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VERSION:2.0
CALSCALE:GREGORIAN
METHOD:PUBLISH
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260415T125535Z
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Amsterdam:20230530T093000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Amsterdam:20230530T170000
SUMMARY:Responsibility\, Norm Psychology\, and Social Cohesion
UID:20260416T215647Z-iCalPlugin-Grails@philevents-web-f5d4878dd-x5n6c
TZID:Europe/Amsterdam
LOCATION:Oude Kijk in t Jatstraat 42\, Groningen\, Netherlands\, 9712LB
DESCRIPTION:<p>Workshop on:</p>\n<p><strong>Responsibility\, norm-psychology\, and social cohesion</strong></p>\n<p>Faculty of Philosophy\, University of Groningen</p>\n<p>May 30th\, 2023</p>\n<p>Recent&nbsp\;philosophical work on responsibility and blame\, argues that one function of holding people responsible for their acts and decisions is to enhance social cohesion. Blaming sends a message that cultivates moral agency and shared moral awareness\, which in turn improves interpersonal relationships.&nbsp\;This view is in line with&nbsp\;theories from&nbsp\;evolutionary anthropology that stress the adaptive function of norm psychology. Norm psychology is widely regarded as a major contribution to evolved mechanisms that&nbsp\;enhance social cohesion\, and regulate collaboration.&nbsp\;These views from philosophy and evolutionary anthropology are in tension\, however\,&nbsp\;with approaches in conflict-resolution&nbsp\;studies and therapy\, which are critical of blame and fault-finding.&nbsp\;Within these domains\, blaming is considered to jeopardize communication\, damage interpersonal relations as well as personal growth.</p>\n<p>This workshop&nbsp\;reconsiders to what extent and in what ways our&nbsp\;practices of holding each other to norms help secure social cohesion.&nbsp\;Can the above three approaches be reconciled? Are there different notions of social cohesion at play\, and if so\, which? And what might&nbsp\;these three disciplines learn from each other?&nbsp\;</p>\n<p>Program</p>\n<p>09:30 &ndash\; 10:30 Kris Moody &lsquo\;A partial responsibility response to manipulation&rsquo\;</p>\n<p>10:45 &ndash\; 11:45 Daphne Brandenburg &lsquo\;Anger management for philosophers&rsquo\;&nbsp\;</p>\n<p>11:45 &ndash\; 12:45 Frank Hindriks &lsquo\;Promoting Norm-Compliance: From Blame to Empowerment&rsquo\;</p>\n<p>12:45 &ndash\; 14:00 Lunch</p>\n<p>14:00 &ndash\; 15:00 Anneli Jefferson &amp\; Katrina L. Sifferd &lsquo\;Punishing for whose benefit?&rsquo\;&nbsp\;</p>\n<p>15:00 &ndash\; 16:00 Jeanette Kennett (keynote) &lsquo\;Blame and Social Role Reinforcement&rsquo\;</p>\n<p>16:00 &ndash\; 17:00 Marc Slors &amp\; Przemysław Zawadzki</p>\n\n&nbsp\;\nEveryone is welcome to attend the workshop! If you'd like to attend\, please email d.d.brandenburg@rug.nl.&nbsp\;\n&nbsp\;\n
ORGANIZER;CN=Marc Slors:
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