgh.

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Frege@Stirling II: Frege’s Conception of Sense

Frege’s Conception of Sense. Context, Content and Inference in a Fregean Framework

May 10-11, 2014

University of Stirling, Pathfoot Building – Room B2

Speakers: Patricia Blanchette (Notre Dame), Mike Beaney (York), Bob Hale (Sheffield), Peter Milne (Stirling), Walter Pedriali (Stirling), Michael Potter (Cambridge).

http://fregeleverhulmestirling.wordpress.com/

Topic: On one natural reading, Fregean thoughts are absolute, timeless, sharply bounded. They are not relativized to anything, not even worlds; they are radically de-contextualized. So construed, thoughts (i.e. the senses of declarative sentences) are entities of staggering (indeed, ungraspable) informational complexity. And yet senses are what competent speakers supposedly understand. Indeed, their content is what guides linguistically competent agents in their inferential activities. However, since senses contain all and only that which determines reference, imperfect grasp of any of their parts should by rights impair our ability to draw inferences correctly. There is thus a prima facie tension between two of the requirements that are constitutive of the notion of sense, namely, that senses be complete in every respect and that they determinedly guide inference. The aim of the workshop is to explore ways to resolve this tension within a Fregean framework. Questions to be considered at the workshop will include discussion of Frege’s various meaning-determining principles, the attendant indeterminacy issues, the role of definitions and elucidations in keeping such issues at bay and the notion(s) of content that Frege was working with.

Registration: £50 (including conference dinner, lunches and coffees); £30 (excluding conference dinner). Graduate Students: £25 (including dinner) and £15 (lunches and coffees only). Registration is free for those who will not be attending any meals.

For further information regarding the workshop and to register for the event, please contact the organisers, Philip Ebert and Walter Pedriali.

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Early Analytic Group at Stirling

On April 12, the Stirling’s Early Analytic Group will meet from 10:30 until 18:30. The programme is as follows:

  • Jim Levine (Trinity College, Dublin), ‘Frege and Russell on the Individuation and Analysis of Propositional Contents’
  • Janine Gühler (St Andrews/Stirling), ‘On non-actual mathematical objects in Frege and Aristotle’
  • Bryan Pickel and Brian Rabern (Edinburgh), ‘The Antinomy of the Variable: Renewed and Resolved’
  • Rob Trueman (Stirling), ‘Hanks and the dissolution of the proposition’
  • Michael Potter (Cambridge), TBC.

All welcome. There is no registration fee for the event, but please contact Walter Pedriali atw.b.pedriali@stir.ac.uk so that appropriate catering arrangements can be made (lunch and coffees will be provided).

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Mary Midgely at Aye Write! Book Festival

Mary Midgely comes to Aye Write! Glasgow’s Book Festival on Thursday 10th May.  She will be in discussion with Raymond Tallis on the subject of ‘Are You An Illusion?’, asking such questions as ‘Do you think that brain chemistry defines who you are?’ and ‘do you believe you are a fiction conjured by your brain’s deeper drives?’. Find out more about the event here: http://bit.ly/1genJAI

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The Global Politics of LGBT Rights, Rules, and Responses

A one-day workshop hosted by the Centre for Global Constitutionalism, the School of International Relations, and the Departments of Philosophy at the University of St Andrews.

9:00am – 3:30pm, Friday, 4th of April, Parliament Hall.

Registration is free; contact globcon@st-andrews.ac.uk  to register.

Web: http://www.st-andrews.ac.uk/intrel/cgc/

On 17 June 2011, the United Nations Human Rights Council (UNHRC) passed a resolution making it illegal to discriminate against anyone on the basis of sexual orientation and gender identity. The resolution, proposed by South Africa, passed on the basis of a 23-19 vote. The resolution is binding on all members of the United Nations, but it does not include any sanctions for those who violate it. The resolution generated opposition from a number of countries who argued that the Council had no right to impose a set of ‘Western’ cultural norms concerning sexuality on their societies. On 15 December 2011, the Office of the UN Commissioner for Human Rights issued a report detailing reports of discrimination and violence against lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgendered people. In September 2012, the UN Human Rights Office issued a report entitled Born Free and Equal which called on states to undertake measures to legalize the rights of LGBT people.

This activity by various UN offices and officials suggests that there is a global effort to make LGBT rights part of a global legal regime surrounding human rights. This workshop explores both the specific question of whether or not international institutions such as the UN are best positioned to advance such rights, and broader issues concerning tension between multiculturalism and protection of individual rights, in what arenas cultural defences have any merit, and the constraints imposed by the value of equality on both domestic and international institutions. Especially in light of the strong cultural resistance to LGBT rights in some parts of the world, how can an international institution help to promote the rule of law and rights protection in this particular area? What normative justifications exist for a globalized regime of rights protection in this particular area? Do cultural defences have any merit in this realm? What responses are available to those who are victims of homophobia or discrimination through international channels?

The workshop, sponsored by the Centre for Global Constitutionalism, Department of Philosophy, and School of International Relations, will provide an opportunity for a critical dialogue on an issue at the forefront of human rights, global governance, and international law.

Schedule

9-9:30 Coffee and Introduction

9:30-11:00 Panel 1

• John Anderson, University of St Andrews: Defending cultural difference: the Russian Orthodox Church, the Kremlin and gay rights in Russia

• Barbara Zollner, Birkbeck University: Islamic Law and Homosexuality

11:00-11:30 Coffee

11:30-1:00: Panel 2

• Matthew Waites, University of Glasgow: Human Rights, Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity in the Commonwealth and Global Queer Politics

• William Vlcek, University of St Andrews: Crafting Rights in a Constitution: Gay Rights in the Cayman Islands and the Limits to Global Norm Diffusion

1:00-2:30 Lunch

2:30-4:00 Panel 3

• Helga Varden, University of Illinois: On the Wrongness of Sexual Violence and Sexual Discrimination — a Kantian Approach

• Claudia Card, University of Wisconsin: Surviving Homophobia

4:00-5:30 Free

5:30-6:30 Wine reception

6:30: Workshop Dinner

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Philosophy events, week of 17th March

Research seminars next week (more information):

  • Kevin Mulligan (University of Geneva) at Glasgow’s Senior Seminar on Tuesday, 18th March.
  • Jessica Frazier (University of Kent) at Dundee’s Visiting Speaker Seminar on Wednesday, 19th March.
  • Matthew Ratcliffe (Durham University), “How Anxiety Induces Verbal Hallucinations,” at Edinburgh’s Philosophy, Psychology, and Informatics Reading Group on Wednesday, 19th March.
  • Steven Horst  (Wesleyan) at Stirling’s Visiting Speaker Seminar on Thursday, 20th March.

Other events next week (more information):

  • Realism, Pluralism, and Naturalism, Stirling, 17th March.  Speakers: Steven Horst (Wesleyan), Rachel Crossley (SASP), Ian Robertson (SASP), Zoe Drayson (Stirling), Michael Wheeler (Stirling).
  • Herman Cappelen (University of St Andrews) at Edinburgh’s Philosophy Society on Thursday, 20th March.
  • Scottish Centre for Continental Philosophy Launch Workshop, Dundee, 21st March.  Speakers: James Williams (Dundee), Daniel Whistler (Liverpool), Pascale Gillot (Paris 1), Yoni Van Den Eede (VUB), Wahida Khandker (MMU) Pierre Cassou-Noguès (Paris 8).
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Scottish Centre for Continental Philosophy: Launch Workshop

To celebrate the launch of the Scottish Centre for Continental Philosophy in the School of Humanities at the University of Dundee, with the support of the Scots Philosophical Association, there will be a workshop open to all on the 21st of March 2014 as part of the School’s new Transforming Humanities research initiative.

Programme

11:00- 11:30 Coffee and welcome (Dalhousie 2F13 http://www.app.dundee.ac.uk/campusmap/ )

11:30 – 12:15 James Williams, Dundee ‘Continental philosophy? Oh, yes!’

12:15 – 1 Daniel Whistler, Liverpool ‘Naturphilosophie and Language’

1-2 Lunch (provided)

2-2:45 Pascale Gillot, Paris 1, ‘Foucault’s Archeology: the Notion of Epistemological Break’

2:45 – 3 Yoni Van Den Eede, VUB, ‘Instrumentalism vs. Essentialism in the Philosophy of Technology: An Ongoing Struggle’

Chair: Jeremy Dunham, Edinburgh

3:30 Coffee

3:30 – 4:15 Wahida Khandker, MMU, ‘Philosophy, Animality, and the Life Sciences’

4:15 – 5 Pierre Cassou-Noguès, Paris 8, ‘The waves and the day after’

Chair: Brian Smith, Dundee

Note: the afternoon sessions will be in Dalhousie 2S17

6pm Drinks

Contact: James Williams, j.r.williams@dundee.ac.uk

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Philosophy events, week of 10th March

Research seminars next week (more information):

  • Mark Textor (King’s College, London) at Glasgow’s Senior Seminar on Tuesday, 11th March.
  • Keith Crome (Manchester Metropolitan University) at Dundee’s Visiting Speaker’s Seminar on Wednesday, 12th March.
  • Richard Creath (Arizona State University) at St Andrews’ Philosophy Club on Wednesday, 12th March, and at Stirling’s Visiting Speaker Seminar on Thursday, 13th March.
  • Matthew Benton (University of Oxford) at Edinburgh’s Epistemology Research Group on Wednesday, 12th march.
  • Alexander Bird (University of Bristol), “Inference to the Best Explanation: Problems and Paradigms,” at Edinburgh’s Philosophy of Science: Contemporary Debates on Thursday, 13th March.
  • Susanna Siegel (Harvard Universsity) at Edinburgh’s Visiting Speaker Seminar on Friday, 14th March.

Other events next week (more information):

  • Stephen Graham (Newcastle University) at Edinburgh’s Philosophy Society on Thursday, 13th March.
  • Book Symposium on Ernest Sosa’s “Epistemic Agency”, Edinburgh, 14th March.  Speakers: J. Adam Carter (Edinburgh), Zoe Drayson (University of Stirling), John Greco (St. Louis), Jesper Kallestrup (Edinburgh), Matthew McGrath (Missouri), Ernest Sosa (Rutgers University).
  • Philosophy for Children, Edinburgh, 15th March.  Speakers: Peter Worley (Philosophy Foundation, London), David Birch (Philosophy Foundation, London), Michael Hand (University of Birmingham), Anne Baril (University of New Mexico), John Greco (St Louis University), Allan Hazlett (University of Edinburgh).
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Realism, Pluralism, and Naturalism

A one-day workshop at the University of Stirling, supported by Zoe Drayson’s Impact Research Fellowship

https://sites.google.com/site/zdrayson/workshop2014

Monday 17 March 2014, 2A9 Cottrell BuildingUniversity of Stirling

There is no registration fee, but those wishing to attend should email z.e.drayson[at]stir.ac.uk to confirm numbers.

Schedule

10.00 Steven Horst (Wesleyan) Beyond Reduction: what can philosophy of mind learn from post-reductionist philosophy of science?

10.45 discussion

11.15 Coffee break

11.30 Graduate session:

11.30 Rachel Crossley (SASP) How does Horst’s cognitive pluralism respond to the intuition that there is something unique about psychological gaps?

12.00 discussion

12.15 Ian Robertson (SASP) Does cognitive pluralism allow us to plausibly evaluate our cognition?

12.45 discussion

1.00 Lunch (Room 2A11)

2.00 Zoe Drayson (Stirling) Explanation and Realism

2.45 discussion

3.15 Coffee break

3.30 Michael Wheeler (Stirling) Minimal Naturalism

4.15 discussion

4.45 Round table discussion

5.30 Finish

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Philosophy events, week of 3rd March

Research seminars next week (more information):

  • Mike Martin (University College, London) at Glasgow’s Senior Seminar on Tuesday, 4th March, at  St Andrews’ Philosophy Club (“Glances & Sighs: Social Competence & the Domain of Expression”) on Wednesday, 5th March, and at Stirling’s Visiting Speaker Seminar on Thursday, 6th March.

Other events next week (more information):

  • Moral vs. Intellectual Virtue, Edinburgh, 4th March.  Speakers: Allan Hazlett (University of Edinburgh), Alan Wilson (University of Edinburgh), Peter Millican (University of Oxford), Anne Baril (University of New Mexico), Sarah Broadie (University of St Andrews).
  • James Harris (University of St Andrews) at St Andrews’ Philosophy Society on Tuesday, 4th March.
  • Michela Massimi (University of Edinburgh) at Edinburgh’s Philosophy Society on Thursday, 6th March.
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Philosophy events, week of 24th February

Research seminars next week (more information):

  • Alan Johnson (University College, London), “Illusions of Motion and Their Perceptual Significance,” at Glasgow’s Philosophy of Mind and Psychology Research Seminar on Monday, 24th February.
  • John Collins (University of East Anglia) at Glasgow’s Senior Seminar on Tuesday, 25th February.
  • Helga Varden (CEPPA/University of Illinois), “A Kantian Theory of Legal Responsibility for Animals,” at St Andrews’ Philosophy Club on Wednesday, 26th February.
  • Jesús Zamora (Universidad Nacional de Educación a Distancia) at Edinburgh’s Epistemology Research Group on Wednesday, 26th February.
  • John Collins (University of East Anglia), “Variables and Natural Language,” at Stirling’s Visiting Speaker Seminar on Thursday, 27th February.
  • James Ladyman (Philosophy, University of Bristol), “Science, Metaphysics and Structural Realism,” at Edinburgh’s Philosophy of Science: Contemporary Debates on Thursday, 27th February.
  • Michael Brady (University of Glasgow) at Edinburgh’s Visiting Speaker Seminar on Friday, 28th February.

Other events next week (more information):

  • Barbara Sattler (Univeristy of St Andrews) at St Andrews’ Philosophy Society on Tuesday, 25th February.
  • Michael Brady (University of Glasgow) at Edinburgh’s Philosophy Society on Thursday, 27th February.
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Philosophy events, week of 10th February

Research seminars next week (more information):

  • John Broome (University of Oxford) at Glasgow’s Senior Seminar on Tuesday, 11th February.
  • John Broome (University of Oxford), “Climate Change, Life, and Death,” at St Andrews’ Philosophy Club on Wednesday, 12th February.
  • Trent Dougherty (Baylor University), “Against Knowledge First,” at Edinburgh’s Epistemology Research Seminar on Wednesday, 12th February.
  • Adam Caulton (University of Cambridge), “Hume’s Dictum as a Guide to Practical Ontology,” at Stirling’s Visiting Speaker Seminar on Thursday, 13th February.
  • Robyn Carston (University College, London), “Lexical Meaning and Concept Communicated,” at Edinburgh’s Visiting Speaker Seminar on Friday, 14th February.

Other events next week (more information):

  • Antony Duff (University of Stirling) at St Andrews’ Philosophy Society on Tuesday, 11th February.
  • Jessica Brown (University of St Andrews) at Edinburgh’s Philosophy Society on Thursday, 13th February.
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2014-15 David Hume Fellowship

Applications are invited for the David Hume Fellowship to be held at the Institute for Advanced Studies in the Humanities, The University of Edinburgh. The Fellowship is for six months in the academic year 2014-15. The David Hume Fellow will be an established scholar in any aspect of Hume studies. The Fellowship, which will be offered annually for five years, is intended to provide an opportunity for scholars to come to Edinburgh to work on the important Hume resources available in the city’s libraries and archives. The successful applicant will be expected to be in residence in Edinburgh for the duration of the Fellowship and to participate fully in IASH activities.  The fellowship provides a bursary of £10,000 towards travel and accommodation.

The closing date for the receipt of applications is 28 February, 2014.  For more information:

http://www.iash.ed.ac.uk/fellowships/fellowships-at-iash/the-david-hume-fellowship/

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Philosophy events, week of 3rd February

Research seminars next week (more information):

  • Guy Longworth (University of Warwick) at Glasgow’s Senior Seminar on Tuesday, 4th February.
  • Brian Smith (University of Dundee), “The Idea of Freedom in Deleuze,” at Dundee’s Visiting Speaker Seminar on Wednesday, 5th February.
  • Hasok Chang (University of Cambridge), “The foundations and progress of scientific knowledge: Popper, Kuhn and beyond,” at Edinburgh’s Philosophy of Science: Contemporary Debates on Thursday, 6th February.

Other events next week (more information):

  • Andy Clark (University of Edinburgh) at Edinburgh’s Philosophy Society on Thursday, 6th February.
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Philosophy events, week of 27th January

Research seminars next week (more information):

  • Thomas Hummel (Taste and Smell Clinic, University of Dresden), “Why and how we smell, how to measure olfactory function, and how to diagnose and treat olfactory loss,” at Glasgow’s Philosophy of Mind and Psychology Research Seminar on Monday, 27th January.
  • Suilin Lavelle (University of Edinburgh) at Glasgow’s Senior Seminar on Tuesday, 28th January.
  • Ema Sullivan-Bissett (University of Birmingham), “Epistemically Innocent Delusions: Support for the One-Stage Account,” at Edinburgh’s Epistemology Research Group on Wednesday, 29th January.
  • Javier Echenique  (University of Chile), “Human Life as a Basic Good: A Dialectical Critique,” at St Andrews’ Philosophy Club on Wednesday, 29th January.
  • Caspar Hare (Massachusetts Institute of Technology), “Procreation – Before and After,” at Edinburgh’s Visiting Speaker Seminar on Friday, 31st January.

Other events next week (more information):

  • Katherine Hawley (University of St Andrews) at St Andrews’ Philosophy Society on Tuesday, 28th January.
  • Peter Poellner (University of Warwick) at Edinburgh’s Philosophy Society on Thursday, 30th January.
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Philosophy events, week of 13th January

Research seminars next week (more information):

  • Chris Daly (University of Manchester) at Glasgow on Tuesday, 14th January.
  • Matthew Benton (University of Edinburgh) at Edinburgh’s Epistemology Research Group on Wednesday, 15th January.
  • Helen Beebee (University of Manchester) at Edinburgh’s Philosophy of Science: Contemporary Debates on Thursday, 16th January.
  • Sarah Broadie (University of St Andrews) at Edinburgh on Friday, 17th January.

Other events next week (more information):

  • Benedict Smith (University of Durham) at Edinburgh’s Philosophy Society on Thursday, 16th January.
  • Suffering and Normativity, Glasgow, 18th January.  Speakers: Brock Bastian, Manolo Martinez, Tom Johnstone, Jonathan Cohen, Matthew Fulkerson.