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VERSION:2.0
CALSCALE:GREGORIAN
METHOD:PUBLISH
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260514T202801Z
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20171026T060000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20171027T130000
SUMMARY:Normative Folk Psychology
UID:20260515T104919Z-iCalPlugin-Grails@philevents-web-6b96c54f56-bljdq
TZID:America/Toronto
LOCATION:4700 Keele St.\, Toronto\, Canada\, M3J1P3
DESCRIPTION:<p><strong>Normative Folk Psychology Workshop</strong></p>\n<p><strong>York University\, October 26-27 2017</strong></p>\n<p><u><br></u></p>\n<p><u>Thursday October 26</u></p>\n<p><br>10:00 Victoria McGeer (Princeton\, ANU Philosophy)</p>\n<p>Scaffolding Folk-Psychology</p>\n<p><br>11:20 Tad Zawidzki (George Washington University\, Philosophy)</p>\n<p>A New Perspective on the Relationship between Metacognition and Social Cognition</p>\n<p><br>12:40 Lunch</p>\n<p><br>2:00 Raymond Marr (York\, Psychology)</p>\n<p>How to Evaluate Whether Narrative Fiction Might Promote Social Cognition</p>\n<p><br>3:20 Coffee Break</p>\n<p>3:40 Heidi Maibom (Cincinnati\, Philosophy)</p>\n<p>Normativity in Perspective Taking</p>\n<p><br> <u>Friday October 27</u></p>\n<p><u><br></u></p>\n<p>10:00 Kristin Andrews (York\, Philosophy)</p>\n<p>Na&iuml\;ve Normativity in Children and Other Great Apes</p>\n\n<p>11:20 Joe Dewhurst and Chris Burr (Edinburgh\, Philosophy)</p>\n<p>Normative Folk Psychology and Decision Theory</p>\n\n<p>12:40-2:00 lunch</p>\n\n<p>2:00 Shannon Spaulding (Oklahoma\, Philosophy)</p>\n<p>Stereotypes in Folk Psychology</p>\n\n<p>3:40 Evan Westra (Rochester\, Philosophy)</p>\n<p>Character and Theory of Mind</p>\n<p>______________________________________________________________________</p>\n<p>Registration is Free but please RSVP at normativefp2017@gmail.com</p>\n<p>This workshop is generously supported by York University&rsquo\;s Department of Philosophy\, The Faculty of Liberal Arts and Professional Studies\, and the York Research Chair program.</p>\n<p>According to causal models of folk psychology\, humans understand others by attributing to them beliefs and desires that cause behavior.Normative accounts of folk psychology seek to ground our social competences in cultural expectations rather than in mechanistic causal models of individuals. This interdisciplinary workshop will explore the idea that normative reasoning in terms of social structures\, identities\, cultures\, relationships\, bodies\, etc. and practices such as coordinating\, explaining\, and justifying behavior are essential to human social understanding.</p>
ORGANIZER;CN=Kristin Andrews:
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