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DTSTAMP:20260620T130805Z
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20210901T050000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20210901T050000
SUMMARY:Animal Minds 2022
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TZID:America/Los_Angeles
LOCATION:University of California\, San Diego\, San Diego\, United States\, 92093
DESCRIPTION:<p>Animal Minds</p>\n<p>February 17-18\, 2022</p>\n<p>Institute for Practical Ethics</p>\n<p>Department of Philosophy</p>\n<p>University of California\, San Diego</p>\n<p>Keynote speaker: Kristin Andrews\, York Research Chair in Animal Minds and Professor of Philosophy at York University (Toronto).</p>\n<p>The Institute for Practical Ethics and the Department of Philosophy at the University of California\, San Diego are sponsoring a two-day conference on animal minds in February 2022. Research on animal minds is an innovative area of interdisciplinary research. Since the 1970s\, an increasing number of non-human species have passed the mirror test of self-recognition or demonstrated other previously unknown mental abilities. Obtaining a robust account of animal minds\, however\, is complex and difficult. Among the second-order questions raised by such research concerns the nature of cognition and what it is to have a mind\; what counts as an appropriate scientific method\; whether it is possible to synthesize findings from a broad range of empirical disciplines to offer a rich understanding of animal cognition\; and what ethical implications\, if any\, may follow from a revised understanding of our fellow animals.&nbsp\;This workshop will explore the philosophical dimensions of these and other issues pertaining to animal minds.</p>\n<p>Keynote speaker bio: Kristin Andrews is the author of&nbsp\;<em>The Animal Mind</em>&nbsp\;(Routledge\, 2015)\, an empirically informed\, state-of-the-art introduction to the philosophy of animal cognition that has recently gone into a second edition. Other titles by her include&nbsp\;<em>The Routledge Handbook of Philosophy of Animal Minds</em>&nbsp\;(2017)\, co-edited with Jakob Beck\, and&nbsp\;<em>How to Study Animal Minds</em>\, in Cambridge University Press&rsquo\;s Elements in the Philosophy of Biology series\, which addresses fundamental methodological questions about cognitive science as it pertains to animals.</p>\n<p>In addition to Andrews&rsquo\; keynote the conference will include 10 papers by philosophers and/or philosophically informed researchers in other disciplines. Most are expected to focus directly on philosophical issues related to animal minds\, but a smaller number may address issues at the intersection of animal cognition and animal ethics. The latter area is one in which Andrews has also published important research as co-author of&nbsp\;<em>Chimpanzee Rights: The Philosophers&rsquo\; Brief</em>&nbsp\;(Routledge\, 2018)\, in which Andrews and 12 co-authors outline a new view of the moral and legal standing of non-human primates.</p>\n<p>Abstracts are due by 5:00 pm Pacific Standard Time Wednesday September 1 2021. Notifications of acceptance will be made by October 4. Please send an anonymized abstract of at least 400 and no more than 750 words to Andy Lamey at&nbsp\;<u>alamey@ucsd.edu</u>. Finished papers will be due one month before the conference date. Presenters will speak as part of a panel of three speakers\, each with half an hour of speaking time\, followed by a collective 90-minute Q&amp\;A.</p>\n<p>The conference fee is US$60 ($40 for graduate students). All presenters will be invited to a conference dinner on February 18.</p>\n<p>Questions about the workshop can be directed to Andy Lamey at&nbsp\;<u>alamey@ucsd.edu</u>.</p>
ORGANIZER;CN=Andy Lamey:
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