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DTSTAMP:20260617T095223Z
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Zurich:20141010T050000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Zurich:20141011T130000
SUMMARY:From Descartes to Darwin and beyond: Reflections on traditional versus modern views of the human mind\, its reliability\, and its place in nature
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TZID:Europe/Zurich
LOCATION:Zürich\, Switzerland
DESCRIPTION:<p>Master Class<br>&nbsp\;<br>From Descartes to Darwin and beyond<br>Reflections on traditional versus modern views of the human mind\, its reliability\, and its place in nature<br>&nbsp\;<br>John Cottingham (University of Reading&nbsp\; &amp\; Heythrop College University of London)<br>and<br>Hans-Johann Glock (University of Zurich)<br><br>Synopsis<br><br>There is a familiar contrast between the traditional religious<br>conception of human nature as the creation of a good God\, and the modern<br>'naturalist' worldview according to which our human nature is the result<br>of an accidental chain of purely natural causes and conditions. The<br>seminar will aim to deepen our understanding of the philosophical<br>problems that arise for each of these outlooks\, taking Descartes and<br>Darwin as key representatives\, and will explore some unexpected<br>continuities and parallels. The main focus will be on how far\, whether<br>on the theistic view or on the naturalistic view\, the human mind can be<br>expected to be a reliable instrument for the pursuit of truth.&nbsp\;<br><br>In stark contrast with The Descent of Man (1871) produces a series of<br>considerations purporting to show that `the difference in mind between<br>man the higher animals\, great as it is\, certainly is one of degree and<br>not of kind.' We shall ask how plausible is Darwin's account of the<br>similarities and differences between the human and the animal worlds and<br>at the question of whether there is any prospect of identifying a single<br>`anthropological difference'. We shall also examine the implications of<br>Darwinism for the reliability of the human mind\, given that it was<br>shaped by success in the competition for survival rather than through<br>any inherent tendency to track the truth. In this context\, we shall<br>briefly look at `evolutionary epistemology' and\, possibly\, at<br>evolutionary anthropology. Finally\, we shall consider Thomas Nagel's<br>arguments (in Mind and Cosmos\, 2012) that modern scientific naturalism<br>cannot fully account for the powers of the human mind\, and in particular<br>its emergence as a `instrument of transcendence' capable of grasping<br>objective meaning\, truth\, and value. On Nagel's view\, any evolutionary<br>account of the place of reason `presupposes reason's validity and cannot<br>confirm it without circularity.'<br><br>In reviewing these various contrasting positions from the seventeenth\,<br>nineteenth and twenty-first centuries\, the course will attempt to look<br>beyond various prevailing preconceptions (whether theistic or<br>naturalistic) about humanity and its place in the natural world. We<br>shall instead aim to examine in detail the arguments offered by the<br>three main protagonists mentioned above in order to make a careful<br>philosophical assessment of their strengths and weaknesses\, and perhaps<br>to draw some conclusions about the status of the naturalistic outlook<br>that is an increasingly dominant feature of the contemporary<br>philosophical climate.<br><br><br><br>Organised by the Institute of Philosophy<br>Doctoral Program: &ldquo\;Philosophy: Language\, Mind and Practice"<br><br>Date:&nbsp\;10th &ndash\; 11th October 2014<br><br>Venue: Philosophisches Seminar\, Z&uuml\;richbergstrasse 43\, 8044 Z&uuml\;rich<br>Room: ZUP-U-8&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;<br><br>Please contact for further information and registration:&nbsp\;<br>Stefan Riegelnik\,&nbsp\;phd@philos.uzh.ch</a></p>
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