Monthly Archives: January 2013

CANCELLED: Northwestern Ancient Philosophy Workshop: Terry Penner on Plato’s dialogues and analytic philosophy, Jan 18th

Terry Penner (UW Madison)  will be giving a talk to the ancient philosophy workshop on Friday, Jan. 18th,:


The Problems of Philosophy in Plato’s Dialogues
Friday, January 18, 2013
4:00 PM – 6:00 PM
Kresge Hall, Rm2-345 1880 Campus Drive. 
The Problems of Philosophy in Plato’s Dialogues, and Analytical Philosophy’s handling of them – so far. With special reference to Misidentifications of the Intended Object of an agent’s Desire for the Good.
via Ancient Philosophy Workshop mailing list

CFP: University at Albany Philosophical Association 6th Annual Graduate Philosophy Conference: Bioethics, April 2013

CALL FOR PAPERS IN BIOETHICS
*Deadline: Feb. 18, 2013*


University at Albany Philosophical Association
6th Annual Graduate Philosophy Conference: Bioethics
Date: April 13th, 2013
Location: University at Albany, SUNY, Albany NY
Keynote: Dr. David DeGrazia, George Washington University

We cordially invite graduate students to submit papers on any
subject in bioethics. Papers should be suitable for a 25 to 30 minute
presentation (approximately 12-15 pages). All submissions should
be suitable for blind review and should include a separate cover
page containing the following information: your name, paper title, an
abstract of no more than 100 words, institution of affiliation, email
address and phone number. Brief biographical information will be
requested upon acceptance. Please submit papers via email, with
“conference submission” as the subject line. Acceptable formats are
MS Word document, rich text format file, or PDF file. Please email
to: uapa.submission@gmail.com

Deadline for Submission: February 18th, 2013

For more information about the conference or submission requirements,
please contact Bill Young at uapa.email@gmail.com.


Postdoctoral Fellowship: Hamilton College (AOS/AOC open, special consideration for Ancient, Bioethics, Phil Law)

HAMILTON COLLEGE, Clinton, NY.

The Philosophy Department at Hamilton College invites applications for the Chauncey Truax Post- Doctoral Fellowship in Philosophy. The position is a two-year appointment to begin July 2013, with a teaching load of three courses per year. AOS and AOC are open, but the department has some interest in candidates who can teach Ancient Philosophy, Bioethics, or Philosophy of Law. Completion of the dissertation by time of appointment is expected. In addition to salary, the fellowship also includes funds for research. Candidates should submit initially only a letter of application, CV, and teaching materials (eg. evaluations, sample syllabi) to Interfolio athttps://secure.interfolio.com/apply/20921. Address materials and questions to Marianne Janack, Chair, Philosophy Department atphilo@hamilton.edu. All application materials must be received by March 15, 2013.

 

 

Hamilton College (www.hamilton.edu) is a residential liberal arts college located in the Mohawk Valley of upstate New York; for applicants with dual-career considerations, Hamilton participates in the regional Higher Education Recruitment Consortium, which posts additional area employment opportunities at www.upstatenyherc.org. Hamilton College is an affirmative action, equal opportunity employer and is committed to diversity in all areas of the campus community. Hamilton provides domestic partner benefits. Candidates from underrepresented groups in higher education are especially encouraged to apply.


2nd CFP: Translating Realism: The Nature and Emergence of Contemporary French Thought


CFP: FEAST “Envisioning Plurality: Feminist Perspectives on Pluralism in Ethics, Politics, and Social Theory,” Fall 2013

FEAST

The Association for Feminist Ethics and

Social Theory

 

invites submissions for the Fall 2013 conference:

 

Envisioning Plurality: Feminist Perspectives on Pluralism in Ethics, Politics, and Social Theory

 

Oct. 17-20, 2013

 

Fiesta Resort and Conference Center

Tempe, AZ

http://www.fiestainnresort.com/

 

submission deadline: February 28, 2013

 

Keynote speakers:

Linda Martín Alcoff, Professor of Philosophy at Hunter College and the CUNY Graduate Center. Author of Visible Identities: Race, Gender and the Self,  Alcoff has initiated public discussions of pluralism, through both her Pluralist’s Guide to Philosophy and her 2012 NYT op-ed piece addressing Arizona’s censorship of the teaching of critical race theory in public schools.

Jennifer Lisa Vest is a mixedblood (Black/Florida Seminole/German) poet and philosopher who holds the position of Associate Professor of Philosophy at the University of Central Florida.  Co-author of Philanthropy in Communities of Color, her book manuscript Sovereign Wisdom: Generating Academic Native American Philosophy is under review.

Invited Sessions:

  • ·                                 Viewing and discussion of film, “Precious Knowledge”
  • ·                                 Invited Panel on Pluralism

 

FEAST encourages submissions related to this year’s theme. However, papers on all topics within the areas of feminist ethics and social theory are welcome.

Description of this year’s theme:
One meaning of pluralism within philosophy is that it seeks to bring
underrepresented theoretical perspectives and underrepresented groups into the philosophical mainstream, transforming philosophy as a result. Yet what is meant by “pluralism” and how to assess whether or not pluralism has been achieved remains hotly contested.

While philosophy is often depicted as the academic field most in need of pluralistic correctives, other disciplines, too, struggle with the marginalization of those whom, due to their theoretical approaches or their bodies, have been pushed to the edges of their disciplines.

This year’s FEAST conference encourages submissions that challenge us to think in new ways about the boundaries, methodologies, and subject matter of academic subfields that pertain to feminist ethics, politics, and social theory, broadly construed. The program committee welcomes papers that take both theoretical and practical approaches to these issues. We aim to create a conference with a diverse group of presenters and a wide range of approaches, topics, and styles. FEAST strongly encourage members of groups that are underrepresented in academia to send submissions.

Call to submit a panel proposal (topic and speakers) for a lunch time “Difficult Conversation”

FEAST conferences typically feature a lunch time “Difficult Conversation” that focuses on an important, challenging, and under-theorized topic related to feminist ethics or social theory. Past topics include: Critical Understandings of Dependency and Disability; Are Academic Feminist Philosophies and Methodologies Still Too White?; A Difficult Conversation about Feminist Sexualities and Identities.  We hereby invite proposals for next year’s Difficult Conversation.

 

Submission Guidelines

A completed paper of no more than 3000 words must be submitted for individual presenters and prepared for anonymous review. Proposals for a Difficult Conversations session or for non-paper formats (e.g., workshops, discussions, etc.) must include detailed descriptions (500-750 words).

 

Please send your submission, in one document (a Word file, please, so that abstracts can be posted), to feast2013@csbsju.eduby February 28, 2013.  Your document must include: paper title, abstract of 100-250 words, and your paper, with no identifying information. The word count (max. 3,000) should appear on the top of the first page of your paper. In the body of the email message, please include: your paper or panel title, name, institutional affiliation, e-mail address, surface mail address, and phone number. All submissions will be anonymously reviewed.

 

Note: Panel organizers, please send the panel title and all three abstracts and papers in one document, along with word counts (3,000 for each paper). Difficult Conversations and other non-paper submissions should be marked as such.

 

For more information on FEAST or to see programs from previous conferences, go to:  http://www.afeast.org

Questions on this conference or the submission process may be directed to the Program Chair, Jean Keller, at feast2013@csbsju.edu


CFP: 4th annual Notre Dame/Northwestern Graduate Epistemology Conference

The philosophy departments at the University of Notre Dame and Northwestern University are proud to announce the fourth joint annual graduate epistemology conference, to be held at the University of Notre Dame April 26-27, 2013. Our keynote speaker will be Thomas Kelly (Princeton).

Submission Guidelines: We welcome submissions in the field of analytic epistemology, broadly construed. Papers should be no more than 4000 words (approx. 13 pages). Submissions should also include a second sheet with an abstract (200 words or less). Papers should be suitable for blind review: include detachable cover page with the paper’s title, author’s name, mailing address, email, phone number, school affiliation, and word count; please omit any self identifying
marks within the body of the paper.

Deadline: Papers must be received by January 15th, 2013. Papers should be emailed as an attachment to the conference organizers at nundgradconf@gmail.com preferably in PDF format. Any questions about the conference can also be emailed to this address.

Website: http://www.wcas.northwestern.edu/epistemology/egradconf4/

Sponsored by:

Notre Dame Philosophy Department, Northwestern Philosophy Department, Notre Dame Center for Philosophy of Religion, ISLA, Notre Dame Graduate School


TODAY: Christina Drogalis’ practice job talk

Christina Drogalis’ practice job talk:
“Kant’s Two Stage Theory of Moral Development”
Tuesday, January 15th at 3 p.m.
Tentatively Crown Center
Room 530
Be there!

Welcome back!

Hope everyone’s semester gets off to a great start.

I have a handful of updates and such to load up here, but the majority of them are things I’ve become aware of through my personal email. If there is something you’d like to see posted here, shoot me an email at philosophyatloyolablog [at] gmail [dot] com.

Thanks!


Empirical Bioethics: Emerging Trends for the 21st Century February 21 & 22, 2013; Cincinnati, OH

Empirical Bioethics: Emerging Trends for the 21st Century
February 21 & 22, 2013

Sponsored by the Center for Clinical and Translational Science and Training

Kingsgate Marriott Conference Hotel, Cincinnati, OH

                       

Featured Presentations:

 

Ethics and Evidence: What Data Can and Cannot Do for Bioethics

  Thursday, February 21st,3:45 p.m. –  5:15 p.m.

  Daniel P. Sulmasy, MD, PhD 

  MacLean Center for Clinical Medical Ethics

  University of Chicago

 

Is Human Nature Ready for Autonomy: What Behavioral Science                      

Teaches us About the Limits of Shared Decision Making in Medicine

  Friday, February 22nd,8:30 a.m. –  9:45 a.m.

  Peter Ubel, MD

  Fuqua School of Business and Sanford School of Public Policy

  Duke University

                       

Ethics Companion Studies: Strategies, Successes and Setbacks

                        Friday, February 22nd,1:00 p.m. –  2:15 p.m.

  Rebecca D. Pentz, PhD

  Emory School of Medicine


Deadline Jan 21st: CRMEP/Université Paris 8 offering scholarships for their MA Contemporary European Philosophy

See original post for details: http://blogs.luc.edu/philosophy/?p=163