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VERSION:2.0
CALSCALE:GREGORIAN
METHOD:PUBLISH
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260604T110618Z
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Paris:20220630T090000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Paris:20220702T170000
SUMMARY:Reference in Remembering
UID:20260605T114335Z-iCalPlugin-Grails@philevents-web-bd7db559-gt5qm
TZID:Europe/Paris
LOCATION:7\, allée de Palestine\, Grenoble\, France\, 38610
DESCRIPTION:<p>We are pleased to announce the Reference in Remembering Workshop\, to be held in-person at the Universit&eacute\; Grenoble Alpes on June 30th&ndash\;July 2nd 2022. A full schedule of talks can be found below. Colleagues interested in attending should please contact me for registration information.&nbsp\;</p>\n<p>Website: http://phil-mem.org/events/2022-reference.php</p>\n<p>Organisers: James Openshaw\; Kourken Michaelian\; Denis Perrin.&nbsp\;</p>\n<p>This workshop is funded by the European Union&rsquo\;s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under the Marie Sklodowska-Curie grant agreement (no. 101032391)\, and also by the CNRS GDR M&eacute\;moire\, the Institut de Philosophie de Grenoble\, and the Centre for Philosophy of Memory.</p>\n<p><strong>1. STUDENT BURSARIES</strong></p>\n<p>We invite applications from Masters and PhD students for some limited travel and accommodation bursaries\, kindly funded by the CNRS GDR M&eacute\;moire. Students interested in attending the workshop should email (1) a copy of their academic CV and (2) a brief\, one-paragraph account of how the conference&rsquo\;s theme interacts with their research interests to James Openshaw at the email address listed on this page. The application deadline for bursaries is Friday May 20th.</p>\n<p><strong>2. THEME</strong></p>\n<p>Episodic memory enables us to consciously &lsquo\;relive&rsquo\; experienced events from our past. You might remember making coffee this morning and sensorily recall what it was like to smell the coffee grounds or to see the kettle reach a boil. Success in this activity requires that there be a certain relationship between your present act of remembering and the past event in question. First\, something must &lsquo\;fix&rsquo\; or determine that your memory is about that particular event\, rather than\, say\, a similar event the previous morning. Second\, the memory must be suitably accurate. By analogy\, success in uttering &lsquo\;This is blue&rsquo\; requires\, for its evaluability\, that &lsquo\;This&rsquo\; refers to a particular object and\, for its truth\, that the predicate accurately characterises the referred-to object. Though these observations are simple\, what we might call the <em>reference-fixing</em> and <em>accuracy</em> conditions of episodic remembering remain obscure. The thriving work on memory in philosophy and the sciences suggests that continued progress requires more attention&mdash\;and new approaches&mdash\;to these particular issues. The primary aim of the workshop is to cast new light on the multi-faceted relationship between reference\, singular thought\, and remembering by bringing together\, for the first time\, researchers specialising on these topics.</p>\n<p><strong>3. SCHEDULE&nbsp\;</strong></p>\n<p><u>Day 1 &ndash\; Thursday June 30th</u></p>\n<p>Location: MACI Amphitheatre\, Universit&eacute\; Grenoble Alpes</p>\n<p>09:20&ndash\;09:30. Welcome.</p>\n<p>09:30&ndash\;10:40. Fran&ccedil\;ois Recanati\, &lsquo\;Pure memory&rsquo\;.</p>\n<p>10:40&ndash\;11:00. Coffee break.</p>\n<p>11:00&ndash\;12:10. Nikola Andonovski\, &lsquo\;Engrams as mental files: A moderately optimistic proposal&rsquo\;.</p>\n<p>12:10&ndash\;13:30. Lunch.</p>\n<p>13:30&ndash\;14:40. Rachel Goodman (and Aidan Gray)\, &lsquo\;Thinking (and filing) across time&rsquo\;.</p>\n<p>14:40&ndash\;15:50. Michael Barkasi\, &lsquo\;Remembering what your brain doesn&rsquo\;t&rsquo\;.</p>\n<p>15:50&ndash\;16:10. Coffee break.&nbsp\;</p>\n<p>16:10&ndash\;17:20. Sarah Robins\, &lsquo\;The target of remembering&rsquo\;.</p>\n<p>19:30. Dinner.</p>\n<p><u>Day 2 &ndash\; Friday July 1st</u></p>\n<p>Location: MACI Amphitheatre\, Universit&eacute\; Grenoble Alpes</p>\n<p>09:30&ndash\;10:40. Kristina Liefke &amp\; Markus Werning\, &lsquo\;Parasitic mnemonic reference&rsquo\;.</p>\n<p>10:40&ndash\;11:00. Coffee break.</p>\n<p>11:00&ndash\;12:10. Kourken Michaelian &amp\; James Openshaw\, &lsquo\;Reconstructing reference&rsquo\;.</p>\n<p>12:10&ndash\;13:30. Lunch.</p>\n<p>13:30&ndash\;14:40. Imogen Dickie\, &lsquo\;The role of episodic memory in present-tense demonstrative thought&rsquo\;.</p>\n<p>Group activity\, flexible evening plans.&nbsp\;</p>\n<p><u>Day 3 &ndash\; Saturday July 2nd</u></p>\n<p>Location: CTL Amphitheatre\, Universit&eacute\; Grenoble Alpes</p>\n<p>09:00&ndash\;10:10. Christoph Hoerl\, &lsquo\;Singular thought without temporal representation?&rsquo\;</p>\n<p>10:10&ndash\;10:30. Coffee break.</p>\n<p>10:30&ndash\;11:40. Denis Perrin (and Christopher McCarroll)\, &lsquo\;Veridical remembering: Accuracy and authenticity in episodic memory&rsquo\;.</p>\n<p>11:40&ndash\;12:50. Manuel Garc&iacute\;a-Carpintero\, &lsquo\;Memory-based reference\, IEM and presupposition-failure&rsquo\;.</p>
ORGANIZER;CN=James Openshaw:
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