BEGIN:VCALENDAR
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VERSION:2.0
CALSCALE:GREGORIAN
METHOD:PUBLISH
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260611T195224Z
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20241001T120000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20261026T170000
SUMMARY:In Conversation: Exploring the Philosophy of Money and Finance
UID:20260618T014146Z-iCalPlugin-Grails@philevents-web-bd7db559-gt5qm
TZID:Europe/London
DESCRIPTION:<p><strong>In Conversation: Exploring the Philosophy of Money and Finance &ndash\; Series III</strong></p>\n<p>A series of interviews with contributors to <em><strong>The Philosophy of Money and Finance</strong></em> (Hardcover\, OUP 2024\; Paperback\, fall 2025)</p>\n<p><strong>Schedule</strong></p>\n<p><strong>"Truth in Financial Accounting"</strong><br>Author: Christopher J. Cowton (Emeritus\, University of Huddersfield)<br>Interviewer: Lisa Warenski (CUNY Graduate Center)<br>Date and Time: 15 January 2026\, 18:00 CET</p>\n<p><strong>"Green Central Banking"</strong>&nbsp\;<br>Authors: Peter Dietsch (University of Victoria)\; Cl&eacute\;ment Fontan (University of Louvain)<br>Interviewer: Jens van't Klooster<br>Date and Time: 25 March 2026\, 18:00 CET</p>\n<p><strong>"On the Wrongfulness of Bank Contributions to Financial Crises"</strong><br>Author:&nbsp\;Richard End&ouml\;rfer (University of Gothenburg)<br>Interviewer: Kobi Finestone (Univeresity of San Diego)<br>Date and Time: 01 June 2026\, 18:00 CET</p>\n<p><strong>"Bitcoins Left and Right: A Normative Assessment of a Digital Currency"<br></strong>Authors: Lars Lindblom and Joakim Sandberg<br>Interviewer: Violet Victoria<br>Date and Time: October (TBA) 2026\, 18:00 CET</p>
ORGANIZER;CN=Lisa Warenski;CN=Emiliano Ippoliti:
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260611T195224Z
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20251001T000000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20260630T170000
SUMMARY:STAL Seminar
UID:20260618T014147Z-iCalPlugin-Grails@philevents-web-bd7db559-gt5qm
TZID:Europe/London
DESCRIPTION:<p>Slurring Terms Across Languages (<strong>STAL</strong>) is an international and interdisciplinary network whose primary aim is to promote work on slurs\, pejoratives\, expressives and evaluative terms in general\, from languages that have been seldom discussed in the recent philosophical and semantic literature\, and in particular\, from sign languages and non-Indo-European languages. Its main aim is to bring to light new empirical data and uncover novel interesting phenomena that may have the potential to challenge current theories. Empirical studies of the expressions mentioned from such languages\, comparisons with English slurs\, as well as wider cross-linguistic approaches and developments of extant theories in application to the new data or previously neglected phenomena are encouraged too.</p>\n<p>The network's coordinators are&nbsp\;<strong>Isidora Stojanovic</strong>&nbsp\;(Pompeu Fabra University/CNRS-Institut Jean Nicod) &amp\;&nbsp\;<strong>Dan Zeman</strong>&nbsp\;(University of Porto). More information about the network and its activities can be found at&nbsp\;https://sites.google.com/view/stalnetwork. To contact the network coordinators\, please write to stalnetwork@gmail.com.</p>\n<p>The <strong>STAL Seminar</strong> features monthly\, online talks by researchers tackling issues&nbsp\;related to the study of slurs\, pejoratives\, expressives and evaluative terms in general\, from less studied languages. The meetings in the 2025-2026 academic year take place on <strong>MONDAYS\, 14:30-16:00 Central European Time (CET)</strong>. The list of speakers is the following (exact dates to be provided soon):</p>\n<p>- OCTOBER 2025: Luvell Anderson (University of Illinois\, Urbana-Champaign)</p>\n<p>- NOVEMBER 2025: Claire Horisk (University of Missouri)</p>\n<p>- DECEMBER 2025: Xavier Villalba (Autonomous University of Barcelona)</p>\n<p>- JANUARY 2026: Daisy Dixon (Cardiff University)</p>\n<p>- FEBRUARY 2026: Elisabeth Camp (Rutgers University)</p>\n<p>- MARCH 2026: Leopold Hess (Jagiellonian University)</p>\n<p>- APRIL 2026: Robin Jeshion (University of Southern California)</p>\n<p>- MAY 2026: Yim Binh Felix Sze (The Chinese University of Hong Kong)</p>\n<p>- JUNE 2026: Mingya Liu (Humboldt University of Berlin)</p>
ORGANIZER;CN=Isidora Stojanovic;CN=Dan Zeman:
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260611T195224Z
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Lisbon:20251001T090000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Lisbon:20260630T170000
SUMMARY:Polysemy in the Evaluative Sphere
UID:20260618T014148Z-iCalPlugin-Grails@philevents-web-bd7db559-gt5qm
TZID:Europe/Lisbon
LOCATION:Faculty of Letters\, University of Porto\, Via Panorâmica s/n\, Porto\, Portugal
DESCRIPTION:<p><strong>POLYSEMY IN THE EVALUATIVE SPHERE</strong></p>\n<p>In-person: Faculty of Letters\, University of Porto\, Via Panor&acirc\;mica s/n</p>\n<p>Online: Zoom</p>\n<p>This is a biweekly seminar pertaining to the project <strong>Slurs and the Lexicon: A Rich-Lexicon Approach to Slurs and Other Evaluative Expressions - LEXISLUR</strong> (2023.05952.CEECIND\; PI: Dan Zeman). The main aim of the project is to offer a polysemy account fit for evaluative expressions and to assess to what extent a unified approach to the entire evaluative sphere is feasible. Much work on polysemy can be found in <em>lexical semantics</em> - the branch of semantics that studies the meaning of words\, their internal structure and interrelations\, etc. However\, while the debate about polysemy of various expressions has produced an impressive amount of work\, not much material on the polysemy of <em>evaluative</em> expressions exists in that area. The purpose of this seminar is twofold: first\, to get acquainted with the essential literature on polysemy (via in-person sessions dedicated to reading and discussing the relevant papers)\; second\, to feature current work on polysemy as applied to evaluative expressions (via online talks by invited speakers). In this way\, participants will both acquire knowledge about polysemy in general and see how the discussions in lexical semantics can be applied to the evaluative sphere.</p>\n<p><u><strong>In-person meetings</strong></u></p>\n<p><strong>Next meeting</strong>: NOVEMBER 5\, 15:00-16:30 WET:&nbsp\;Marina Ortega Andr&eacute\;s &amp\; Agustin Vicente\, "Polysemy and co-predication"\,&nbsp\;<em>Glossa</em>&nbsp\;4(1)\, 2019.</p>\n<p><strong>Past meetings:&nbsp\;</strong>OCTOBER 15\, 16.30-18.00 WET:&nbsp\;Michelle Liu\, "Polysemy and Philosophy"\,&nbsp\;<em>Philosophy Compass</em>&nbsp\;20: e70040\, 2025.</p>\n<p><strong>Future readings</strong>:</p>\n<p>Nicholas Asher\, <em>Lexical Meaning in Context: A Web of Words</em>\, Cambridge University Press\, 2011 (excerpts).</p>\n<p>Robyn Carston\, "Polysemy: pragmatics and sense conventions"\, <em>Mind &amp\; Language</em> 36(1): 108-133\, 2021.</p>\n<p>John Collins\, "Copredication as illusion"\, <em>Journal of Semantics</em> 40(2-3): 359-389\, 2023.</p>\n<p>Steven Frisson\, "Semantic underspecification in language processing"\, <em>Language and Linguistics Compass</em> 3(1): 111-127\, 2009.</p>\n<p>Lotte Hogeweg &amp\; Agustin Vicente\, "On the nature of the lexicon"\, <em>Journal of Linguistics</em> 56(4): 865-891\, 2020.</p>\n<p>Ray Jackendoff\, <em>Semantic Structures</em>\, MIT Press\, 1990 (excerpts).</p>\n<p>Ingrid Lossius Falkum &amp\; Agustin Vicente\, "Polysemy"\, Oxford Bibliographies Online\, 2020.</p>\n<p>James Pustejovsky\, <em>The Generative Lexicon</em>\, MIT Press\, 1995 (excerpts).</p>\n<p>Petra Schumacher\, "When combinatorial processing results in reconceptualization: Towards a new approach of compositionality"\, <em>Frontiers of Psychology</em> 4: 677\, 2013.</p>\n<p>Agustin Vicente\, "Polysemy and word meaning"\, <em>Philosophical Studies</em>\, 175(4): 947-968\, 2018.</p>\n<p>Agustin Vicente\, "Approaches to co-predication"\, <em>Journal of Pragmatic</em>s 182: 348-357\, 2021.</p>\n<p><strong><br></strong></p>\n<p><u><strong>Online talks</strong></u></p>\n<p><strong>Next talk</strong>: NOVEMBER 21\, 11:00-12.30 WET: Marina Ortega-Andr&eacute\;s (University of the Basque Country)\, "When this chef says pot: The importance of the speaker's identity in understanding ambiguous words"</p>\n<p><strong>Past talks:&nbsp\;</strong>OCTOBER 31\, 11:00-12:30 WET:&nbsp\;Michelle Liu (Monash University)\, "Ad Hoc Concepts\, Polysemy\, and Verbal Disputes"</p>\n<p><strong>Future talks (schedule and titles TBA):&nbsp\;</strong>John Collins &amp\; Agustin Vicente\, Tamara Dobler\, Jessica Keiser\, Michelle Liu\, Ingrid Lossius Falkum\, Emanuel Viebahn</p>
ORGANIZER;CN=Dan Zeman;CN=Alba Moreno Zurita:
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260611T195224Z
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20251001T090000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20260630T170000
SUMMARY:UK XPHI Online
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TZID:Europe/London
DESCRIPTION:<p>We are delighted to announce the next series of our monthly online workshop devoted to discussion of work in progress in experimental philosophy. The workshop is usually held via Teams\, the second Wednesday of each month\, 16:00-18:00 UK time.&nbsp\; Details of 2025/26 season TBC</p>\n&nbsp\;
ORGANIZER;CN=James Andow;CN=Eugen Fischer:
METHOD:PUBLISH
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260611T195224Z
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Warsaw:20251013T090000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Warsaw:20260917T170000
SUMMARY:NGRE 25/26
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TZID:Europe/Warsaw
LOCATION:Krakowskie Przedmieście 3\, Warsaw\, Poland\, 00-927
DESCRIPTION:<p>New Generation Research Exchange</p>\n<p>&nbsp\;Call for Applications&nbsp\;</p>\n<p>Summary&nbsp\;</p>\n<p>The Humane Philosophy Society\, in collaboration the Faculty of Philosophy\, University of Warsaw\, Blackfriars Hall\, University of Oxford\, and Faculty of Philosophy\, Zagreb University invite applications for the New Generation Research Exchange programme. The Exchange programme will give young scholars in Central and Eastern Europe (CEE) working on Big Questions of fundamental human importance the opportunity to participate in three fully funded workshops taking place at the Universities of Warsaw\, Zagreb and Oxford. Participants will have the further opportunity to apply to continue the research during a term of funded supervised research at the University of Oxford on the Marek Matraszek Fellowship. Participants&rsquo\; research projects will be assessed by an external committee after the final workshop takes place to determine possible supervisors for research visits to Oxford. The Fellowship will conclude with an alumni workshop in the summer of 2026 to take place in Trogir\, Croatia.&nbsp\;</p>\n<p>An introductory video can be viewed here:&nbsp\;</p>\n<p>https://youtu.be/vfaPrP2W2Hs</p>\n<p>Eligibility</p>\n<p>Applicants will normally be MA or early PhD students at Central and Eastern European research institutions\, including universities\, research academies and seminaries\, or young scholars from CEE on equivalent degree programmes outside the region. The programme is intended to support research projects of successful candidates during the final year of their MA course\, or developing their MA research topics for publication\, or with a PhD application in mind\, as well as those beginning to work on a PhD. Proposed projects should broadly fall under the project themes\, which are outlined below.&nbsp\; It is expected that most applications will be submitted by natural scientists\, theologians and philosophers\, but there are no disciplinary restrictions and applicants with academic backgrounds in other areas are also welcome. Applications are welcome from researchers working in any religious tradition\, and from researchers working in no religious tradition.</p>\n<p>For the purposes of the project\, Central and Eastern Europe (CEE) is defined as: Albania\, Armenia\, Azerbaijan\, Belarus\, Bosnia and Herzegovina\, Bulgaria\, Croatia\, Czechia\, Estonia\, Georgia\, Hungary\, Kosovo\, Latvia\, Lithuania\, Moldova\, Montenegro\, North Macedonia\, Poland\, Romania\, Serbia\, Slovakia\, Slovenia and Ukraine.</p>\n<p>Activities</p>\n<p>Successful candidates will participate in a series of three masterclasses during the course of the programme. The meetings will take place over three days each at the Universities of Zagreb\, Warsaw\, and Oxford. Participants will have the opportunity to discuss their work as a group and with invited mentors\, as well as participate in seminars led by prominent visiting speakers. The Fellowship will cover all the costs of participating in each masterclass including travel and accommodation. The fellowship will conclude with an alumni workshop in the summer of 2026 which will cover all participant costs except travel. The total value of the Fellowship is 4000 USD.&nbsp\;</p>\n<p>Selected participants will have a further opportunity to receive the Marek Matraszek Oxford Fellowship to complete their work during a term at Oxford University\, where they will be able to work closely with a secondary supervisor to advance their research. The funding for research visits at Oxford University will cover accommodation\, living costs\, college fees\, and supervision and have a total value of 3000 USD.&nbsp\;</p>\n<p>Supported Research Themes</p>\n<p>The programme will support research which engages with Big Questions of universal human importance. We are especially interested in research into fundamental issues which straddle boundaries between disciplines including philosophy\, psychology\, physical sciences\, social sciences\, theology\, literature and cultural studies. Applicants will be expected to engage with recent developments in their disciplines\, and demonstrate a high standard of academic rigor. Suitable topics include\, but are not limited to:</p>\n<p>▪ The significance of theological traditions for scientific practice today\;</p>\n<p>▪ The relations of brains\, minds and human persons\;</p>\n<p>▪ Whether physical cosmology can explain the origin of the cosmos\;</p>\n<p>▪ The role of religion in the historical development of science\;</p>\n<p>▪ The place of values in the natural world\;</p>\n<p>▪ The relevance of literary works and traditions for understanding and interpreting Big Questions\;</p>\n<p>▪ Phenomenology of human life and interpersonal relations\;</p>\n<p>▪ Intellectual traditions in CEE and their import for Big Questions\;</p>\n<p>▪ Free will and scientific determinism and/or divine foreknowledge\;</p>\n<p>▪ Empirical psychology and the second person perspective\;</p>\n<p>▪ Phenomenological approaches to religion\;</p>\n<p>▪ Understanding notions of God\, good and evil in a scientific age.</p>\n<p>For further example areas that explore Big Questions applicants are strongly encouraged to visit the Humane Philosophy Society&rsquo\;s website where example areas of interest are listed.</p>\n<p>For more information on the NGRE fellowship programme as well as on NGRE alumni visit:&nbsp\;https://www.humanephilosophy.com/ngre</p>\n<p>Application process</p>\n<p>Applications for Exchange Fellowships must be submitted no later than 1 August 2025 for the cycle of the programme starting October 2025. Applications must include the following documents.&nbsp\;&nbsp\;</p>\n<p>▪A proposal describing the research the candidate is carrying out\, how far the research is advanced\, and an outline of the work the candidate expects to complete during the course of their final year.&nbsp\;</p>\n<p>▪A full curriculum vitae\, and a statement saying how the candidate expects to benefit from participating in the programme</p>\n<p>▪Two academic references including a reference from the candidate&rsquo\;s supervisor if the research project is part of an MA degree.&nbsp\;</p>\n<p>▪A confirmation from the candidate&rsquo\;s institution stating that they are allowed to participate in the programme during the academic year 2025&ndash\;6.&nbsp\;</p>\n<p>All application materials should be submitted via email to info@humanephilosophy.com stating in the subject line: &ldquo\;NGRE application&rdquo\;. The results of the competition will be announced in September 2025.</p>\n<p>By submitting an application for the New Generation Research Exchange candidates accept and acknowledge the terms of processing their personal data for the purpose of the application process. For further information concerning the processing of personal data by the University of Warsaw see the personal data information sheet. If you have any questions please contact Dr Mikołaj Sławkowski-Rode: m.slawkowski-rode@uw.edu.pl&nbsp\;</p>
ORGANIZER;CN=Mikolaj Slawkowski-Rode;CN=Marija Selak;CN=Ralph Stefan Weir:
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260611T195224Z
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Bucharest:20251028T090000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Bucharest:20260930T170000
SUMMARY:DFT-CELFIS research seminar\, University of Bucharest
UID:20260618T014151Z-iCalPlugin-Grails@philevents-web-bd7db559-gt5qm
TZID:Europe/Bucharest
LOCATION:Splaiul Independenţei nr. 204\, Bucharest\, Romania\, 060024
DESCRIPTION:<p>We're delighted to invite you to the research seminar of the Department of Theoretical Philosophy at the University of Bucharest. These are organized in partnership with CELFIS\, the Center for Logic\, Philosophy and History of Science at UB. Here are talks scheduled so far:</p>\n<p><strong>Fall 2025</strong>:</p>\n<p>October 28\, 5pm: Alexandru Dragomir &amp\; Andrei Mărăşoiu (University of Bucharest\,&nbsp\;<strong>f2f</strong>)\, "The Inconstant Moral Expert: the case of LLMs"</p>\n<p>November 25\, 4pm: Nicholas Rimell (Chinese University of Hong Kong\, <strong>hybrid</strong> via Zoom)\, "A Metaphysics of Despair"</p>\n<p>November 28\, 2pm: Micah Thomas Pimaro\, Jr. (University of Calabar\,&nbsp\;<strong>f2f</strong>)\, "Placide Tempels&rsquo\;s Metaphysics: A challenge or a trap for African philosophy?"</p>\n<p>December 2\, 3pm: Nora Grigore (Romanian Academy\, Institute of Philosophy and Psychology\, <strong>f2f</strong>)\, "Worthiness and Expediency: a Distinction without a Difference?"</p>\n<p>December 19\, 2pm: Alin Olteanu (Shanghai International Studies University\, ICUB\,&nbsp\;<strong>f2f</strong>)\, "Iconic Imagination in Modeling: A Semiotic Approach to Scientific Inquiry"</p>\n<p>January 16\, 2pm: Marco Facchin (University of Antwerp\, <strong>hybrid</strong> via Zoom)\,&nbsp\;"Is mental content an illusion?"&nbsp\;</p>\n<p>January 22\, 12pm: Sandra Br&acirc\;nzaru (University of Bucharest\, CELFIS\, FPSE\,&nbsp\;<strong>f2f</strong>)\, "Conceptualising Empathy"</p>\n<p>February 10\, 4pm: Marian Călborean (OPTI Software &amp\; University of Bucharest\, <strong>f2f</strong>)\, "The minimal ontology of time"&nbsp\;</p>\n<p><strong>Spring 2026:</strong></p>\n<p>March 27\, 2pm: Erik Myin (University of Antwerp\,&nbsp\;<strong>hybrid</strong>&nbsp\;via Zoom)\, &ldquo\;Of a Different Mind&rdquo\;</p>\n<p>March 30:&nbsp\;Mariona Eiren Miyata-Sturm (University of Oxford\, <strong>f2f</strong>)\, &ldquo\;The metacognitive account of aesthetics in science&rdquo\;</p>\n<p>April 3:&nbsp\;Ren&eacute\;&nbsp\;van Woudenberg (Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam\,&nbsp\;<strong>hybrid</strong>&nbsp\;via Zoom)\, "Are LLMs Authors?"</p>\n<p>May 11\, 12pm: Gheorge Ştefanov (U. Bucharest\, <strong>f2f</strong>)\; "<em>Ce nu pot vedea neuroștiințele? &mdash\;&nbsp\;Gramatica&nbsp\;libertății: Wittgenstein\, Anscombe și critica determinismului tare</em>"</p>\n<p>May 13\, 3pm: Andrei Moldovan (U. Salamanca\, <strong>f2f</strong>)\,&nbsp\;&ldquo\;Between Independence and Guidance: A Dilemma for Intellectual Autonomy&rdquo\;</p>\n<p>May 19\, 10am: Daian Bica (Heinrich Heine University\,&nbsp\;<strong>hybrid</strong>&nbsp\;via Zoom)\,&nbsp\;''How to Tame &lsquo\;Abundance&rsquo\;? Roman Frigg&rsquo\;s User Manual''</p>\n<p>June 5\, 2pm: Paula Tomi (National University of Science and Technology 'Politehnica' Bucharest\,&nbsp\;<strong>f2f</strong>)\, &ldquo\;LLMs and truth pluralism&rdquo\;</p>\n<p>June: Alexandru Nicolae (University of Bucharest\, Faculty of Letters\; Romanian Academy\, Institute of Linguistics\,&nbsp\;<strong>f2f</strong>)</p>\n<p>June: Cătălin Teoharie (University of Bucharest\, CELFIS\,&nbsp\;<strong>f2f</strong>)</p>\n<p>June: Ioan Muntean (UT Rio Grande Valley\, UI Urbana\,&nbsp\;<strong>f2f</strong>)</p>\n<p>July: Mihai Rusu (Babeş Bolyai University\, ICUB\, <strong>hybrid)</strong></p>\n<p>July: Constantin Stoenescu (University of Bucharest\, CELFIS\,&nbsp\;<strong>f2f</strong>)\, "Revisiting 'The Normative Structure of Science'&nbsp\;</p>\n<p>September: Oana Şerban (University of Bucharest\, CCIIF\,&nbsp\;<strong>f2f</strong>)</p>\n<p><strong>Previous events</strong>&nbsp\;in the series are available at:&nbsp\;</p>\n<p>2021-22:&nbsp\;https://philevents.org/event/show/93365&nbsp\;</p>\n<p>2022-23:&nbsp\;https://philevents.org/event/show/105249&nbsp\;</p>\n<p>https://filosofie.unibuc.ro/category/seminar-cercetare-dft/&nbsp\;</p>\n<p>https://icub.unibuc.ro/2022/06/14/workshop-semantic-cognition-and-truth/&nbsp\;</p>\n<p>For those of you who would like to join some of the meetings but have overlapping commitments\, we will do our best to record the meetings whenever everyone in attendance consents to it\, and to then upload the recordings on the Department's YouTube channel. Previous talks are available here:</p>\n<p>https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCOgUq3dN8CXI4L6DhZT1f_Q</p>
ORGANIZER;CN="Andrei Mărăşoiu":
METHOD:PUBLISH
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260611T195224Z
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20260201T090000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20260630T170000
SUMMARY:Inquiry Network WIP Talks (Spring 2026)
UID:20260618T014152Z-iCalPlugin-Grails@philevents-web-bd7db559-gt5qm
TZID:Europe/London
DESCRIPTION:<p>The Inquiry Network WIP Talks feature presentations of work in progress related to inquiry\, broadly understood. For example\, presentations might discuss (but are not limited to): the epistemology of inquiry\, the metaphysics of inquiry\, ethical norms of inquiry\, historical perspectives on inquiry\, or the structure of scientific inquiry.<br><br>We aim to foster the sharing of ideas in an inclusive\, welcoming and low-pressure environment. Papers that are already accepted for publication will not be accepted. We aim to be sensitive to the needs of early-career scholars.<br><br>The group meets biweekly on Zoom during each of the Fall and Spring semesters. Meeting times are determined shortly before the beginning of each semester with the goal of finding a time that works for as many members as possible. Special consideration is given to finding a meeting time that works for presenters of accepted papers.</p>
ORGANIZER;CN=David Thorstad;CN=Arianna Falbo;CN=Dennis Whitcomb:
METHOD:PUBLISH
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260611T195224Z
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20260218T090000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20261209T170000
SUMMARY:Reconstructing Carnap Webinar Series 2026
UID:20260618T014153Z-iCalPlugin-Grails@philevents-web-bd7db559-gt5qm
TZID:Europe/London
DESCRIPTION:<p>I am excited to share that the&nbsp\;<em>Reconstructing Carnap Webinar Series</em>&nbsp\;will resume in&nbsp\;<strong>February 2026</strong>! Please find the official flyer attached. All talks will take place from&nbsp\;<strong>4:30 PM to 6:30 PM CET</strong>&nbsp\;(10:30 AM&ndash\;12:30 PM EST).<br>The webinar can be accessed via the following link: <strong>https://meet.google.com/uaq-jqpf-mwr</strong> <strong><br></strong> <strong>Schedule of speakers:</strong></p>\n<ul>\n<li><strong>Gila Sher</strong>&nbsp\;&mdash\; February 18\, 2026<br><em>Carnap&rsquo\;s and Quine&rsquo\;s Models of Knowledge: A Critical Reconstruction</em></li>\n<li><strong>Matti Eklund</strong>&nbsp\;&mdash\; March 25\, 2026<br><em>Carnap\, Metaontology and the Aufbau</em></li>\n<li><strong>Huw Price</strong>&nbsp\;&mdash\; May 13\, 2026<br><em>From Non-cognitivism to Global Expressivism: Carnap&rsquo\;s Unfinished Journey?</em></li>\n<li><strong>Pierre Wagner</strong>&nbsp\;&mdash\; June 3\, 2026<br><em>Carnap on Definition</em></li>\n<li><strong>Hannes Leitgeb</strong>&nbsp\;&mdash\; October 7\, 2026<br><em>Reviving Logical Empiricism</em></li>\n<li><strong>Thomas Hofweber</strong>&nbsp\;&mdash\; November 11\, 2026<br><em>Carnap on Internal and External Questions</em></li>\n<li><strong>Amie Thomasson</strong>&nbsp\;&mdash\; December 9\, 2026<br><em>Title TBA</em></li>\n</ul>\n<p>The series is organized in collaboration with&nbsp\;<em>Carnap in Context IV</em>&nbsp\;(&Ouml\;AW\, FWF Grant PAT7905424) and&nbsp\;<em>Rudolf Carnap Digital</em>&nbsp\;(MCMP\, LMU Munich). &nbsp\;</p>
ORGANIZER;CN=Caterina Del Sordo;CN=Luca Oliva;CN=Silvano Zipoli Caiani:
METHOD:PUBLISH
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260611T195224Z
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20260317T170000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20261117T170000
SUMMARY:Wittgenstein's Lecture on Ethics: Online Lecture Series
UID:20260618T014154Z-iCalPlugin-Grails@philevents-web-bd7db559-gt5qm
TZID:Europe/London
DESCRIPTION:<ul><li>17/3/2026 17:00 CET&nbsp\; &nbsp\; &nbsp\;<strong>Reshef Agam-Segal</strong> (VMI): How to Be Morally Resolute: Diamond vs. Conant &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\;</li>\n<li>28/4/2026 17:00 CEST &nbsp\; &nbsp\;&nbsp\;<strong>Samuel Pedziwiatr </strong>(Hagen): Echoes of Euthyphro. Wittgenstein and Schlick on the (Im-)possibility of Scientific Ethics &nbsp\;&nbsp\;</li>\n<li>18/6/2026 17:00 CEST &nbsp\; &nbsp\;<strong>Duncan Richter </strong>(VMI): Ethics and the Supernatural &nbsp\;&nbsp\;</li>\n<li>17/11/2026 17:00 CET &nbsp\; <strong>Maria Balaska</strong> (&Aring\;bo): Wittgenstein (and Heidegger) on the Wonder at Being</li>\n<li><br>Please note the lectures start at 5pm CET (Central European Time).</li>\n</ul>
ORGANIZER;CN=Nimrod Matan;CN=Gilad Nir;CN=Jonathan Soen:
METHOD:PUBLISH
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260611T195224Z
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Athens:20260404T180000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Athens:20261219T170000
SUMMARY:Η ΜΕΤΑ - ΦΙΛΟΣΟΦΙΚΗ ΣΚΕΨΗ - ΑΛΕΞΗΣ ΚΑΡΠΟΥΖΟΣ
UID:20260618T014155Z-iCalPlugin-Grails@philevents-web-bd7db559-gt5qm
TZID:Europe/Athens
LOCATION:PLAKA  23\, Athens\, Greece
DESCRIPTION:<p>&Eta\; &mu\;&epsilon\;&tau\;&alpha\;-&phi\;&iota\;&lambda\;&omicron\;&sigma\;&omicron\;&phi\;&iota\;&kappa\;ή &sigma\;&kappa\;έ&psi\;&eta\;\, ό&pi\;&omega\;&sigmaf\; &alpha\;&nu\;&alpha\;&delta\;ύ&epsilon\;&tau\;&alpha\;&iota\; &sigma\;&tau\;&omicron\; &sigma\;&tau\;&omicron\;&chi\;&alpha\;&sigma\;&mu\;ό &tau\;&omicron\;&upsilon\; &Alpha\;&lambda\;έ&xi\;&eta\; &Kappa\;&alpha\;&rho\;&pi\;&omicron\;ύ&zeta\;&omicron\;&upsilon\;\, &delta\;&epsilon\;&nu\; &alpha\;&pi\;&omicron\;&tau\;&epsilon\;&lambda\;&epsilon\;ί &alpha\;&pi\;&lambda\;ώ&sigmaf\; &mu\;&iota\;&alpha\; &nu\;έ&alpha\; &theta\;&epsilon\;&omega\;&rho\;&eta\;&tau\;&iota\;&kappa\;ή &pi\;&rho\;ό&tau\;&alpha\;&sigma\;&eta\; &alpha\;&lambda\;&lambda\;ά &mu\;&iota\;&alpha\; &rho\;&iota\;&zeta\;&iota\;&kappa\;ή &mu\;&epsilon\;&tau\;&alpha\;&tau\;ό&pi\;&iota\;&sigma\;&eta\; &tau\;&omicron\;&upsilon\; ί&delta\;&iota\;&omicron\;&upsilon\; &tau\;&omicron\;&upsilon\; &nu\;&omicron\;ή&mu\;&alpha\;&tau\;&omicron\;&sigmaf\; &tau\;&eta\;&sigmaf\; &phi\;&iota\;&lambda\;&omicron\;&sigma\;&omicron\;&phi\;ί&alpha\;&sigmaf\;\, &mu\;&iota\;&alpha\; &kappa\;ί&nu\;&eta\;&sigma\;&eta\; &alpha\;&pi\;ό &tau\;&eta\; &phi\;&iota\;&lambda\;&omicron\;&sigma\;&omicron\;&phi\;ί&alpha\; &omega\;&sigmaf\; &sigma\;ύ&sigma\;&tau\;&eta\;&mu\;&alpha\; &pi\;&rho\;&omicron\;&sigmaf\; &tau\;&eta\; &phi\;&iota\;&lambda\;&omicron\;&sigma\;&omicron\;&phi\;ί&alpha\; &omega\;&sigmaf\; &alpha\;&nu\;&omicron\;&iota\;&chi\;&tau\;ή &epsilon\;&mu\;&pi\;&epsilon\;&iota\;&rho\;ί&alpha\; &tau\;&omicron\;&upsilon\; &Epsilon\;ί&nu\;&alpha\;&iota\;\, ό&pi\;&omicron\;&upsilon\; &eta\; &sigma\;&kappa\;έ&psi\;&eta\; &delta\;&epsilon\;&nu\; &pi\;&epsilon\;&rho\;&iota\;&omicron\;&rho\;ί&zeta\;&epsilon\;&tau\;&alpha\;&iota\; &sigma\;&tau\;&eta\; &lambda\;&omicron\;&gamma\;&iota\;&kappa\;ή &alpha\;&nu\;&alpha\;&pi\;&alpha\;&rho\;ά&sigma\;&tau\;&alpha\;&sigma\;&eta\; &alpha\;&lambda\;&lambda\;ά &mu\;&epsilon\;&tau\;&alpha\;&mu\;&omicron\;&rho\;&phi\;ώ&nu\;&epsilon\;&tau\;&alpha\;&iota\; &sigma\;&epsilon\; &tau\;&rho\;ό&pi\;&omicron\; ύ&pi\;&alpha\;&rho\;&xi\;&eta\;&sigmaf\; &kappa\;&alpha\;&iota\; &sigma\;&upsilon\;&mu\;&mu\;&epsilon\;&tau\;&omicron\;&chi\;ή&sigmaf\; &sigma\;&tau\;&eta\;&nu\; &pi\;&rho\;&alpha\;&gamma\;&mu\;&alpha\;&tau\;&iota\;&kappa\;ό&tau\;&eta\;&tau\;&alpha\;. &Sigma\;&tau\;&omicron\;&nu\; &pi\;&upsilon\;&rho\;ή&nu\;&alpha\; &alpha\;&upsilon\;&tau\;ή&sigmaf\; &tau\;&eta\;&sigmaf\; &pi\;&rho\;&omicron\;&omicron\;&pi\;&tau\;&iota\;&kappa\;ή&sigmaf\; &beta\;&rho\;ί&sigma\;&kappa\;&epsilon\;&tau\;&alpha\;&iota\; &eta\; έ&nu\;&nu\;&omicron\;&iota\;&alpha\; &tau\;&eta\;&sigmaf\; &Alpha\;&nu\;&omicron\;&iota\;&chi\;&tau\;ή&sigmaf\; &Omicron\;&lambda\;ό&tau\;&eta\;&tau\;&alpha\;&sigmaf\;\, &mu\;&iota\;&alpha\;&sigmaf\; &delta\;&upsilon\;&nu\;&alpha\;&mu\;&iota\;&kappa\;ή&sigmaf\; &kappa\;&alpha\;&iota\; &mu\;&eta\;-&kappa\;&lambda\;&epsilon\;&iota\;&sigma\;&tau\;ή&sigmaf\; &epsilon\;&nu\;ό&tau\;&eta\;&tau\;&alpha\;&sigmaf\; &mu\;έ&sigma\;&alpha\; &sigma\;&tau\;&eta\;&nu\; &omicron\;&pi\;&omicron\;ί&alpha\; &omicron\; ά&nu\;&theta\;&rho\;&omega\;&pi\;&omicron\;&sigmaf\; &kappa\;&alpha\;&iota\; &omicron\; &kappa\;ό&sigma\;&mu\;&omicron\;&sigmaf\; &sigma\;&upsilon\;&nu\;-&sigma\;&upsilon\;&gamma\;&kappa\;&rho\;&omicron\;&tau\;&omicron\;ύ&nu\;&tau\;&alpha\;&iota\; &chi\;&omega\;&rho\;ί&sigmaf\; &nu\;&alpha\; &tau\;&alpha\;&upsilon\;&tau\;ί&zeta\;&omicron\;&nu\;&tau\;&alpha\;&iota\;\, &sigma\;&upsilon\;&gamma\;&kappa\;&rho\;&omicron\;&tau\;ώ&nu\;&tau\;&alpha\;&sigmaf\; &alpha\;&upsilon\;&tau\;ό &pi\;&omicron\;&upsilon\; &omicron\; &Kappa\;&alpha\;&rho\;&pi\;&omicron\;ύ&zeta\;&omicron\;&sigmaf\; &omicron\;&nu\;&omicron\;&mu\;ά&zeta\;&epsilon\;&iota\; &Mu\;&eta\;-&Tau\;&alpha\;&upsilon\;&tau\;&omicron\;&lambda\;&omicron\;&gamma\;&iota\;&kappa\;ή &Tau\;&alpha\;&upsilon\;&tau\;ό&tau\;&eta\;&tau\;&alpha\;\, &delta\;&eta\;&lambda\;&alpha\;&delta\;ή &mu\;&iota\;&alpha\; &sigma\;&chi\;έ&sigma\;&eta\; ό&pi\;&omicron\;&upsilon\; &tau\;&omicron\; έ&nu\;&alpha\; &delta\;&epsilon\;&nu\; &alpha\;&pi\;&omicron\;&rho\;&rho\;&omicron\;&phi\;ά &tau\;&omicron\; ά&lambda\;&lambda\;&omicron\; &alpha\;&lambda\;&lambda\;ά &omicron\;ύ&tau\;&epsilon\; &kappa\;&alpha\;&iota\; &pi\;&alpha\;&rho\;&alpha\;&mu\;έ&nu\;&epsilon\;&iota\; &alpha\;&pi\;&omicron\;&lambda\;ύ&tau\;&omega\;&sigmaf\; &delta\;&iota\;&alpha\;&chi\;&omega\;&rho\;&iota\;&sigma\;&mu\;έ&nu\;&omicron\;\, &mu\;&iota\;&alpha\; &epsilon\;&nu\;ό&tau\;&eta\;&tau\;&alpha\; &sigma\;&epsilon\; &delta\;&iota\;&alpha\;&rho\;&kappa\;ή &mu\;&epsilon\;&tau\;&alpha\;&mu\;ό&rho\;&phi\;&omega\;&sigma\;&eta\; &mu\;έ&sigma\;&alpha\; &sigma\;&tau\;&omicron\;&nu\; &chi\;&rho\;ό&nu\;&omicron\;. &Eta\; &pi\;&rho\;&alpha\;&gamma\;&mu\;&alpha\;&tau\;&iota\;&kappa\;ό&tau\;&eta\;&tau\;&alpha\;\, &sigma\;&epsilon\; &alpha\;&upsilon\;&tau\;ή &tau\;&eta\; &mu\;&epsilon\;&tau\;&alpha\;-&phi\;&iota\;&lambda\;&omicron\;&sigma\;&omicron\;&phi\;&iota\;&kappa\;ή &sigma\;ύ&lambda\;&lambda\;&eta\;&psi\;&eta\;\, &delta\;&epsilon\;&nu\; &epsilon\;ί&nu\;&alpha\;&iota\; &sigma\;&tau\;&alpha\;&tau\;&iota\;&kappa\;ή &omicron\;&upsilon\;&sigma\;ί&alpha\; &alpha\;&lambda\;&lambda\;ά &delta\;&iota\;&alpha\;&delta\;&iota\;&kappa\;&alpha\;&sigma\;ί&alpha\; &Sigma\;&chi\;&epsilon\;&sigma\;&iota\;&alpha\;&kappa\;ή&sigmaf\; &Sigma\;&upsilon\;&nu\;-&Gamma\;έ&nu\;&epsilon\;&sigma\;&eta\;&sigmaf\;\, έ&nu\;&alpha\; &pi\;&lambda\;έ&gamma\;&mu\;&alpha\; &zeta\;&omega\;&nu\;&tau\;&alpha\;&nu\;ώ&nu\; &sigma\;&chi\;έ&sigma\;&epsilon\;&omega\;&nu\; ό&pi\;&omicron\;&upsilon\; &kappa\;ά&theta\;&epsilon\; &mu\;&omicron\;&rho\;&phi\;ή ύ&pi\;&alpha\;&rho\;&xi\;&eta\;&sigmaf\; &alpha\;&nu\;&alpha\;&delta\;ύ&epsilon\;&tau\;&alpha\;&iota\; &mu\;έ&sigma\;&alpha\; &alpha\;&pi\;ό &tau\;&eta\;&nu\; &alpha\;&lambda\;&lambda\;&eta\;&lambda\;&epsilon\;&pi\;ί&delta\;&rho\;&alpha\;&sigma\;&eta\; &kappa\;&alpha\;&iota\; &tau\;&eta\;&nu\; &alpha\;&mu\;&omicron\;&iota\;&beta\;&alpha\;ί&alpha\; &sigma\;&upsilon\;&gamma\;&kappa\;&rho\;ό&tau\;&eta\;&sigma\;&eta\;\, &gamma\;&epsilon\;&gamma\;&omicron\;&nu\;ό&sigmaf\; &pi\;&omicron\;&upsilon\; &sigma\;&upsilon\;&nu\;&tau\;&omicron\;&nu\;ί&zeta\;&epsilon\;&tau\;&alpha\;&iota\; &mu\;&epsilon\; &tau\;&eta\;&nu\; &eta\;&rho\;&alpha\;&kappa\;&lambda\;&epsilon\;ί&tau\;&epsilon\;&iota\;&alpha\; &epsilon\;&nu\;ό&tau\;&eta\;&tau\;&alpha\; &tau\;&omega\;&nu\; &alpha\;&nu\;&tau\;&iota\;&theta\;έ&tau\;&omega\;&nu\;\, &tau\;&eta\;&nu\; &epsilon\;&kappa\;&pi\;ό&rho\;&epsilon\;&upsilon\;&sigma\;&eta\; &tau\;&omicron\;&upsilon\; &Epsilon\;&nu\;ό&sigmaf\; &sigma\;&tau\;&omicron\;&nu\; &Pi\;&lambda\;&omega\;&tau\;ί&nu\;&omicron\;\, &tau\;&eta\; &mu\;&omicron\;&nu\;&iota\;&sigma\;&tau\;&iota\;&kappa\;ή &omicron\;&nu\;&tau\;&omicron\;&lambda\;&omicron\;&gamma\;ί&alpha\; &tau\;&omicron\;&upsilon\; &Sigma\;&pi\;&iota\;&nu\;ό&zeta\;&alpha\;\, &tau\;&eta\; &delta\;&iota\;&alpha\;&lambda\;&epsilon\;&kappa\;&tau\;&iota\;&kappa\;ή &kappa\;ί&nu\;&eta\;&sigma\;&eta\; &tau\;&omicron\;&upsilon\; &Chi\;έ&gamma\;&kappa\;&epsilon\;&lambda\;\, &tau\;&eta\; &sigma\;&upsilon\;&nu\;-&alpha\;&nu\;ή&kappa\;&epsilon\;&iota\;&nu\; &alpha\;&nu\;&theta\;&rho\;ώ&pi\;&omicron\;&upsilon\; &kappa\;&alpha\;&iota\; &Epsilon\;ί&nu\;&alpha\;&iota\; &sigma\;&tau\;&omicron\;&nu\; &Chi\;ά&iota\;&nu\;&tau\;&epsilon\;&gamma\;&kappa\;&epsilon\;&rho\;\, &tau\;&eta\; &laquo\;&sigma\;ά&rho\;&kappa\;&alpha\; &tau\;&omicron\;&upsilon\; &kappa\;ό&sigma\;&mu\;&omicron\;&upsilon\;&raquo\; &sigma\;&tau\;&omicron\;&nu\; Merleau-Ponty &kappa\;&alpha\;&iota\; &tau\;&eta\; &delta\;&iota\;&alpha\;&delta\;&iota\;&kappa\;&alpha\;&sigma\;&iota\;&alpha\;&kappa\;ή &omicron\;&nu\;&tau\;&omicron\;&lambda\;&omicron\;&gamma\;ί&alpha\; &tau\;&omicron\;&upsilon\; Whitehead.</p>\n<p>&Sigma\;&tau\;&omicron\; &kappa\;έ&nu\;&tau\;&rho\;&omicron\; &alpha\;&upsilon\;&tau\;ή&sigmaf\; &tau\;&eta\;&sigmaf\; &sigma\;&kappa\;έ&psi\;&eta\;&sigmaf\; &alpha\;&nu\;&alpha\;&pi\;&tau\;ύ&sigma\;&sigma\;&epsilon\;&tau\;&alpha\;&iota\; &eta\; &Omicron\;&nu\;&tau\;&omicron\;&lambda\;&omicron\;&gamma\;ί&alpha\; &Mu\;&epsilon\;&tau\;&alpha\;&mu\;ό&rho\;&phi\;&omega\;&sigma\;&eta\;&sigmaf\;\, &sigma\;ύ&mu\;&phi\;&omega\;&nu\;&alpha\; &mu\;&epsilon\; &tau\;&eta\;&nu\; &omicron\;&pi\;&omicron\;ί&alpha\; &tau\;&omicron\; &Epsilon\;ί&nu\;&alpha\;&iota\; &delta\;&epsilon\;&nu\; &epsilon\;ί&nu\;&alpha\;&iota\; &delta\;&epsilon\;&delta\;&omicron\;&mu\;έ&nu\;&omicron\; &alpha\;&lambda\;&lambda\;ά &gamma\;&epsilon\;&nu\;&nu\;ά&tau\;&alpha\;&iota\; &kappa\;&alpha\;&iota\; &mu\;&epsilon\;&tau\;&alpha\;&sigma\;&chi\;&eta\;&mu\;&alpha\;&tau\;ί&zeta\;&epsilon\;&tau\;&alpha\;&iota\; &delta\;&iota\;&alpha\;&rho\;&kappa\;ώ&sigmaf\;\, &kappa\;&alpha\;&iota\; &epsilon\;&delta\;ώ &alpha\;&nu\;&alpha\;&delta\;ύ&epsilon\;&tau\;&alpha\;&iota\; &eta\; &Pi\;&omicron\;&iota\;&eta\;&tau\;&iota\;&kappa\;ό&tau\;&eta\;&tau\;&alpha\; &tau\;&omicron\;&upsilon\; &Kappa\;ό&sigma\;&mu\;&omicron\;&upsilon\; &omega\;&sigmaf\; &Kappa\;&omicron\;&sigma\;&mu\;&iota\;&kappa\;ή &Pi\;&omicron\;ί&eta\;&sigma\;&eta\;\, &delta\;&eta\;&lambda\;&alpha\;&delta\;ή &omega\;&sigmaf\; &eta\; ί&delta\;&iota\;&alpha\; &eta\; &delta\;&eta\;&mu\;&iota\;&omicron\;&upsilon\;&rho\;&gamma\;&iota\;&kappa\;ή &pi\;&rho\;ά&xi\;&eta\; &mu\;&epsilon\; &tau\;&eta\;&nu\; &omicron\;&pi\;&omicron\;ί&alpha\; &eta\; &pi\;&rho\;&alpha\;&gamma\;&mu\;&alpha\;&tau\;&iota\;&kappa\;ό&tau\;&eta\;&tau\;&alpha\; &mu\;&omicron\;&rho\;&phi\;&omicron\;&pi\;&omicron\;&iota\;&epsilon\;ί&tau\;&alpha\;&iota\; &kappa\;&alpha\;&iota\; &alpha\;&upsilon\;&tau\;&omicron\;-&epsilon\;&kappa\;&delta\;&eta\;&lambda\;ώ&nu\;&epsilon\;&tau\;&alpha\;&iota\;. &Eta\; &pi\;&omicron\;&iota\;&eta\;&tau\;&iota\;&kappa\;ό&tau\;&eta\;&tau\;&alpha\; &alpha\;&upsilon\;&tau\;ή &pi\;&eta\;&gamma\;ά&zeta\;&epsilon\;&iota\; &alpha\;&pi\;ό &tau\;&eta\; &delta\;&upsilon\;&nu\;&alpha\;&mu\;&iota\;&kappa\;ή &sigma\;&chi\;έ&sigma\;&eta\; &tau\;&eta\;&sigmaf\; &Alpha\;&beta\;ύ&sigma\;&sigma\;&omicron\;&upsilon\;\, &tau\;&omicron\;&upsilon\; &Mu\;&eta\;&delta\;&epsilon\;&nu\;ό&sigmaf\; &kappa\;&alpha\;&iota\; &tau\;&omicron\;&upsilon\; &Pi\;&alpha\;&nu\;&tau\;ό&sigmaf\;\, &kappa\;&alpha\;&theta\;ώ&sigmaf\; &kappa\;&alpha\;&iota\; &tau\;&omicron\;&upsilon\; &Chi\;ά&omicron\;&upsilon\;&sigmaf\; &kappa\;&alpha\;&iota\; &tau\;&eta\;&sigmaf\; &Tau\;ά&xi\;&eta\;&sigmaf\;\, ό&pi\;&omicron\;&upsilon\; &tau\;&omicron\; &Mu\;&eta\;&delta\;έ&nu\; &delta\;&epsilon\;&nu\; &sigma\;&eta\;&mu\;&alpha\;ί&nu\;&epsilon\;&iota\; &alpha\;&nu\;&upsilon\;&pi\;&alpha\;&rho\;&xi\;ί&alpha\; &alpha\;&lambda\;&lambda\;ά &delta\;&eta\;&mu\;&iota\;&omicron\;&upsilon\;&rho\;&gamma\;&iota\;&kappa\;ή &delta\;&upsilon\;&nu\;&alpha\;&tau\;ό&tau\;&eta\;&tau\;&alpha\;\, έ&nu\;&alpha\; &pi\;&rho\;&omicron\;-&omicron\;&nu\;&tau\;&omicron\;&lambda\;&omicron\;&gamma\;&iota\;&kappa\;ό &beta\;ά&theta\;&omicron\;&sigmaf\; &alpha\;&pi\;ό &tau\;&omicron\; &omicron\;&pi\;&omicron\;ί&omicron\; &alpha\;&nu\;&alpha\;&delta\;ύ&epsilon\;&tau\;&alpha\;&iota\; &tau\;&omicron\; &Pi\;ά&nu\; &omega\;&sigmaf\; &sigma\;&upsilon\;&nu\;&epsilon\;&chi\;ή&sigmaf\; &phi\;&alpha\;&nu\;έ&rho\;&omega\;&sigma\;&eta\; &tau\;&omicron\;&upsilon\; &Epsilon\;ί&nu\;&alpha\;&iota\;\, &epsilon\;&nu\;ώ &tau\;&omicron\; &Chi\;ά&omicron\;&sigmaf\; &delta\;&epsilon\;&nu\; &epsilon\;ί&nu\;&alpha\;&iota\; &alpha\;&pi\;&lambda\;ή &alpha\;&tau\;&alpha\;&xi\;ί&alpha\; &alpha\;&lambda\;&lambda\;ά &pi\;&epsilon\;&delta\;ί&omicron\; &Delta\;&eta\;&mu\;&iota\;&omicron\;&upsilon\;&rho\;&gamma\;&iota\;&kappa\;ή&sigmaf\; &Alpha\;&beta\;&epsilon\;&beta\;&alpha\;&iota\;ό&tau\;&eta\;&tau\;&alpha\;&sigmaf\;\, &eta\; &alpha\;&nu\;&omicron\;&iota\;&chi\;&tau\;ή &mu\;ή&tau\;&rho\;&alpha\; &tau\;&omega\;&nu\; &mu\;&omicron\;&rho\;&phi\;ώ&nu\;\, &alpha\;&pi\;ό &tau\;&eta\;&nu\; &omicron\;&pi\;&omicron\;ί&alpha\; &alpha\;&nu\;&alpha\;&delta\;ύ&epsilon\;&tau\;&alpha\;&iota\; &eta\; &Tau\;ά&xi\;&eta\; &omega\;&sigmaf\; &pi\;&rho\;&omicron\;&sigma\;&omega\;&rho\;&iota\;&nu\;ή &mu\;&omicron\;&rho\;&phi\;&omicron\;&pi\;&omicron\;ί&eta\;&sigma\;&eta\;\, &gamma\;&iota\;&alpha\; &nu\;&alpha\; &epsilon\;&pi\;&iota\;&sigma\;&tau\;&rho\;έ&psi\;&epsilon\;&iota\; &kappa\;&alpha\;&iota\; &pi\;ά&lambda\;&iota\; &sigma\;&tau\;&omicron\; &Chi\;ά&omicron\;&sigmaf\; &mu\;έ&sigma\;&alpha\; &sigma\;&epsilon\; έ&nu\;&alpha\;&nu\; &rho\;&upsilon\;&theta\;&mu\;&iota\;&kappa\;ό &kappa\;&alpha\;&iota\; &alpha\;&upsilon\;&tau\;&omicron\;-&upsilon\;&pi\;&epsilon\;&rho\;&beta\;&alpha\;&tau\;&iota\;&kappa\;ό &kappa\;ύ&kappa\;&lambda\;&omicron\; &mu\;&epsilon\;&tau\;&alpha\;&mu\;ό&rho\;&phi\;&omega\;&sigma\;&eta\;&sigmaf\;\, &gamma\;&epsilon\;&gamma\;&omicron\;&nu\;ό&sigmaf\; &pi\;&omicron\;&upsilon\; &sigma\;&upsilon\;&nu\;&alpha\;&nu\;&tau\;ά &tau\;&eta\;&nu\; &eta\;&rho\;&alpha\;&kappa\;&lambda\;&epsilon\;ί&tau\;&epsilon\;&iota\;&alpha\; &alpha\;&rho\;&mu\;&omicron\;&nu\;ί&alpha\; &tau\;&omega\;&nu\; &alpha\;&nu\;&tau\;&iota\;&theta\;έ&tau\;&omega\;&nu\;\, &tau\;&omicron\; &delta\;&eta\;&mu\;&iota\;&omicron\;&upsilon\;&rho\;&gamma\;&iota\;&kappa\;ό &chi\;ά&omicron\;&sigmaf\; &tau\;&omicron\;&upsilon\; &Nu\;ί&tau\;&sigma\;&epsilon\;\, &tau\;&eta\; &zeta\;&omega\;&tau\;&iota\;&kappa\;ή &omicron\;&rho\;&mu\;ή &tau\;&omicron\;&upsilon\; &Mu\;&pi\;&epsilon\;&rho\;&gamma\;&kappa\;&sigma\;ό&nu\;\, &tau\;&eta\;&nu\; &pi\;&omicron\;&lambda\;&lambda\;&alpha\;&pi\;&lambda\;ό&tau\;&eta\;&tau\;&alpha\; &tau\;&omicron\;&upsilon\; &Nu\;&tau\;&epsilon\;&lambda\;έ&zeta\; &kappa\;&alpha\;&iota\; &tau\;&eta\; &sigma\;ύ&gamma\;&chi\;&rho\;&omicron\;&nu\;&eta\; &epsilon\;&pi\;&iota\;&sigma\;&tau\;&eta\;&mu\;&omicron\;&nu\;&iota\;&kappa\;ή &kappa\;&alpha\;&tau\;&alpha\;&nu\;ό&eta\;&sigma\;&eta\; &tau\;&eta\;&sigmaf\; &alpha\;&upsilon\;&tau\;&omicron\;-&omicron\;&rho\;&gamma\;ά&nu\;&omega\;&sigma\;&eta\;&sigmaf\; &sigma\;&tau\;&omicron\;&nu\; &Pi\;&rho\;ί&gamma\;&kappa\;&omicron\;&zeta\;&iota\;&nu\;.</p>\n<p>&Mu\;έ&sigma\;&alpha\; &sigma\;&epsilon\; &alpha\;&upsilon\;&tau\;ή &tau\;&eta\; &delta\;&iota\;&alpha\;&delta\;&iota\;&kappa\;&alpha\;&sigma\;ί&alpha\;\, &omicron\; &Kappa\;ό&sigma\;&mu\;&omicron\;&sigmaf\; &delta\;&epsilon\;&nu\; &epsilon\;ί&nu\;&alpha\;&iota\; &mu\;&eta\;&chi\;&alpha\;&nu\;&iota\;&sigma\;&tau\;&iota\;&kappa\;ό &sigma\;ύ&sigma\;&tau\;&eta\;&mu\;&alpha\; &alpha\;&lambda\;&lambda\;ά &alpha\;&upsilon\;&tau\;&omicron\;-&pi\;&omicron\;&iota\;&eta\;&tau\;&iota\;&kappa\;ή &delta\;&eta\;&mu\;&iota\;&omicron\;&upsilon\;&rho\;&gamma\;ί&alpha\;\, &mu\;&iota\;&alpha\; &zeta\;&omega\;&nu\;&tau\;&alpha\;&nu\;ή &rho\;&omicron\;ή ό&pi\;&omicron\;&upsilon\; &tau\;&omicron\; ά&mu\;&omicron\;&rho\;&phi\;&omicron\; &gamma\;ί&nu\;&epsilon\;&tau\;&alpha\;&iota\; &mu\;&omicron\;&rho\;&phi\;ή &kappa\;&alpha\;&iota\; &eta\; &mu\;&omicron\;&rho\;&phi\;ή &epsilon\;&pi\;&iota\;&sigma\;&tau\;&rho\;έ&phi\;&epsilon\;&iota\; &sigma\;&tau\;&omicron\; ά&mu\;&omicron\;&rho\;&phi\;&omicron\;\, &kappa\;&alpha\;&iota\; έ&tau\;&sigma\;&iota\; &eta\; ύ&pi\;&alpha\;&rho\;&xi\;&eta\; &epsilon\;&mu\;&phi\;&alpha\;&nu\;ί&zeta\;&epsilon\;&tau\;&alpha\;&iota\; &omega\;&sigmaf\; &gamma\;&epsilon\;&nu\;&epsilon\;&tau\;&iota\;&kappa\;ή\, &sigma\;&chi\;&epsilon\;&sigma\;&iota\;&alpha\;&kappa\;ή &kappa\;&alpha\;&iota\; &pi\;&omicron\;&iota\;&eta\;&tau\;&iota\;&kappa\;ή. &Eta\; &mu\;&epsilon\;&tau\;&alpha\;-&phi\;&iota\;&lambda\;&omicron\;&sigma\;&omicron\;&phi\;&iota\;&kappa\;ή &sigma\;&tau\;ά&sigma\;&eta\; &mu\;&epsilon\;&tau\;&alpha\;&tau\;&omicron\;&pi\;ί&zeta\;&epsilon\;&iota\; &tau\;&omicron\; &kappa\;έ&nu\;&tau\;&rho\;&omicron\; &alpha\;&pi\;ό &tau\;&eta\; &gamma\;&nu\;ώ&sigma\;&eta\; &pi\;&rho\;&omicron\;&sigmaf\; &tau\;&eta\; &Beta\;&iota\;&omega\;&mu\;&alpha\;&tau\;&iota\;&kappa\;ή &Sigma\;&omicron\;&phi\;ί&alpha\;\, ό&pi\;&omicron\;&upsilon\; &eta\; &alpha\;&lambda\;ή&theta\;&epsilon\;&iota\;&alpha\; &delta\;&epsilon\;&nu\; &epsilon\;ί&nu\;&alpha\;&iota\; &alpha\;&pi\;&lambda\;ώ&sigmaf\; &epsilon\;&nu\;&nu\;&omicron\;&iota\;&omicron\;&lambda\;&omicron\;&gamma\;&iota\;&kappa\;ή &alpha\;&lambda\;&lambda\;ά &epsilon\;&mu\;&pi\;&epsilon\;&iota\;&rho\;&iota\;&kappa\;ή &kappa\;&alpha\;&iota\; &sigma\;&upsilon\;&mu\;&mu\;&epsilon\;&tau\;&omicron\;&chi\;&iota\;&kappa\;ή\, &mu\;&iota\;&alpha\; &kappa\;&alpha\;&tau\;ά&sigma\;&tau\;&alpha\;&sigma\;&eta\; &sigma\;&upsilon\;&nu\;&tau\;&omicron\;&nu\;&iota\;&sigma\;&mu\;&omicron\;ύ &mu\;&epsilon\; &tau\;&omicron\;&nu\; &rho\;&upsilon\;&theta\;&mu\;ό &tau\;&omicron\;&upsilon\; &kappa\;ό&sigma\;&mu\;&omicron\;&upsilon\;\, &kappa\;&alpha\;&iota\; &epsilon\;&delta\;ώ &epsilon\;&mu\;&phi\;&alpha\;&nu\;ί&zeta\;&epsilon\;&tau\;&alpha\;&iota\; &eta\; &Upsilon\;&pi\;έ&rho\;&beta\;&alpha\;&sigma\;&eta\; &tau\;&eta\;&sigmaf\; &Gamma\;&lambda\;ώ&sigma\;&sigma\;&alpha\;&sigmaf\;\, &kappa\;&alpha\;&theta\;ώ&sigmaf\; &eta\; &alpha\;&lambda\;ή&theta\;&epsilon\;&iota\;&alpha\; &delta\;&epsilon\;&nu\; &mu\;&pi\;&omicron\;&rho\;&epsilon\;ί &nu\;&alpha\; &pi\;&epsilon\;&rho\;&iota\;&omicron\;&rho\;&iota\;&sigma\;&tau\;&epsilon\;ί &sigma\;&epsilon\; &omicron\;&rho\;&iota\;&sigma\;&mu\;&omicron\;ύ&sigmaf\; &kappa\;&alpha\;&iota\; &delta\;ό&gamma\;&mu\;&alpha\;&tau\;&alpha\; &alpha\;&lambda\;&lambda\;ά &beta\;&iota\;ώ&nu\;&epsilon\;&tau\;&alpha\;&iota\; &omega\;&sigmaf\; ά&mu\;&epsilon\;&sigma\;&eta\; &pi\;&alpha\;&rho\;&omicron\;&upsilon\;&sigma\;ί&alpha\;\, ό&pi\;&omega\;&sigmaf\; &delta\;&iota\;&alpha\;&phi\;&alpha\;ί&nu\;&epsilon\;&tau\;&alpha\;&iota\; &sigma\;&tau\;&omicron\;&nu\; &Sigma\;&omega\;&kappa\;&rho\;ά&tau\;&eta\; &kappa\;&alpha\;&iota\; &tau\;&eta\; &phi\;&iota\;&lambda\;&omicron\;&sigma\;&omicron\;&phi\;ί&alpha\; &omega\;&sigmaf\; &tau\;&rho\;ό&pi\;&omicron\; &zeta\;&omega\;ή&sigmaf\;\, &sigma\;&tau\;&omicron\;&upsilon\;&sigmaf\; &Sigma\;&tau\;&omega\;&iota\;&kappa\;&omicron\;ύ&sigmaf\; &kappa\;&alpha\;&iota\; &tau\;&eta\;&nu\; &tau\;έ&chi\;&nu\;&eta\; &tau\;&omicron\;&upsilon\; &beta\;ί&omicron\;&upsilon\;\, &sigma\;&tau\;&omicron\;&nu\; &Zeta\;&epsilon\;&nu\; &kappa\;&alpha\;&iota\; &tau\;&eta\; &mu\;&eta\;-&epsilon\;&nu\;&nu\;&omicron\;&iota\;&omicron\;&lambda\;&omicron\;&gamma\;&iota\;&kappa\;ή &epsilon\;&pi\;ί&gamma\;&nu\;&omega\;&sigma\;&eta\;\, &sigma\;&tau\;&omicron\;&nu\; Wittgenstein &kappa\;&alpha\;&iota\; &tau\;&alpha\; ό&rho\;&iota\;&alpha\; &tau\;&eta\;&sigmaf\; &gamma\;&lambda\;ώ&sigma\;&sigma\;&alpha\;&sigmaf\;\, &kappa\;&alpha\;&iota\; &sigma\;&tau\;&omicron\;&nu\; Heidegger ό&pi\;&omicron\;&upsilon\; &eta\; &sigma\;&kappa\;έ&psi\;&eta\; &pi\;&lambda\;&eta\;&sigma\;&iota\;ά&zeta\;&epsilon\;&iota\; &tau\;&eta\; &sigma\;&iota\;&omega\;&pi\;ή &tau\;&omicron\;&upsilon\; &Epsilon\;ί&nu\;&alpha\;&iota\;. &Eta\; &mu\;&epsilon\;&tau\;&alpha\;-&phi\;&iota\;&lambda\;&omicron\;&sigma\;&omicron\;&phi\;ί&alpha\;\, &epsilon\;&pi\;&omicron\;&mu\;έ&nu\;&omega\;&sigmaf\;\, &delta\;&epsilon\;&nu\; &sigma\;&upsilon\;&gamma\;&kappa\;&rho\;&omicron\;&tau\;&epsilon\;ί &kappa\;&lambda\;&epsilon\;&iota\;&sigma\;&tau\;ό &sigma\;ύ&sigma\;&tau\;&eta\;&mu\;&alpha\; &alpha\;&lambda\;&lambda\;ά έ&nu\;&alpha\;&nu\; &Alpha\;&nu\;&omicron\;&iota\;&chi\;&tau\;ό &Omicron\;&rho\;ί&zeta\;&omicron\;&nu\;&tau\;&alpha\;\, &mu\;&iota\;&alpha\; &delta\;&iota\;&alpha\;&rho\;&kappa\;ή &kappa\;ί&nu\;&eta\;&sigma\;&eta\; &pi\;&rho\;&omicron\;&sigmaf\; &tau\;&omicron\; Ά&pi\;&epsilon\;&iota\;&rho\;&omicron\; ό&pi\;&omicron\;&upsilon\; &eta\; &epsilon\;&nu\;ό&tau\;&eta\;&tau\;&alpha\; &delta\;&epsilon\;&nu\; &epsilon\;ί&nu\;&alpha\;&iota\; &omicron\;&mu\;&omicron\;&iota\;&omicron\;&mu\;&omicron\;&rho\;&phi\;ί&alpha\; &alpha\;&lambda\;&lambda\;ά &Kappa\;&alpha\;&theta\;&omicron\;&lambda\;&iota\;&kappa\;ή &Epsilon\;&nu\;ό&tau\;&eta\;&tau\;&alpha\;/&Pi\;&omicron\;&lambda\;&lambda\;&alpha\;&pi\;&lambda\;ό&tau\;&eta\;&tau\;&alpha\;\, &delta\;&eta\;&lambda\;&alpha\;&delta\;ή &mu\;&iota\;&alpha\; &epsilon\;&nu\;ό&tau\;&eta\;&tau\;&alpha\; &pi\;&omicron\;&upsilon\; &epsilon\;&kappa\;&delta\;&eta\;&lambda\;ώ&nu\;&epsilon\;&tau\;&alpha\;&iota\; &mu\;έ&sigma\;&alpha\; &alpha\;&pi\;ό &tau\;&eta\; &delta\;&iota\;&alpha\;&phi\;&omicron\;&rho\;&omicron\;&pi\;&omicron\;ί&eta\;&sigma\;&eta\; &kappa\;&alpha\;&iota\; &tau\;&eta\;&nu\; &pi\;&omicron\;&lambda\;&lambda\;&alpha\;&pi\;&lambda\;ό&tau\;&eta\;&tau\;&alpha\;\, &gamma\;&epsilon\;&gamma\;&omicron\;&nu\;ό&sigmaf\; &pi\;&omicron\;&upsilon\; &sigma\;&upsilon\;&nu\;&delta\;έ&epsilon\;&tau\;&alpha\;&iota\; &mu\;&epsilon\; &tau\;&eta\; &sigma\;ύ&mu\;&pi\;&tau\;&omega\;&sigma\;&eta\; &tau\;&omega\;&nu\; &alpha\;&nu\;&tau\;&iota\;&theta\;έ&tau\;&omega\;&nu\; &sigma\;&tau\;&omicron\;&nu\; &Nu\;&iota\;&kappa\;ό&lambda\;&alpha\;&omicron\; &Kappa\;&omicron\;&upsilon\;&zeta\;&alpha\;&nu\;ό\, &tau\;&eta\;&nu\; &epsilon\;&xi\;&epsilon\;&lambda\;&iota\;&kappa\;&tau\;&iota\;&kappa\;ή &epsilon\;&nu\;ό&tau\;&eta\;&tau\;&alpha\; &tau\;&omicron\;&upsilon\; Teilhard de&nbsp\;Chardin\, &tau\;&eta\;&nu\; &pi\;&omicron\;&lambda\;ύ&pi\;&lambda\;&omicron\;&kappa\;&eta\; &sigma\;&kappa\;έ&psi\;&eta\; &tau\;&omicron\;&upsilon\; Morin\, &tau\;&eta\; &delta\;&eta\;&mu\;&iota\;&omicron\;&upsilon\;&rho\;&gamma\;&iota\;&kappa\;ή &phi\;&alpha\;&nu\;&tau\;&alpha\;&sigma\;&iota\;&alpha\;&kappa\;ή &theta\;έ&sigma\;&mu\;&iota\;&sigma\;&eta\; &tau\;&omicron\;&upsilon\; Castoriadis &kappa\;&alpha\;&iota\; &tau\;&eta\; &phi\;&iota\;&lambda\;&omicron\;&sigma\;&omicron\;&phi\;ί&alpha\; &tau\;&eta\;&sigmaf\; &pi\;&omicron\;&lambda\;&lambda\;&alpha\;&pi\;&lambda\;ό&tau\;&eta\;&tau\;&alpha\;&sigmaf\; &sigma\;&tau\;&omicron\;&nu\; Deleuze.</p>\n<p>&Sigma\;&tau\;&omicron\; &beta\;&alpha\;&theta\;ύ&tau\;&epsilon\;&rho\;&omicron\; &epsilon\;&pi\;ί&pi\;&epsilon\;&delta\;&omicron\;\, &eta\; &mu\;&epsilon\;&tau\;&alpha\;-&phi\;&iota\;&lambda\;&omicron\;&sigma\;&omicron\;&phi\;ί&alpha\; &omicron\;&delta\;&eta\;&gamma\;&epsilon\;ί &sigma\;&tau\;&eta\; &Sigma\;&iota\;&omega\;&pi\;&eta\;&lambda\;ή &Epsilon\;&pi\;ί&gamma\;&nu\;&omega\;&sigma\;&eta\;\, ό&pi\;&omicron\;&upsilon\; &eta\; &gamma\;&nu\;ώ&sigma\;&eta\; &delta\;&epsilon\;&nu\; &epsilon\;ί&nu\;&alpha\;&iota\; &pi\;&lambda\;έ&omicron\;&nu\; &alpha\;&nu\;&alpha\;&lambda\;&upsilon\;&tau\;&iota\;&kappa\;ή &alpha\;&lambda\;&lambda\;ά &sigma\;&tau\;&omicron\;&chi\;&alpha\;&sigma\;&tau\;&iota\;&kappa\;ή &pi\;&alpha\;&rho\;&omicron\;&upsilon\;&sigma\;ί&alpha\; &mu\;έ&sigma\;&alpha\; &sigma\;&tau\;&omicron\; &Mu\;&upsilon\;&sigma\;&tau\;ή&rho\;&iota\;&omicron\; &tau\;&omicron\;&upsilon\; &Epsilon\;ί&nu\;&alpha\;&iota\;\, &kappa\;&alpha\;&iota\; &epsilon\;&delta\;ώ &eta\; &phi\;&iota\;&lambda\;&omicron\;&sigma\;&omicron\;&phi\;ί&alpha\; &mu\;&epsilon\;&tau\;&alpha\;&tau\;&rho\;έ&pi\;&epsilon\;&tau\;&alpha\;&iota\; &sigma\;&epsilon\; &sigma\;&tau\;ά&sigma\;&eta\; &delta\;έ&omicron\;&upsilon\;&sigmaf\; &alpha\;&pi\;έ&nu\;&alpha\;&nu\;&tau\;&iota\; &sigma\;&tau\;&omicron\; ά&rho\;&rho\;&eta\;&tau\;&omicron\;\, ό&pi\;&omega\;&sigmaf\; &sigma\;&tau\;&omicron\;&nu\; Pascal &kappa\;&alpha\;&iota\; &tau\;&omicron\;&upsilon\;&sigmaf\; &lambda\;ό&gamma\;&omicron\;&upsilon\;&sigmaf\; &tau\;&eta\;&sigmaf\; &kappa\;&alpha\;&rho\;&delta\;&iota\;ά&sigmaf\;\, &sigma\;&tau\;&omicron\;&nu\; Meister Eckhart &kappa\;&alpha\;&iota\; &tau\;&eta\;&nu\; &epsilon\;&sigma\;&omega\;&tau\;&epsilon\;&rho\;&iota\;&kappa\;ή &sigma\;&iota\;&omega\;&pi\;ή\, &sigma\;&tau\;&omicron\;&nu\; Levinas &kappa\;&alpha\;&iota\; &tau\;&omicron\; ά&pi\;&epsilon\;&iota\;&rho\;&omicron\; &tau\;&omicron\;&upsilon\; Ά&lambda\;&lambda\;&omicron\;&upsilon\;\, &kappa\;&alpha\;&iota\; &sigma\;&tau\;&omicron\;&nu\; Blanchot &kappa\;&alpha\;&iota\; &tau\;&omicron\; ό&rho\;&iota\;&omicron\; &tau\;&eta\;&sigmaf\; &gamma\;&lambda\;ώ&sigma\;&sigma\;&alpha\;&sigmaf\;. Έ&tau\;&sigma\;&iota\;\, &eta\; &mu\;&epsilon\;&tau\;&alpha\;-&phi\;&iota\;&lambda\;&omicron\;&sigma\;&omicron\;&phi\;&iota\;&kappa\;ή &sigma\;&kappa\;έ&psi\;&eta\; &tau\;&omicron\;&upsilon\; &Kappa\;&alpha\;&rho\;&pi\;&omicron\;ύ&zeta\;&omicron\;&upsilon\; &alpha\;&nu\;&alpha\;&delta\;ύ&epsilon\;&tau\;&alpha\;&iota\; &omega\;&sigmaf\; &omicron\;&nu\;&tau\;&omicron\;&lambda\;&omicron\;&gamma\;ί&alpha\; &delta\;&eta\;&mu\;&iota\;&omicron\;&upsilon\;&rho\;&gamma\;&iota\;&kappa\;ή&sigmaf\; &mu\;&epsilon\;&tau\;&alpha\;&mu\;ό&rho\;&phi\;&omega\;&sigma\;&eta\;&sigmaf\; &kappa\;&alpha\;&iota\; &tau\;&alpha\;&upsilon\;&tau\;ό&chi\;&rho\;&omicron\;&nu\;&alpha\; &omega\;&sigmaf\; &upsilon\;&pi\;&alpha\;&rho\;&xi\;&iota\;&alpha\;&kappa\;ό&sigmaf\; &tau\;&rho\;ό&pi\;&omicron\;&sigmaf\; &zeta\;&omega\;ή&sigmaf\;\, ό&pi\;&omicron\;&upsilon\; &eta\; &pi\;&rho\;&alpha\;&gamma\;&mu\;&alpha\;&tau\;&iota\;&kappa\;ό&tau\;&eta\;&tau\;&alpha\; &epsilon\;ί&nu\;&alpha\;&iota\; &alpha\;&nu\;&omicron\;&iota\;&chi\;&tau\;ή\, &sigma\;&chi\;&epsilon\;&sigma\;&iota\;&alpha\;&kappa\;ή &kappa\;&alpha\;&iota\; &pi\;&omicron\;&iota\;&eta\;&tau\;&iota\;&kappa\;ή\, &eta\; &gamma\;&nu\;ώ&sigma\;&eta\; &mu\;&epsilon\;&tau\;&alpha\;&mu\;&omicron\;&rho\;&phi\;ώ&nu\;&epsilon\;&tau\;&alpha\;&iota\; &sigma\;&epsilon\; &sigma\;&omicron\;&phi\;ί&alpha\;\, &eta\; &epsilon\;&nu\;ό&tau\;&eta\;&tau\;&alpha\; &phi\;&alpha\;&nu\;&epsilon\;&rho\;ώ&nu\;&epsilon\;&tau\;&alpha\;&iota\; &omega\;&sigmaf\; &pi\;&omicron\;&lambda\;&lambda\;&alpha\;&pi\;&lambda\;ό&tau\;&eta\;&tau\;&alpha\;\, &kappa\;&alpha\;&iota\; &omicron\; ά&nu\;&theta\;&rho\;&omega\;&pi\;&omicron\;&sigmaf\; &kappa\;&alpha\;&lambda\;&epsilon\;ί&tau\;&alpha\;&iota\; &nu\;&alpha\; &mu\;&epsilon\;&tau\;έ&chi\;&epsilon\;&iota\; &sigma\;&upsilon\;&nu\;&epsilon\;&iota\;&delta\;&eta\;&tau\;ά &sigma\;&tau\;&eta\;&nu\; &kappa\;&omicron\;&sigma\;&mu\;&iota\;&kappa\;ή &delta\;&iota\;&alpha\;&delta\;&iota\;&kappa\;&alpha\;&sigma\;ί&alpha\; &tau\;&eta\;&sigmaf\; &delta\;&eta\;&mu\;&iota\;&omicron\;&upsilon\;&rho\;&gamma\;ί&alpha\;&sigmaf\;\, &beta\;&iota\;ώ&nu\;&omicron\;&nu\;&tau\;&alpha\;&sigmaf\; &tau\;&eta\;&nu\; &Alpha\;&nu\;&omicron\;&iota\;&chi\;&tau\;ή &Omicron\;&lambda\;ό&tau\;&eta\;&tau\;&alpha\; &omega\;&sigmaf\; &alpha\;&delta\;&iota\;ά&kappa\;&omicron\;&pi\;&eta\; &kappa\;ί&nu\;&eta\;&sigma\;&eta\; &tau\;&omicron\;&upsilon\; &Epsilon\;ί&nu\;&alpha\;&iota\; &mu\;έ&sigma\;&alpha\; &sigma\;&tau\;&omicron\; ά&pi\;&epsilon\;&iota\;&rho\;&omicron\; &mu\;&upsilon\;&sigma\;&tau\;ή&rho\;&iota\;&omicron\; &tau\;&eta\;&sigmaf\; ύ&pi\;&alpha\;&rho\;&xi\;&eta\;&sigmaf\;.</p>
ORGANIZER;CN=Abhijith Jose:
METHOD:PUBLISH
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260611T195224Z
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20260422T181500
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20260715T170000
SUMMARY:InterChair Kolloquium
UID:20260618T014156Z-iCalPlugin-Grails@philevents-web-bd7db559-gt5qm
TZID:Europe/Berlin
LOCATION:Poppelsdorfer Allee 28\, Bonn\, Germany\, 53115
DESCRIPTION:<p>Das InterChair Kolloquium ist ein offenes Forum f&uuml\;r Philosophie\, das die Grenzen von Lehrst&uuml\;hlen und Seminarr&auml\;umen &uuml\;berschreitet und jede:n dazu einl&auml\;dt\, ein selbstgew&auml\;hltes Thema vorzustellen und gemeinsam zu diskutieren &ndash\; egal ob eigene Forschungsarbeit\, Seminararbeit oder pers&ouml\;nliches philosophisches Interesse.&nbsp\; &nbsp\; <br><br>Pr&auml\;sentiert wird in einem Rahmen\, der den Austausch zwischen Studierenden\, Promovierenden und dem weiteren philosophisch Interessierten f&ouml\;rdert. &nbsp\; &nbsp\; <br><br>Immer mittwochs\, 18 Uhr\, IZPH Bonn.<br><br></p>\n<p><strong>Zuh&ouml\;rer sind immer herzlichst eingeladen! Daf&uuml\;r muss man sich nicht anmelden!&nbsp\;</strong></p>\n
ORGANIZER;CN=Dalon Axhimusa:
METHOD:PUBLISH
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260611T195224Z
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20260422T180000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20260715T170000
SUMMARY:Representations in Minds\, Brains\, and AI
UID:20260618T014157Z-iCalPlugin-Grails@philevents-web-bd7db559-gt5qm
TZID:Europe/London
DESCRIPTION:<p>This series was prompted by a recent wave of fascinating new work on the topic of representations. We are honored and happy that so many authors agreed to participate and we hope to provide a platform for further interdisciplinary discussion. Most papers are already available and you can find links here:&nbsp\;https://www.pe.ruhr-uni-bochum.de/philosophie/ii/bewusstsein/lehre.html.en</a>&nbsp\;<br><br><strong>Schedule</strong><br>22 April\,&nbsp\;<strong>Rosa Cao&nbsp\;</strong>(Stanford): The Scientist in the Machine&nbsp\;(paper forthcoming)<br>29 April\,&nbsp\;<strong>Ken Aizawa&nbsp\;</strong>(Rutgers):&nbsp\;The Evidence for Representation&nbsp\;<br>06 May\,&nbsp\;<strong>Corey Maley</strong>&nbsp\;(Purdue):&nbsp\;Structural Representation is Analog Representation<br>13 May\,&nbsp\;<strong>Kevin J. Mitchell</strong>&nbsp\;(Dublin):&nbsp\;The Origins of Meaning: From Pragmatic Control Signals to Semantic Representation<br>20 May\,&nbsp\;<strong>Eric Hochstein</strong>&nbsp\;(Victoria\, Canada)):&nbsp\;Neural Representations as Scientific Posits and Metaphysical Entities<br>10 June\,&nbsp\;<strong>Manolo Mart&iacute\;nez</strong>&nbsp\;(Barcelona):&nbsp\;The Information-Processing Perspective on Representation<br>17 June\,&nbsp\;<strong>John Krakauer</strong>&nbsp\;(Johns Hopkins/Champalimaud Foundation) &amp\;&nbsp\;<strong>Bill Ramsey</strong>&nbsp\;(Nevada\, Las Vegas):&nbsp\;Mental Representation without Neural Representation<br>24 June\,&nbsp\;<strong>Nina Poth</strong>&nbsp\;(Radboud\, Nijmegen) &amp\;&nbsp\;<strong>Annika Schuster</strong>&nbsp\;(Dortmund):&nbsp\;Mental\, Scientific\, and Artificial Representations<br>01 July\,&nbsp\;<strong>Lotem Elber-Dorozko&nbsp\;</strong>(Jerusalem) &amp\;&nbsp\;<strong>Devin Gouv&ecirc\;a</strong>&nbsp\;(Holy Cross):&nbsp\;"Neural Representation" is not a Defective Concept<br>08 July\,&nbsp\;<strong>Zina B. Ward&nbsp\;</strong>(Florida State):&nbsp\;Directive Representation and the Job Description Challenge<br>15 July\,&nbsp\;<strong>Krzysztof Dolega</strong>&nbsp\;(Ruhr-University Bochum): The Gloss on the Machine: Egan's Representations in Mechanistic Explanation&nbsp\;(paper forthcoming)<br><br>All sessions will be on Zoom:<br>https://ruhr-uni-bochum.zoom-x.de/j/64692924755?pwd=803uh1OEPBkBrEONeL87zJFudGjlw7.1</a>&nbsp\;&nbsp\;<br>Meeting-ID: 646 9292 4755 | Passwort: 531564<br><br>Everybody interested is welcome!</p>
ORGANIZER;CN=Tobias Schlicht;CN=Krzysztof (Krys) Dolega:
METHOD:PUBLISH
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260611T195224Z
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20260429T210000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20261126T170000
SUMMARY:Séminaire Arendt 2026
UID:20260618T014158Z-iCalPlugin-Grails@philevents-web-bd7db559-gt5qm
TZID:Europe/London
DESCRIPTION:<p>Le R&eacute\;seau Arendtien Francophone\, cr&eacute\;&eacute\; en 2024\, vise &agrave\; favoriser une synergie entre celles et ceux qui\, des amateurs aux chercheuses\, fr&eacute\;quentent la pens&eacute\;e de Hannah Arendt. Dans cette optique\, nous cherchons &agrave\; mettre en place un rendez-vous r&eacute\;gulier pour en discuter les diff&eacute\;rents interpr&eacute\;tations et aspects.</p>\n<p>Du fait de l&rsquo\;&eacute\;tendue de la francophonie\, ces s&eacute\;minaires auront lieu <strong>en ligne</strong>. Leur principe sera le suivant : les participant-e-s auront tous et toutes pr&eacute\;alablement lu un article ou un chapitre r&eacute\;cent\, lequel sera pr&eacute\;sent&eacute\; tr&egrave\;s rapidement par souci de prioriser les &eacute\;changes (10 minutes) par son autrice ou auteur. &Agrave\; partir de celui-ci\, un-e membre du r&eacute\;seau ouvrira (5 min) &agrave\; un <strong>d&eacute\;bat</strong> plus large <strong>afin de discuter</strong>\, outre l&rsquo\;article\, <strong>les diff&eacute\;rents interpr&eacute\;tations et aspects de l&rsquo\;&oelig\;uvre d&rsquo\;Arendt</strong> (1h30).</p>\nProgramme 2026\n<p>En 2026\, nous proposons quatre s&eacute\;ances ordinaires du s&eacute\;minaire et une s&eacute\;ance sp&eacute\;ciale : &laquo\; <strong>Arendt et la science &eacute\;conomique </strong> &raquo\;\, &laquo\; <strong>Arendt et le travail </strong> &raquo\;\, &laquo\; <strong>Libert&eacute\;\, volont&eacute\;\, politique </strong> &raquo\;\, &laquo\; <strong>Arendt et la violence </strong> &raquo\;\, &laquo\; <strong>Philosophie\, &eacute\;ducation et politique </strong> &raquo\;.</p>\n<ul>\n<ul>\n<li>Le <strong>mercredi 29 avril 2026</strong> (<strong>21h</strong>\, heure de Paris)\, nous discuterons du th&egrave\;me &laquo\; <strong>Arendt et la science &eacute\;conomique</strong> &raquo\; &agrave\; partir de Pouchol Marlyse\, &laquo\; Arendt ou les limites des lois &eacute\;conomiques &raquo\; dans <em>Y a-t-il des lois en &eacute\;conomie ? </em>\, Berthoud Arnaud (dir.)\, Delmas Bernard (dir.)\, Demals Thierry (dir.)\, &Eacute\;ditions du Septentrion\, 2007\, p. 623-644. La s&eacute\;ance sera ouverte par Nicole Dewandre. <br>Lien de connexion : <a href="https://univ-antilles-fr.zoom.us/j/97775876163?pwd=WtKGooU5FppJPmbtOBljfPYQDRpyBl.1"> https://univ-antilles-fr.zoom.us/j/97775876163?pwd=WtKGooU5FppJPmbtOBljfPYQDRpyBl.1</a></li>\n</ul>\n</ul>\n\n<ul>\n<ul>\n<li>Le <strong>mardi 26 mai 2026</strong> (<strong>15h</strong>\, heure de Paris)\, nous discuterons du th&egrave\;me &laquo\; <strong>Arendt et le travail</strong> &raquo\; &agrave\; partir de Genel Katia\, &laquo\; Une ambigu&iuml\;t&eacute\; au c&oelig\;ur du diagnostic d'Arendt &raquo\; dans <em>L'oubli du labeur : Arendt et les th&eacute\;ories f&eacute\;ministes du travail</em>\, Klincksieck\, 2025\, p. 57-85. La s&eacute\;ance sera ouverte par Martine Leibovici. <br>Lien de connexion : <a href="https://univ-antilles-fr.zoom.us/j/96401223281?pwd=EGeLanYzoILWwoRZpjV2zsXhd8bp82.1">https://univ-antilles-fr.zoom.us/j/96401223281?pwd=EGeLanYzoILWwoRZpjV2zsXhd8bp82.1</a></li>\n</ul>\n</ul>\n\n<ul>\n<ul>\n<li>Le <strong>jeudi 18 juin 2026</strong> (<strong>21h</strong>\, heure de Paris)\, nous discuterons du th&egrave\;me &laquo\; <strong>Libert&eacute\;\, volont&eacute\;\, politique</strong> &raquo\; &agrave\; partir de Mr&eacute\;jen Aurore\, <em>Introduction &agrave\; Hannah Arendt</em>\, La D&eacute\;couverte\, 2025\, p. 61-72 et 102-109\, https://shs.cairn.info/introduction-a-hannah-arendt--9782348080685</a>. La s&eacute\;ance sera ouverte par Emma Augris. <br>Lien de connexion : <a href="https://univ-antilles-fr.zoom.us/j/98195228664?pwd=4fJ6ppZGaToPLYGO9eZQUYhYzkrLV9.1">https://univ-antilles-fr.zoom.us/j/98195228664?pwd=4fJ6ppZGaToPLYGO9eZQUYhYzkrLV9.1</a></li>\n</ul>\n</ul>\n\n<ul>\n<ul>\n<li>Le <strong>mardi 22 septembre 2026</strong> (<strong>14h-17h</strong>\, heure de Paris) aura lieu une s&eacute\;ance sp&eacute\;ciale lors de laquelle nous discuterons du th&egrave\;me &laquo\; <strong>Arendt et la violence</strong>&raquo\; &agrave\; partir de trois textes et autrices/auteurs :\n<ul>\n<li>Augris Emma\, &laquo\; Distinguer le pouvoir politique et la domination coercitive avec Hannah Arendt &raquo\; dans <em>L'Enseignement philosophique</em>\, 2025/1\, p. 57-66\, https://shs.cairn.info/revue-l-enseignement-philosophique-2025-1-page-57</a> \;</li>\n<li>Buntzly Marie-V&eacute\;ronique\, &laquo\; Peut-on comprendre la violence ? Une lecture de l&rsquo\;essai "sur la violence" de Hannah Arendt &raquo\; dans <em>L'Enseignement philosophique</em>\, 2025/1\, p. 67-77\, https://shs.cairn.info/revue-l-enseignement-philosophique-2025-1-page-67</a> \;</li>\n<li>Zanni R&eacute\;mi\, &laquo\; &Agrave\; partir d&rsquo\;Hannah Arendt : pouvoir\, violence et fondation politiques &raquo\;\, L. Raymond &amp\; M. Kurdyka (dir.)\, Presses Universitaires Savoie Mont Blanc\, &agrave\; para&icirc\;tre.</li>\n</ul>\nLa s&eacute\;ance sera ouverte et anim&eacute\;e par Carole Widmaier. <br>Lien de connexion : <a href="https://univ-antilles-fr.zoom.us/j/92107481423?pwd=HmULZ2uacHZsQ7G6j1jxS7TYvbJB54.1">https://univ-antilles-fr.zoom.us/j/92107481423?pwd=HmULZ2uacHZsQ7G6j1jxS7TYvbJB54.1</a></li>\n</ul>\n</ul>\n\n<ul>\n<li>Le <strong>jeudi 26 novembre 2026</strong> (<strong>21h</strong>\, heure de Paris)\, nous discuterons du th&egrave\;me &laquo\; <strong>Philosophie\, &eacute\;ducation et politique</strong> &raquo\; &agrave\; partir de Lara Pierquin-Rifflet\, &laquo\; Penser les ambitions singuli&egrave\;re et plurielle dans un atelier de philosophie. L&rsquo\;<em>amor mundi</em> d&rsquo\;Arendt &raquo\; dans <em>&Eacute\;ducation et socialisation</em>\, n&deg\;73\, 2024\, https://doi.org/10.4000/12del</a>. La s&eacute\;ance sera ouverte par R&eacute\;mi Zanni. <br>Lien de connexion : <a href="https://univ-antilles-fr.zoom.us/j/98781188106?pwd=rvBHMgxGC1L5LsqpFVrnIqVbkMFqi3.1">https://univ-antilles-fr.zoom.us/j/98781188106?pwd=rvBHMgxGC1L5LsqpFVrnIqVbkMFqi3.1</a></li>\n</ul>\n<p>Le s&eacute\;minaire est ouvert &agrave\; toutes et tous sans inscription pr&eacute\;alable \; n&rsquo\;h&eacute\;sitez pas &agrave\; venir y assister et y participer. Les articles et textes discut&eacute\;s sont disponibles <a href="https://www.reseau-arendt.fr/calendrier/details/17">sur le site du RAF</a>. N&rsquo\;h&eacute\;sitez pas non plus &agrave\; <a href="mailto:remi.zanni@reseau-arendt.fr">nous contacter</a> pour toute demande d&rsquo\;information compl&eacute\;mentaire.</p>\nLe RAF ?\n<p>Le R&eacute\;seau Arendtien Francophone (RAF) se veut un espace divers et pluriel\, rassemblant une communaut&eacute\; de doctorant-e-s\, enseignant-e-s\, chercheurs/ses\, intellectuel-le-s et toute personne int&eacute\;ress&eacute\;e ou engag&eacute\;e dans l'&eacute\;tude et la diffusion de la pens&eacute\;e d'Hannah Arendt en France et le monde francophone. &Agrave\; travers cette plateforme\, nous souhaitons favoriser les &eacute\;changes intellectuels\, offrir une visibilit&eacute\; accrue aux travaux de recherche et cr&eacute\;er des liens solides entre francophones s'int&eacute\;ressant &agrave\; et puisant dans l'&oelig\;uvre de cette autrice majeure du XXe si&egrave\;cle.</p>\n<p>Outre l&rsquo\;organisation de ce s&eacute\;minaire et d'&eacute\;v&egrave\;nements acad&eacute\;miques li&eacute\;s &agrave\; la pens&eacute\;e d'Arendt\, le r&eacute\;seau actualise continuellement <a href="https://www.reseau-arendt.fr/">un site web</a> qui met &agrave\; disposition : une <a href="https://www.reseau-arendt.fr/bibliographie/">bibliographie</a> des textes de langue fran&ccedil\;aise consacr&eacute\;s &agrave\; Arendt ou la mobilisant\, un <a href="https://www.reseau-arendt.fr/annuaire/">annuaire</a> des membres du r&eacute\;seau\, un <a href="https://www.reseau-arendt.fr/calendrier/">agenda</a> des activit&eacute\;s francophones qui lui sont d&eacute\;di&eacute\;es et une lettre d'information mensuelle.</p>\n<p>N'h&eacute\;sitez pas &agrave\; <a href="https://www.reseau-arendt.fr/membre/se-connecter/">rejoindre le r&eacute\;seau</a> ou &agrave\; <a href="mailto:remi.zanni@reseau-arendt.fr">nous contacter</a> pour rejoindre l&rsquo\;&eacute\;quipe d&rsquo\;animation !</p>\n
ORGANIZER;CN="Rémi Zanni":
METHOD:PUBLISH
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260611T195224Z
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20260523T130000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20260620T170000
SUMMARY:Introduction to Chaos Theory
UID:20260618T014159Z-iCalPlugin-Grails@philevents-web-bd7db559-gt5qm
TZID:Europe/London
DESCRIPTION:<p><strong>COURSE DESCRIPTION</strong></p>\n<p>Slowly crystallizing throughout the 20th century and popularized in the 1980s\, chaos theory is a loosely defined set of transdisciplinary scientific research that cuts through virtually every branch of disciplinary sciences\, and even the humanities: for the butterfly effect applies not only to tornadoes but also to the stock exchange\, and self-organization is not limited to ants and termite architecture (termite mounds!)\, but is a crucial element in revolutionary movements\; bifurcation does occur in trees\, but also in decisions humans take\, and vast complexity takes shape in migrating populations\, but no less in the human brain. In short\, chaos theory turns out to be so universal that we might be in the making of an entirely &ldquo\;new science\,&rdquo\; as some authors claim\, or at least of a new paradigm beyond reductionism\, calling for a new metaphysics.</p>\n<p>But in talking this way\, are we not confusing chaos theory with cybernetics\, yet another field of transdisciplinary research that originated in the 1940s and <em>as well</em> functions with feedback loops? &hellip\; A total system of control that Heidegger had warned against?</p>\n<p>We can never know for sure. In this seminar\, we will treat chaos theory as the flipside of cybernetics\, arguing for unpredictability against control\, for freedom against determinism. For no matter how &ldquo\;adaptive&rdquo\; cybernetic systems may appear to capture each and every step we take\, chaos is essentially ungraspable and always one step further than the system.</p>\n<p><strong><br></strong></p>\n<p><strong>COURSE MATERIALS</strong></p>\n<p>Since the material on chaos theory is vast and at times not easy to digest\, we will focus on some key texts that initially gave shape to the wicked world of chaos theory. While chaos theory is a holistic set of co-dependent concepts which cannot be analyzed in isolation\, each session will zoom in on one of these concepts while maintaining its relations to the whole.</p>\n<p>PDFs of all the readings will be provided upon registration. No prior knowledge is required.</p>\n<p><strong><br></strong></p>\n<p><strong>TIME</strong></p>\n<p>5 SATURDAYS\, weekly\, beginning May 23\, 2026.<br>1-3 PM&nbsp\;Eastern US Time.</p>\n<p><strong><br></strong></p>\n<p><strong>SESSIONS</strong></p>\n<ol>\n<li>From Reductionism to Complexity</li>\n<li>The Butterfly Effect</li>\n<li>Fractal Geometry and the Mandelbrot Set</li>\n<li>The Arrow of Time</li>\n<li>Self-Organization</li>\n</ol>\n<p><strong><br></strong></p>\n<p><strong>FACILITATOR</strong></p>\n<p>Having lived and studied all around the world\, <strong>Hannes Schumacher</strong> works at the threshold between philosophy and art. He has carried out intensive research on Hegel and Deleuze\, and he has also published widely on Nishida\, Nāgārjuna\, chaos theory\, global mysticism\, and contemporary art. Hannes is the founder of the Berlin-based publisher <a href="https://freigeist-verlag.net/">Freigeist Verlag</a> and co-founder of the grassroots art space <a href="https://chaosmos.zone/">Chaosmos &infin\;</a> in Athens\, Greece. He has facilitated the following courses and groups at Incite Seminars: &ldquo\;<a href="https://inciteseminars.com/nishida-kitaro/">Nishida Kitarō: The Logic of Place and the Religious Worldview</a>&rdquo\;\; &ldquo\;<a href="https://inciteseminars.com/whos-afraid-of-hegel/">Who&rsquo\;s Afraid of Hegel: Introduction to G. W. F. Hegel&rsquo\;s Science of Logic</a>&rdquo\;\; &ldquo\;<a href="https://inciteseminars.com/chaos-research-group/">Chaos Research Group</a>&rdquo\;\; &ldquo\;<a href="https://inciteseminars.com/reading-after-finitude-by-quentin-meillassoux/">Reading <em>After Finitude </em>by Quentin Meillassoux</a>&rdquo\;\; &ldquo\;<a href="https://inciteseminars.com/deleuze-guattari-what-is-philosophy/">Deleuze &amp\; Guattari: What is Philosophy?</a>&rdquo\;\; &ldquo\;<a href="https://inciteseminars.com/platos-chora/">Plato&rsquo\;s ch&ocirc\;ra through the lens of Derrida</a>&rdquo\;\; &ldquo\;<a href="https://inciteseminars.com/anarchia-and-archai-reimagining-the-pre-socratics/">Anarchia and Archai: Reimagining the Pre-Socratics</a>&rdquo\; (with Carlos A. Segovia)\; &ldquo\;<a href="https://inciteseminars.com/reading-nietzsches-zarathustra/">Reading Nietzsche&rsquo\;s Zarathustra</a>&rdquo\; (current)\; &ldquo\;<a href="https://inciteseminars.com/liana-of-the-resurrected/">Liana of the Resurrected</a>&rdquo\;\; and &ldquo\;<a href="https://inciteseminars.com/the-body-without-organs/">The Body without Organs.</a>&rdquo\;</p>\n<p><strong><br></strong></p>\n<p><strong>INCITE SEMINARS</strong></p>\n<p>We are a mix&nbsp\;of rogue scholars\, disgruntled academics\, disenchanted buddhists\, enchantment-hungry anarchists\, radical therapists\, and general weirdos looking to create autonomous and accessible forms of &ldquo\;higher education.&rdquo\;</p>\n<p>We offer<strong>&nbsp\;</strong>online seminars and reading groups to incite personal exploration and inspire community action. Incite Seminars offers&nbsp\;an educational&nbsp\;<em>experience</em>. We do so by gathering an engaged group of participants for a dynamic exchange of ideas\, led by skilled facilitators. All of our facilitators have a deep relationship to a subject or topic through intensive study or practice.</p>\n<p>Incite Seminars is a 100% member-supported learning community.&nbsp\;We depend on member contributions to continue holding space for radical study and practice groups\, putting on rigorous seminars and courses\, and providing our facilitators and organizers with fair compensation.&nbsp\;If you are unable to pay the full amount for a session or membership at this time\, we invite you to join us at&nbsp\;reduced or no cost with our Solidarity option.</p>
ORGANIZER;CN=Glenn Wallis:
METHOD:PUBLISH
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260611T195224Z
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20260528T163000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20260924T170000
SUMMARY:Inner Speech Colloquium
UID:20260618T014200Z-iCalPlugin-Grails@philevents-web-bd7db559-gt5qm
TZID:Europe/London
DESCRIPTION:<p>We are happy to announce another season of the online Inner Speech colloquium starting next month\, with a new list of speakers:&nbsp\;</p>\n<p>- May 28th - Gary Lupyan (University of Wisconsin-Madison)</p>\n<p>- June 25th -&nbsp\;Kasia Jaszczolt (University of Cambridge)</p>\n<p>- July 16th -&nbsp\;Romain Bourdoncle (Coll&egrave\;ge de France) &amp\; Axel Baptista (Institut Jean Nicod)</p>\n<p>- August 20th - Aleksandr Fadeev (University of Leuven)</p>\n<p>- September 24th - Keith Frankish (University of Sheffield)&nbsp\;</p>\n<p><em>Times are all 16:30 CEST</em></p>\n<p>More info about the first talk coming soon. We hope to see many of you there next month! For more information or to subscribe to the mailing list\, contact: jonida.kodra@uni-osnabrueck.de</p>\n<p>Best regards\,</p>\n<p>Jonida Kodra\, Daniel M&uuml\;ller and Mathijs Geurts (University of Osnabr&uuml\;ck and&nbsp\;University of Salzburg)</p>
ORGANIZER;CN=Jonida Kodra;CN=Mathijs Geurts;CN="Daniel Lennart Müller":
METHOD:PUBLISH
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260611T195224Z
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260531T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260611T170000
SUMMARY:Call for Applicants: Medieval Philosophy Fellowship - Center for Canon Expansion and Change 
UID:20260618T014201Z-iCalPlugin-Grails@philevents-web-bd7db559-gt5qm
TZID:America/New_York
LOCATION:Minneapolis\, United States
DESCRIPTION:<p>Call for Applicants: Medieval Philosophy Fellowship (3 positions open)</p>\n<p>The Center for Canon Expansion and Change (CCEC) at the University of Minnesota Twin Cities invites applications for the Fellowship in Medieval Philosophy. This program is an exciting opportunity to contribute to a groundbreaking initiative aimed at diversifying and expanding the philosophical canon. Over the next several years\, the CCEC will expand its curriculum beyond the early modern period to include the ancient\, medieval\, and early analytic periods. In 2026\, the focus will be on medieval Philosophy!</p>\n<p>Program Overview</p>\n<p>CCEC&rsquo\;s Fellowship seeks to employ scholars who are passionate about philosophy and committed to creating teaching modules that reflect the richness and diversity of the medieval philosophical tradition. This initiative builds upon the Center&rsquo\;s success in reimagining the teaching of early modern philosophy to include voices historically marginalized in the discipline and falls on the heels of the 2025 ancient fellowship program. The program aims to develop teaching resources that promote inclusive pedagogy and inspire students to see themselves as philosophers.</p>\n<p>Eligibility</p>\n<ul>\n<li>\n<p>Applicants must be career scholars in philosophy. Preference will be given to early career medieval scholars\, and open to recent PhD graduates\, adjuncts\, assistant/associate professor\, and/or contingent faculty.&nbsp\;</p>\n</li>\n<li>\n<p>Strong expertise in Medieval Philosophy is required.</p>\n</li>\n<li>\n<p>A demonstrated commitment to inclusive pedagogy and/or interest in expanding the philosophical canon is required.</p>\n</li>\n</ul>\n<p>Responsibilities</p>\n<ul>\n<li>\n<p>Collaborate with the CCEC team to develop comprehensive 6 to 9 teaching modules on medieval philosophy.</p>\n</li>\n<li>\n<p>Create resources for classroom use\, including syllabi\, lectures\, and assignments that highlight underrepresented figures and perspectives.</p>\n</li>\n<li>\n<p>Participate in the CCEC Summer Program at the University of Minnesota Twin Cities (May 31- June 6\, 2026)</p>\n</li>\n<li>\n<p>Take part in a post-summer program retreat (~3 days\, June 9-11\, 2026) to begin developing the plan for a medieval version of the CCEC Summer Program.</p>\n</li>\n<li>\n<p>As part of the compensation\, commit to be available to participate in CCEC 2027 (May 30 - June 5).</p>\n</li>\n</ul>\n<p>Compensation<br>Selected scholars will receive a competitive stipend of $2500-3000 for their contributions to the program.</p>\n<p><strong><br></strong></p>\n<p>Key Dates</p>\n<ul>\n<li>\n<p>Application Deadline: April 5\, 2026 (extended)</p>\n</li>\n<li>\n<p>Notification of Decision: April 15\, 2026</p>\n</li>\n<li>\n<p>Program Start Date: May 31\,&nbsp\; 2026</p>\n</li>\n</ul>\n<p>Application Requirements</p>\n<ul>\n<li>\n<p>A current CV.</p>\n</li>\n<li>\n<p>A cover letter detailing your research in medieval philosophy and commitment to inclusive pedagogy.</p>\n</li>\n<li>\n<p>A writing sample or portfolio demonstrating expertise in the field.</p>\n</li>\n<li>\n<p>Contact information for two references.</p>\n</li>\n</ul>\n<p>How to Apply</p>\n<p>Applications must be submitted online</p>\n<p>Application deadline: April 5\, 2026.</p>\n<p><strong><br></strong></p>\n<p>About Center for Canon Expansion and Change<br>Founded in 2021\, the Center for Canon Expansion and Change is dedicated to transforming the face of philosophy through justice-driven approaches to teaching and curriculum design. The Center has already engaged hundreds of educators and thousands of students worldwide in reimagining the discipline. The CCEC is housed in the Department of Philosophy at the University of Minnesota Twin Cities and is supported by the Institute for Advanced Study at the University of Minnesota with a grant from the Mellon Foundation. www.minnesotaccec.com</p>\n<p>Join us in shaping a more inclusive future for philosophy!</p>\n<p><br><br></p>
ORGANIZER;CN=Jessica Gordon-Roth;CN=Dwight K Lewis Jr:
METHOD:PUBLISH
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260611T195224Z
DTSTART;TZID=Asia/Hong_Kong:20260601T090000
DTEND;TZID=Asia/Hong_Kong:20260612T170000
SUMMARY:The Kyoto School: Totality and Contradiction 
UID:20260618T014202Z-iCalPlugin-Grails@philevents-web-bd7db559-gt5qm
TZID:Asia/Hong_Kong
LOCATION:Chinese university of Hong Kong\, Hong Kong\, Hong Kong\, 99999
DESCRIPTION:<p>While major Western philosophical movements in the 20th century looked upon claims to absolute knowledge with deep suspicion\, the Kyoto School never abandoned philosophy's sacred vocation to know the absolute. Against the dominant disposition to look upon contradiction as an obstacle to absolute knowledge\, the Kyoto School recognizes contradiction as the key to unlocking the secrets of absolute totality. The Summer School will think with major thinkers of the Kyoto School on totality and contradiction. Philosophizing with Nishida\, Takahashi\, Tanabe\, Nishitani\, Ueda\, Miki\, Tosaka\, and Watsuji\, the Summer School will also explore the contemporary relevance of the Kyoto School for philosophical thought in the 21st century.</p>
ORGANIZER;CN=Gregory S. Moss;CN=Dennis Prooi;CN=Kyle Peters:
METHOD:PUBLISH
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260611T195224Z
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260601T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260731T170000
SUMMARY:AI and Data Ethics Summer Training Program
UID:20260618T014203Z-iCalPlugin-Grails@philevents-web-bd7db559-gt5qm
TZID:America/New_York
LOCATION:Boston\, United States
DESCRIPTION:<p>AI + Data Ethics (AIDE) Summer is a 9-week\, in-person training program intended for graduate students with advanced training in applied ethics\, ethical theory\, philosophy of science\, metascience\, epistemology\, or other areas with potential research applications to artificial intelligence (AI) and big data who would like to develop research capacities in the ethics of AI\, data ethics\, and the philosophy of technology.&nbsp\;</p>\n<p>Designing AI and machine learning systems to promote human flourishing in just and sustainable ways will require a robust and diverse AI and data ethics research community. However\, there are few graduate programs that train students in these areas. The aim of this summer long\, in person training program is to supplement resources in students&rsquo\; home universities with philosophical and technical skills necessary to research in this area.</p>\n<p>AIDE Summer 2026 especially welcomes epistemologists\, philosophers of science\, and metascience researchers interested in developing a research program in the philosophy of AI and computation.</p>\n<p>The 2026 AIDE Summer Program was made possible by generous funding from the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation and Northeastern's Khoury College of Computer Science.</p>\n<p>The summer 2026 program will run from Monday\, June 1st through Friday\, July 31.</p>\n<p>Applications are due Thursday January 15th\, 2026 at 11:59pm anywhere in the world.</p>
ORGANIZER;CN=Kathleen A. Creel;CN=John Basl:
METHOD:PUBLISH
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260611T195224Z
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20260601T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20260612T170000
SUMMARY:NEH Summer Institute: Aristotle's Psychology and Contemporary Philosophy
UID:20260618T014204Z-iCalPlugin-Grails@philevents-web-bd7db559-gt5qm
TZID:America/Chicago
LOCATION:College Station\, United States
DESCRIPTION:<p>This Summer Institute will investigate&nbsp\;the rich possibilities that arise from bringing contemporary philosophical concerns and Aristotle&rsquo\;s psychological writings into dialogue &ndash\; specifically\, the <em>De Anima\,</em> the <em>Parva Naturalia</em>\, and the <em>De Motu Animalium</em>.</p>\n\n<p>Over the course of the Institute&rsquo\;s two weeks\, participants will learn from respected figures in Greek philosophy how ideas and arguments from these writings can fruitfully engage with contemporary philosophical discussions. Through seminars and online resources\, the Institute will show participants how historical and contemporary philosophical texts can be profitably combined and enhance both research and teaching opportunities for participants.</p>\n<p><br>All participants of the summer institute will receive a $2\,200 stipend to help defray the costs of participation (related to travel\, accommodation and meals in College Station).</p>\n\n<p>Additional information about this Summer Institute\, including applicant eligibility and how to apply\, can be found at the Institute&rsquo\;s website: </p>\n<p>aristotle-neh.artsci.tamu.edu</p>\n\n<p>Any questions about this Summer Institute should be sent to Brandon Wadlington (nehinstitute@tamu.edu).</p>
ORGANIZER;CN=Jose Luis Bermudez;CN=Victor Caston;CN=Brandon Wadlington:
METHOD:PUBLISH
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260611T195224Z
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Paris:20260604T090000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Paris:20261024T170000
SUMMARY:Stanley Cavell at 100. An International Centennial Conference
UID:20260618T014205Z-iCalPlugin-Grails@philevents-web-bd7db559-gt5qm
TZID:Europe/Paris
LOCATION:Roma\; Paris\; Boston\, Italy
DESCRIPTION:<p>Stanley Cavell at 100&nbsp\; An International Centennial Conference&nbsp\;&nbsp\; <br> <strong>Paris</strong>:&nbsp\;<strong>4-5 June 2026</strong>&nbsp\;| Organized by Sandra Laugier\, Universit&eacute\; Paris 1 Panth&eacute\;on Sorbonne&nbsp\; <strong>Rome: 8-9 June 2026&nbsp\;</strong>| Organized by Piergiorgio Donatelli\, Sapienza Universit&agrave\; di Roma&nbsp\; <strong>Boston: 23-24 October 2026</strong>&nbsp\;| Organized by Juliet Floyd\, Boston University&nbsp\; &nbsp\; &nbsp\;</p>\n<p>In 2026\, we mark the centenary of&nbsp\;Stanley Cavell (1926&ndash\;2026)\, one of the&nbsp\;most original and wide-ranging American philosophers of the twentieth century. Cavell&rsquo\;s work traversed traditional disciplinary boundaries&mdash\;engaging deeply with philosophy\, literature\, film\, opera\, psychoanalysis\, politics\, and both American and European traditions of thought. In the spirit of his intellectual breadth and transnational sensibility\, we are organizing a three-part international conference to celebrate his life\, work\, and legacy in Paris\, Rome\, and Boston.</p>\n<p>Why This Conference Matters</p>\n<p>Stanley Cavell transformed philosophy into an act of acknowledgment&mdash\;of self\, of others\, and of the everyday. His writings on skepticism\, language\, film\, and the ordinary remain vital at a time when trust in both language and human connection faces renewed challenges. From&nbsp\;<em>Must We Mean What We Say?</em>&nbsp\;to&nbsp\;<em>The Claim of Reason</em>\, from&nbsp\;<em>The World Viewed</em>&nbsp\;to&nbsp\;<em>Pursuits of Happiness</em>\, and through his readings of Emerson and Thoreau\, Cavell helped redefine the scope and style of philosophical writing and teaching.</p>\n<p>His engagement with Wittgenstein and Austin reinvigorated the ordinary language tradition\, while his interests in modernism\, cinema\, and American transcendentalism forged a philosophical voice that responded to&mdash\;and often transcended&mdash\;the academic context.</p>\n<p>This centennial conference will bring together philosophers\, literary scholars\, and critics to reflect on Cavell&rsquo\;s legacy and extend the conversations he began.</p>\n<p>This call for papers concerns all three installments&mdash\;Paris\, Rome\, and Boston&mdash\;of the Cavell at 100 conference.</p>\n<p>Suggested Themes:</p>\n<p>We welcome proposals that engage with the following themes or propose new directions for exploring Cavell&rsquo\;s thought.</p>\n<ul>\n<li>Wittgenstein\, Austin\, and Ordinary Language Philosophy</li>\n<li>Cavell and the Analytic Tradition</li>\n<li>Skepticism and Acknowledgment</li>\n<li>The Philosophy of Film and Popular Culture</li>\n<li>Modernism\, Literature\, and the Arts</li>\n<li>Music</li>\n<li>Shakespeare and Tragedy</li>\n<li>Psychoanalysis</li>\n<li>Emerson\, Thoreau\, and American Transcendentalism</li>\n<li>Moral Perfectionism and Ordinary Ethics</li>\n<li>Forms of Life and Anthropology</li>\n<li>Gender and the Feminist Conversation</li>\n<li>Democratic Politics</li>\n<li>The Concept of America</li>\n</ul>\n<p>Conference Foci:</p>\n<p>Paris will focus especially on Ordinary Language Philosophy\, Film\, and Popular Culture.</p>\n<p>Rome will center mainly on Ethics\, Politics\, and Forms of Life.</p>\n<p>Boston will treat primarily Philosophy and Literature\, Tragedy\, Music\, and the Idea of America.</p>\n<p>Some themes&mdash\;such as skepticism\, modernism\, the ordinary&mdash\;cut across all three conferences.</p>
ORGANIZER:
METHOD:PUBLISH
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260611T195224Z
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Istanbul:20260608T090000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Istanbul:20260628T170000
SUMMARY:The 32nd World Congress of the International Association Philosophy of Law and Social Philosophy
UID:20260618T014206Z-iCalPlugin-Grails@philevents-web-bd7db559-gt5qm
TZID:Europe/Istanbul
LOCATION:İstanbul\, Turkey
ORGANIZER:
METHOD:PUBLISH
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260611T195224Z
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Istanbul:20260608T090000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Istanbul:20260628T170000
SUMMARY:The 32nd World Congress of the International Association Philosophy of Law and Social Philosophy
UID:20260618T014207Z-iCalPlugin-Grails@philevents-web-bd7db559-gt5qm
TZID:Europe/Istanbul
LOCATION:İstanbul\, Turkey
ORGANIZER:
METHOD:PUBLISH
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260611T195224Z
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20260608T090000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20260619T170000
SUMMARY:University of Missouri 2026 Virtual Summer School on the Foundations of the Mind Sciences
UID:20260618T014208Z-iCalPlugin-Grails@philevents-web-bd7db559-gt5qm
TZID:Europe/London
DESCRIPTION:<p><strong>University of Missouri</strong> <strong>2026 Virtual Summer School on the Foundations of the Mind Sciences</strong></p>\n<p>We are pleased to announce the University of Missouri 2026 Virtual Summer School on the Foundations of the Mind Sciences\, sponsored by the Florence G. Kline Chair in Philosophy and directed by Gualtiero Piccinini. This program brings together leading researchers to provide advanced training on the state of the art.</p>\n<p>Accepted participants will attend for free via Zoom.</p>\n<p>Participants will pursue their own research project and do some readings before each session. They will engage directly with the speakers and each other through lectures and discussions. Applicants with particularly strong research proposals may be selected to receive feedback on their projects from faculty.</p>\n<p>We welcome applications from advanced graduate students\, postdoctoral researchers\, and early-career scholars working on foundational topics in the mind sciences (such as linguistics\, neuroscience\, and psychology). Philosophers are especially welcome to apply\; applicants from other disciplines may be accepted in exceptional cases.</p>\n<p><strong>Daily Schedule: Sessions will be held during 9:00 AM - 12:00 PM CDT (UTC-5)</strong></p>\n<p>&middot\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\; 9-9:30 Welcome and Introduction</p>\n<p>&middot\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\; 9:30-10:15 Guest Presentation (except for PGS who will join around 9)</p>\n<p>&middot\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\; 10:15-11:30 Discussion/Q&amp\;A with the Guest Presenter</p>\n<p>&middot\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\; 11:30-12:00 Closing Remarks</p>\n<p><strong>Speaker Schedule: (with guest presenters joining the session 9:30-11:30 am CDT (UTC-5)\, except for PGS who will join the session around 9 am):</strong></p>\n<ul>\n<li><strong>June 8\, 2026</strong> &ndash\; <em>Evaluation and Affect</em>\, <strong>Fr&eacute\;d&eacute\;rique de Vignemont</strong></li>\n<li><strong>June 9\, 2026</strong> &ndash\; <em>Evolutionary Foundations of Cognition</em>\, <strong>Peter Godfrey-Smith</strong></li>\n<li><strong>June 10\, 2026</strong> &ndash\; Time for research (no session)</li>\n<li><strong>June 11\, 2026</strong> &ndash\; <em>Computation and Representation</em>\, <strong>Cameron Buckner</strong></li>\n<li><strong>June 12\, 2026</strong> &ndash\; <em>Language and Propositional Thought</em>\, <strong>Nikola Kompa</strong></li>\n<li><strong>June 15\, 2026</strong> &ndash\; <em>Mechanisms and Explanation</em>\, <strong>Carl Craver</strong></li>\n<li><strong>June 16\, 2026</strong> &ndash\; <em>Action and</em> <em>Situated Cognition</em>\, <strong>Gy&ouml\;rgy Buzs&aacute\;ki</strong></li>\n<li><strong>June 17\, 2026</strong> &ndash\; Time for research (no session)</li>\n<li><strong>June 18\, 2026</strong> &ndash\; <em>Consciousness and Attention</em>\, <strong>Ned Block</strong></li>\n<li><strong>June 19\, 2026</strong> &ndash\; <em>Introspection</em>\, <strong>Maja Spener</strong></li>\n</ul>\n<p><strong>Application Requirements:</strong><br> Applicants should submit a curriculum vitae\, a summary of their research project (max 750 words)\, and a statement of how the summer school will benefit them (max one paragraph). Priority will be given to research proposals on topics in the foundations of the mind sciences.</p>\n<p><strong>Application Deadline:</strong> January 15th\, 2026<br> <strong>Submission Email:</strong> lngmnp@missouri.edu</p>\n<p>We look forward to your applications!</p>\n<p>Thank you\, <br> Lauren Graf<br> Graduate Research Assistant<br> University of Missouri-Columbia<br> Lngmnp@missouri.edu</p>\n
ORGANIZER;CN=Lauren Graf;CN=Gualtiero Piccinini:
METHOD:PUBLISH
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260611T195224Z
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260608T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260612T170000
SUMMARY:ISTP 2026 Conference: Theorizing in Dark Times – Art\, Narrative\, Politics
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TZID:America/New_York
LOCATION:200 Willoughby Ave \, New York\, United States\, 11205
DESCRIPTION:<p>STP 2026 Conference &ndash\; &ldquo\;Theorizing in Dark Times &ndash\; Art\, Narrative\, Politics&rdquo\;</p>\n<p>June 8 &ndash\; June 12\, 2026</p>\n<p>Pratt Institute\, Brooklyn\, NY\, USA</p>\n<p>www.pratt.edu/ISTP-2026</p>\n<p>CALL FOR CONTRIBUTIONS</p>\n<p>The International Society for Theoretical Psychology (ISTP\, www.istpsychology.org) will host its 2026 conference at Pratt Institute&rsquo\;s Brooklyn\, New York Campus\, which is located on Lenapehoking\, the traditional and unceded homeland of the Lenape people\, past\, present\, and future.</p>\n<p>The conference theme &ldquo\;Theorizing in Dark Times &ndash\; Art\, Narrative\, Politics&rdquo\; invites scholars\, artists\, and practitioners to critically reflect on the ways in which theory operates not only as an intellectual tool but as a form of political engagement.</p>\n<p>At the heart of the conference lies the question: What is the role of theory in dark times? Theoretical psychology has long sought to understand the human condition\, yet in moments of global crisis\, theory itself becomes a site of political resistance. The conference will examine how theory functions as a political force\, shaping narratives of power\, ideology\, and agency. It will address the political implications of psychological theory\, asking how psychological concepts\, often regarded as neutral or apolitical\, become entangled with broader social and political dynamics.</p>\n<p>The conference will also provide the room to explore how the arts\, through their ability to create alternative narratives and question existing power structures\, play a pivotal role in advancing theoretical inquiry in times of crisis. Art\, in this context\, is not merely reflective\; it is transformative\, offering new ways to theorize human experience and political realities.</p>\n<p>We warmly invite scholars from theoretical psychology and neighboring disciplines&mdash\;philosophy\, sociology\, anthropology\, literature\, the arts\, and beyond&mdash\;to submit their contributions and join us at Pratt Institute in Brooklyn\, New York\, from June 8 to June 12\, 2026. Whether through theoretical reflection\, conceptual analyses\, or creative interventions\, we seek diverse perspectives that critically engage with the conference theme. Contributions beyond the conference theme are also welcome. Submit here: www.pratt.edu/ISTP-2026. The deadline is December 10\, 2025.</p>\n<p>&mdash\;&mdash\;&mdash\;&mdash\;&mdash\;&mdash\;</p>\n<p>The Conference Registration Opens September 2025</p>\n<p>Registration Fees: Regular $630/ISTP Member $570/Reduced $310</p>\n<p>Pratt Institute provides affordable accommodations: Single: $135 first night\, $65 each additional night/Full conference stay $510/ Double accommodation: $125 first night\, $55 each additional night/Full conference stay $400 per person.</p>\n<p>Website: www.pratt.edu/ISTP-2026</p>\n<p>Contact: istp-2026@pratt.edu</p>
ORGANIZER;CN=Martin Dege:
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DTSTAMP:20260611T195224Z
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20260609T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20260611T170000
SUMMARY:Principia Mathematica's Second Edition in Its Century\, 1925-2025
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TZID:America/Toronto
LOCATION:1280 Main St W\, Hamilton\, Canada\, L8S 48L
DESCRIPTION:<p><strong>Principia Mathematica's Second Edition in Its Century\, 1925-2025<br></strong></p>\n<p><em>Principia Mathematica</em>&nbsp\;was and remains a fixture of ongoing discussions in logic\, philosophy of language\, philosophy of mathematics\, metaphysics\, and early analytic philosophy. The second edition of Principia\, however\,&nbsp\;received a lukewarm reception and its significance\, both for understanding <em>Principia</em>&rsquo\;s first edition and for later developments in early analytic philosophy\, have not been fully explored. This workshop convenes scholars to further explore developments between the editions of <em>Principia</em> and the impact of the second edition itself on 20th century philosophy.</p>\n<p>The invited speakers are contributing their papers to a peer-reviewed volume\, and there is an open call for papers for submitted contributions alongside these invited papers. Details about submitting a paper to this collection can be found below.</p>\n<p><strong>Call for Papers</strong></p>\n<p>We invite contributed papers on&nbsp\;<em>Principia Mathematica</em> and its second edition\, broadly construed\, for a peer-reviewed collection that also brings together the papers stemming from this workshop. Topics of interest include but are not limited to the following:</p>\n<ol>\n<li><em>What was Whitehead&rsquo\;s influence on the Principia&rsquo\;s second edition?</em> According to Whitehead himself\,&nbsp\;the second edition of <em>Principia</em> was &ldquo\;solely undertaken by Mr. Bertrand Russell.&rdquo\; Nonetheless\, Whitehead notes that he did discuss and concur in the changes to any first edition materials. What proposals did Whitehead influence\, and how did he influence them?&nbsp\;</li>\n<li><em>To what extent did the second edition of Principia support a move among logicians and mathematicians towards the now-preferred (set-theoretic) foundation for mathematics?</em>&nbsp\;The logic of <em>Principia</em> was decidedly intensional such that two relations might not be identical even if they have the same extension (that is\, they apply to the same things). But Quine (1941\, 147-148) for example argued at length that the intensional logic of<em>&nbsp\;Principia</em>&nbsp\;was best replaced by the extensional logic. In the 1930s and 1940s\, notable logicians like Kurt G&ouml\;del (1944) and Alfred Tarski (1944) similarly moved in this direction (and argued explicitly for doing so). Arguably\, though\, the second edition of<em>&nbsp\;Principia</em>&nbsp\;apparently departs remarkably from its earlier intensional stance. Not only that\, but the second edition departs (if it does) from the earlier intensional logic and embraces an extensional logic due to different influences\, especially that of Ludwig Wittgenstein. Taken as a newly extensional work\, <em>Principia</em>&rsquo\;s second edition rather supported the gathering momentum towards extensional logics. This belies the lukewarm reception of <em>Principia</em>&rsquo\;s second edition among reviewers\, who largely&nbsp\;repeated their impressions of the first edition with minimal discussion of the second edition&rsquo\;s innovations.</li>\n<li><em>What parts of Principia&rsquo\;s first edition\, like the multiple relation theory of judgment\, are rejected&nbsp\;in its second one?</em>&nbsp\;Perhaps the most difficult and longstanding textual question concerning <em>Principia</em>&rsquo\;s first edition concerns the highly technical matter of its formal grammar or syntax. Similarly\, a difficult and longstanding controversy persists concerning Russell&rsquo\;s multiple relation theory of judgment. These two issues are related\, though there has been little interaction across these two literatures.</li>\n<li>What results from Principia&rsquo\;s text can be saved if other parts are rejected? Perhaps the most significant inquiry undertaken in Principia&rsquo\;s second edition is to what extent the first edition&rsquo\;s two axioms of reducibility (❋12&middot\;1 and ❋12&middot\;11) can be abandoned without critically damaging the rest of the work. Kurt G&ouml\;del (1944) identified an error in a key demonstration within this appendix\, and subsequently scholars intermittenly discussed whether a repair was possible and how it might be done.18 But how might other results be recovered without the axioms of reducibility? For example\, Wittgenstein (1922\, 5.53-5.5303) in his Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus criticized Principia&rsquo\;s account of identity. This definition hinges on the axioms of reducibility in Principia&rsquo\;s first edition. So also does the recovery of important results about classes\, like the principle of extensionality (theorem ❋20&middot\;11). Which results besides induction are jeopardized by<br>abandoning reducibility in Principia&rsquo\;s second edition? How are these to be recovered?</li>\n<li>Applications of interactive theorem provers to&nbsp\;<em>Principia</em>'s theorems and proofs are especially welcome.</li>\n<li>Contributions utilizing the PM-MATS digital resource are especially welcome. Read more about this resource here: https://principia.lib.uiowa.edu/about.html</li>\n</ol>\n<p>Absent alternative arrangements\, papers are due no later than December 14\, 2026. Expressing interest in submitting a contribution is strongly encouraged by October 15\, 2026. Papers should be at least 5\,000 words and no more than 15\,000. Papers should be anonymized for blind review and submitted with a cover page indicating the author's name\, affiliation\, email\, paper title\, and abstract to Landon Elkind\, landon.elkind@wku.edu\, with the subject line PM2 Paper Submission. &nbsp\;</p>\n<p>TeX format is encouraged for contributions\, but Word formats are also acceptable. Typesetting of equations using the principia package (for TeX users: https://ctan.org/pkg/principia) or the PMifier (for Word users: https://principia.lib.uiowa.edu/pmifier/index.html) is strongly encouraged.&nbsp\;</p>\n<p><strong>Support</strong></p>\n<p>The Principia Mathematica&rsquo\;s Second Edition in Its Century\, 1925-2025 workshop has been made possible in part by a major grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities (Collaborative Research\, <a href="https://awardsearch.neh.gov/AwardDetail.aspx?gn=RZ-306663-26">RZ-206663-26</a>). Any views\, findings\, conclusions\, or recommendations expressed in this publication do not necessarily reflect those of the National Endowment for the Humanities.</p>\n<p>The PM-MATS project is also supported Western Kentucky University and McMaster University. We are grateful for their support.</p>
ORGANIZER;CN=Landon D. C. Elkind;CN=Alexander Mugar Klein:
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DTSTAMP:20260611T195224Z
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20260610T090000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20260612T170000
SUMMARY:Fiction and Lies: the ASIFF/SIRFF Fourth International Congress
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TZID:Europe/London
LOCATION:Edinburgh\, United Kingdom
DESCRIPTION:<p>This three-day international conference aims to explore the relationship between fiction and lies from a range of disciplinary and interdisciplinary perspectives\, including philosophy\, literary history and theory\, narratology\, film and media studies\, psychology and cognitive science.&nbsp\;</p>\n<p>The keynote speakers are Eileen John (Philosophy\, Warwick) and Pierre Bayard (Literature\, Universit&eacute\; Paris 8 - Saint-Denis). The full programme is available on the conference web page: https://fictionstudies.org/?p=index&amp\;art_ID=420.</p>\n<p>Registration is &pound\;50 for staff\, &pound\;15 for students\, except for those at Scottish universities. This includes lunch on all three days.</p>\n<p>Funding from the Scots Philosophical Association means that staff (including emeritus) and students from Scottish universities attending the conference can have their fees waived. Please email fictionlies2026@gmail.com from your institutional address to request a password before registering. We encourage you to join the ASIFF/SIRFF for other benefits.</p>\n<p>All other delegates must be members of ASIFF/SIRFF. If you are not yet a member\, please go to https://fictionstudies.org/?index&amp\;art_ID=333 and follow the instructions. Membership status will be checked against registration.</p>\n<p>There will also be an optional conference dinner. Please go to the conference web page for more information: https://fictionstudies.org/?p=index&amp\;art_ID=420.</p>
ORGANIZER;CN=Stacie Friend:
METHOD:PUBLISH
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260611T195224Z
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Amsterdam:20260610T120000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Amsterdam:20260612T170000
SUMMARY:Recent developments in formal theories of truth and type-free theories
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TZID:Europe/Amsterdam
LOCATION:Amsterdam\, Netherlands
ORGANIZER;CN=Thomas Schindler;CN=Simone Picenni;CN=Pablo Rivas-Robledo:
METHOD:PUBLISH
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260611T195224Z
DTSTART;TZID=America/Sao_Paulo:20260610T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/Sao_Paulo:20260611T170000
SUMMARY:PUCRS Epistemology Conference 2026: On Epistemic Defeat
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TZID:America/Sao_Paulo
LOCATION:Porto Alegre\, Brazil
DESCRIPTION:<p><strong>Zoom Link:</strong>&nbsp\;<a href="https://pucrs.zoom.us/j/93963963528?pwd=qLLSHwptNTYYWORNXXVraHp40V6zGF.1">https://pucrs.zoom.us/j/93963963528?pwd=qLLSHwptNTYYWORNXXVraHp40V6zGF.1</a></p>
ORGANIZER;CN="João R. Fett";CN="Vinícius Felipe Posselt":
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DTSTAMP:20260611T195224Z
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260610T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260612T170000
SUMMARY:Experiments in Linguistic Meaning 4
UID:20260618T014214Z-iCalPlugin-Grails@philevents-web-bd7db559-gt5qm
TZID:America/New_York
LOCATION:Philadelphia\, United States\, 19143
DESCRIPTION:<p><strong><u>Call for Papers</u></strong><strong>: Experiments in Linguistic Meaning (ELM) 4</strong></p>\n<p><strong>June 10-12 2026</strong>\,&nbsp\;<strong>University of Pennsylvania</strong></p>\n<p><strong>Organizers:</strong>&nbsp\;Paloma Jeretič\, Anna Papafragou\, and Florian Schwarz</p>\n<p><strong>Email:</strong>&nbsp\;<u>organizers@elm-conference.net</u></p>\n<p>We are excited to announce the fourth Experiments in Linguistic Meaning (ELM) conference to be hosted by the University of Pennsylvania on June 10-12\, 2026. The conference is dedicated to the experimental study of linguistic meaning broadly construed\, with a focus on theoretical issues in semantics and pragmatics\, their interplay with other components of the grammar\, their relation to language processing and acquisition\, as well as their connections to human cognition and computation. We aim to include representation of linguistic\, psychological\, logical\, philosophical\, social\, developmental\, computational\, as well as cross-linguistic and cross-cultural perspectives.</p>\n<p><strong>Invited speakers:</strong></p>\n<p>Jennifer Culbertson\, University of Edinburgh</p>\n<p>Ellen Lau\, University of Maryland</p>\n<p>Kyle Rawlins\, Johns Hopkins University</p>\n<p><strong>Invited Online Symposium on Modality in language and cognition:</strong></p>\n<p>Nicol&ograve\; Cesana-Arlotti\, Yale University<br>WooJin Chung\, Seoul National University<br>Valentine Hacquard\, University of Maryland</p>\n<p>The experimental study of meaning in language draws on a broad spectrum of disciplines\, topics\, and methodologies\, and ELM reflects this diversity in its scope. The biennial ELM conference aims to foster the interdisciplinary study of meaning\, and to provide a home for a community of scholars that might not meet and interact with each other with regularity in other contexts. We encourage researchers from around the world to submit their recent work to ELM 4\, and to attend in order to discuss the latest theories and data in the cognitive science of meaning broadly construed.</p>\n<p>The University of Pennsylvania is home to a vibrant interdisciplinary community that studies language and meaning across several departments. ELM acknowledges support from&nbsp\;<u>mindCORE</u>\, Penn&rsquo\;s hub for the integrative study of&nbsp\;the mind\; Penn&rsquo\;s&nbsp\;<u>Department of Linguistics</u>\; and the&nbsp\;<u>University Research Foundation</u>.</p>\n<p><strong>Format:</strong>&nbsp\;After successful hybrid ELM 2 and 3\, we will continue in the same format\, namely:</p>\n<p>&middot\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\; &nbsp\;start out with an&nbsp\;<strong>online-only day</strong>&nbsp\;(with on-site gathering options for in person attendees already there) on&nbsp\;<strong>June 10</strong>\,&nbsp\;</p>\n<p>&middot\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\; &nbsp\;followed by&nbsp\;<strong>two in person</strong>&nbsp\;presentation days (<strong>June 11-12</strong>) (with&nbsp\;<strong>hybrid</strong>&nbsp\;audience participation option).&nbsp\;<br><strong>Note</strong>: Desired presentation format (with a commitment to either online or in person) will have to be indicated at time of submission (this applies to consideration for both talks and posters/short presentations)</p>\n<p><strong>Abstract Submissions via&nbsp\;</strong><strong><u>OpenReview</u></strong><strong>\, due December 10\, 2025 (11:59pm EST)</strong></p>\n<p>The conference will feature both 20-minute talks and posters/short presentations. Abstracts must be anonymous and written in English. They should use US Letter size paper and 1 inch margins on all four sides. Abstracts must be single-spaced\, and written using Arial 11pt font. Abstracts should be at most 2 pages\, including the main text of the abstract\, figures\, and any supplementary materials and references the authors wish to include. Authors should avoid identifying information in the abstract\, especially when referring to their own prior work. The abstract must be submitted as a single PDF file and must include a title at the top. Abstracts violating these requirements may be rejected without further consideration.<br><strong>Note</strong>: If you do not already have an OpenReview account\, be sure to register and get your account approved/activated well before the deadline\, as this can take a few days.</p>\n<p><strong>Timeline:</strong></p>\n<p>November 10\, 2025: &nbsp\; ELM abstract submissions opens on&nbsp\;<strong><u>OpenReview</u></strong><br><u>https://openreview.net/group?id=elm-conference.net/ELM/2026/Conference</u><br><br>December 10\, 2025 (11:59pm EST): &nbsp\; &nbsp\;&nbsp\;Abstract submission deadline</p>\n<p>Feb 1\, 2026: &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\; Acceptance Notifications</p>
ORGANIZER;CN=Paloma Jeretic;CN=Florian Schwarz;CN=Anna Papafragou:
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DTSTAMP:20260611T195224Z
DTSTART;TZID=America/Indiana/Indianapolis:20260610T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/Indiana/Indianapolis:20260612T170000
SUMMARY:Issues in Philosophy of Memory 5 (IPM5)
UID:20260618T014215Z-iCalPlugin-Grails@philevents-web-bd7db559-gt5qm
TZID:America/Indiana/Indianapolis
LOCATION:West Lafayette\, United States
ORGANIZER;CN=Sarah Robins:
METHOD:PUBLISH
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DTSTAMP:20260611T195224Z
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Helsinki:20260611T090000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Helsinki:20260612T170000
SUMMARY:Dialogue in Democratic Education
UID:20260618T014216Z-iCalPlugin-Grails@philevents-web-bd7db559-gt5qm
TZID:Europe/Helsinki
LOCATION:Pentti Kaiteran katu 1 \, Oulu\, Finland
DESCRIPTION:<p>Dialogue in Democratic Education -Conference&nbsp\; University of Oulu\, 11.-12.6.2026 We are pleased to announce a joint conference that specifically invites academic researchers engaged in the study of dialogue\, democracy\, and education. This collaborative event aims to foster rigorous scholarly exchange\, encourage interdisciplinary perspectives\, and deepen theoretical and empirical inquiry in these intersecting fields. Researchers from philosophy\, pedagogy\, history\, political science\, and related disciplines are encouraged to contribute their expertise as we collectively advance academic understanding and innovation within democratic education. Keynote speakers and invited panelists of the main event include Nicholas Burbules\, Silvia Edling\, Andrea English\, Maughn Gregory\, Walter Kohan\, Jonas Lieberkind\, and Dina Mendon&ccedil\;a.</p>\n<p>As part of the conference\, a pre-seminar and workshop on philosophizing with children and young people and the Community of Philosophical Inquiry pedagogy will be held on June 10. The pre-seminar will feature presentations and a panel discussion with Maughn Gregory\, Walter Kohan\, and Dina Mendon&ccedil\;a &ndash\; internationally recognized experts in the field. Further details and registration for the pre-seminar will be made available in early 2026.</p>\n<p>Conference theme</p>\n<p>Dialogue has traditionally been situated at the very heart of democracy. Recently\, however\, the role of dialogue in both democracy and democratic education has been contested from different perspectives. The increasing difficulty to establish a genuine dialogue between political rivals in the present polarized political culture has led to seeking alternative interpretations and approaches to understanding the nature of democracy (e.g. conflict-based\, agonistic). On a theoretical level\, discussion-based models of democracy have been challenged for their over-idealized and normative nature. In the same vein\, democratic education and pedagogy have been argued to be unfeasible considering the institutional realities of schooling and persistent educational inequalities. Still\, the idea of democracy as dialogue seems vital and worth sustaining. In pedagogical practices\, dialogue\, deliberation\, and debate all belong to the broader category of discussion-based approaches. Rational and evidence-based forms of dialogue\, deliberation\, and debate can still be justifiably regarded as crucial modes of communication for the functioning of democratic society as a whole. The purpose of the conference is to examine the significance and realizations of these modes of communication in the context of democratic education.</p>\n<p>We invite presentations on a broad range of topics concerning the relationship between dialogue\, deliberation\, debate\, education\, democracy and the related concepts. We are also interested in contributions focusing on or fostering dialogue between different theories and fields of research in relation to these themes. In addition to contributions in the field of philosophy of education\, which is the primary focus of the conference\, we invite papers addressing these issues from various perspectives\, including but not limited to\, pedagogical practices\, teachers and teacher education\, empirical research on education\, history of education\, and political science. On abstract submissions\, see further information on page&nbsp\;Presentations.</p>\n<p>Organizers:&nbsp\;</p>\n<p>Research Consortium&nbsp\;Education for Deliberation: Practices of Inquiry in Dialogue-Based Democratic Education&nbsp\;(DELIBERATE\; Research Council of Finland) &amp\;<br>The Philosophy of Democracy Education research group (DEMOED)\, University of Oulu &amp\;<br>The Finnish Network of the History and Philosophy of Education</p>\n<p>Conference web-page:&nbsp\;<a href="https://ssl.eventilla.com/democraticdialogue">Dialogue in Democratic Education -Conference</a><br><br></p>
ORGANIZER:
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DTSTAMP:20260611T195224Z
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Vienna:20260611T090000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Vienna:20260612T170000
SUMMARY:POLEMO – GOODINT Symposium: Justice\, Integration & Democracy
UID:20260618T014217Z-iCalPlugin-Grails@philevents-web-bd7db559-gt5qm
TZID:Europe/Vienna
LOCATION:Quellenstraße 51\, Vienna\, Austria\, 1100
DESCRIPTION:<p>The Political\, Legal\, and Moral Philosophy Research Group (POLEMO) at Central European University kindly invites submissions for its annual conference\, the 7th POLEMO Symposium\, which will take place on&nbsp\;<strong>the 11th and 12th of June 2026 in Vienna\, Austria.</strong></p>\n<p>The Symposium provides a professional\, stimulating\, and international environment for PhD students and early career researchers in political\, legal\, and moral philosophy to discuss their works in progress\, establish informal networks\, and initiate future collaborative research.</p>\n<p>We are delighted to announce that our keynote speakers for the 2026 Symposium will be:</p>\n<ul>\n<li>Antoinette Scherz (The University of Stockholm)</li>\n<li>Sarah Fine (The University of Cambridge)</li>\n</ul>\n<p>We welcome early-career researchers in political theory and political philosophy to submit&nbsp\;<strong>abstracts of 700 words or less by email to&nbsp\;polemo@ceu.edu&nbsp\;by the deadline of 1st March 2026.</strong></p>\n<p><strong>Abstracts should be in PDF format and fully prepared for blind review.</strong>&nbsp\;Please include your name\, institutional affiliation\, and contact information in the body of your email. Papers should be suitable for a 20-minute presentation. We will endeavour&nbsp\;to communicate a decision by the 1st April 2026.</p>\n<p>The conference will be held at CEU's campus in Vienna. It is planned as a fully in-person event.</p>\n<p>Attendance is free of charge and open to anyone upon registration. Please note that POLEMO is unable to provide financial assistance for participants though lunches\, coffee breaks\, and a conference dinner will be covered for participants over the duration of the conference.&nbsp\;</p>\n<p>If you have any questions\, please contact us at&nbsp\;polemo@ceu.edu. For more information\, please see the details of previous symposia&nbsp\;here.</p>
ORGANIZER;CN=Matthew Haji-Michael:
METHOD:PUBLISH
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DTSTAMP:20260611T195224Z
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Zurich:20260611T090000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Zurich:20260612T170000
SUMMARY:Styles of Appearing. Aesthetics and Phenomenology
UID:20260618T014218Z-iCalPlugin-Grails@philevents-web-bd7db559-gt5qm
TZID:Europe/Zurich
LOCATION:Avenue de l'Europe 20\, Fribourg\, Switzerland\, 1700
DESCRIPTION:<p>In January 1907\, the founder of phenomenology\,&nbsp\; Edmund Husserl\, wrote a letter to the Viennese Modernist playwright and poet Hugo von Hofmannsthal\, suggesting that the phenomenologist&rsquo\;s and the artist&rsquo\;s methods are closely connected. Husserl&rsquo\;s suggestion remains provocative to this day\, as its full implications are yet to be fully grasped. Undeniably\, for more than a century now\, the tradition of phenomenology has cleared a path for philosophy that departs from argument-centric approaches in favor of firsthand corporeal experiences rooted in the lifeworld. This also entailed suspending or &ldquo\;bracketing&rdquo\; the question of whether our metaphysical\, ethical\, or aesthetic beliefs are justified\, focusing instead on the way things appear to us: phenomenology sets aside the &ldquo\;what&rdquo\; (the mind-independent nature of things) to home in on the &ldquo\;how&rdquo\;&mdash\;the mode in which things are given in our experience.</p>\n<p>If this is a valid characterization of the phenomenological method\, it aligns it closely with the discipline of aesthetics\, as founded by A.G. Baumgarten in the 18th century. Aesthetics too\, one might argue\, predominantly leaves aside the nature of what is being depicted or expressed to focus on the &ldquo\;how&rdquo\;: on how things are presented to us by artworks or other aesthetic objects and\, correspondingly\, on what it is like to sense them in aesthetic experience. G&uuml\;nter Figal even went as far as to claim that aesthetics could never be anything but phenomenological. Be that as it may: uncontestably\, what phenomenology and aesthetics have in common is a shared interest in the &ldquo\;style&rdquo\; of appearing.</p>\n<p>Although Husserl himself hinted at this proximity in his letter to von Hofmannsthal\, his own writings on art and literature are remarkably sparse. While Husserl never wrote a formal work on aesthetics\, Jacques Derrida</p>\n<p>maintained that his thinking yields a &ldquo\;latent aesthetics.&rdquo\; This claim seems applicable to the phenomenological movement as a whole: while attempts to develop a systematic phenomenological aesthetics are surprisingly rare&mdash\;with Roman Ingarden and&nbsp\; Mikel Dufrenne as the exceptions that prove the rule &mdash\;the aesthetic dimension however takes center stage in the work of numerous other authors\, from Eugen Fink\, Jean-Paul Sartre and Maurice Merleau-Ponty through Erwin Straus\, Henri Maldiney\, and Bernhard Waldenfels. What happens\, then\, when we look at phenomenology through an aesthetic lens? And in turn\, what is the outcome of practicing aesthetics as a kind of phenomenology?</p>\n<p>The ninth iteration of the Aesthetics &amp\; Critique workshop will address the complex and layered relationship between aesthetics and phenomenology. Topics for discussion include:</p>\n<p>&middot\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\; What does it mean to ground aesthetics in phenomenological analysis rather than other approaches? Conversely\, could an aesthesiological approach&mdash\;as required by aesthetic objects and situations&mdash\;offer a refinement to phenomenology as a method?</p>\n<p>&middot\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\; What is the relationship between sensible experience and artistic experience\, and how does a phenomenology of art relate to the phenomenological analysis of sensible experience in general?</p>\n<p>&middot\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\; Can the concept of style help describe different modes of appearing (and of reacting to it)?</p>\n<p>&middot\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\; How is sense-making inextricably connected to corporeal sensing?</p>\n<p>&middot\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;What possibilities does the artist&rsquo\;s encounter with the world offer the phenomenologist&mdash\;perhaps a heightened sensitivity to the nuances of lived experience?</p>\n<p>&middot\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;How can aesthetic as well as aesthesiological categories help reconceptualizing the multisensorial mediascapes of our contemporary condition?</p>\n<p>&middot\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\; How can experimental aesthetic practices become test sites\, both individually and collectively\, for transformative embodied experiences?</p>
ORGANIZER;CN=Emmanuel Alloa;CN=Alessandro De Cesaris:
METHOD:PUBLISH
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260611T195224Z
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20260611T090000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20260612T170000
SUMMARY:Autonomy & Algorithms (11-12 June 2026\, Karlsruhe)
UID:20260618T014219Z-iCalPlugin-Grails@philevents-web-bd7db559-gt5qm
TZID:Europe/Berlin
LOCATION:Karlsruhe\, Germany
DESCRIPTION:<p>As algorithms shape the choices we make\, traditional assumptions about autonomy and deliberation come under pressure. By curating what is visible\, relevant\, or recommended\, algorithmic outputs play a formative role in human deliberation and action. These developments raise well-known yet unresolved philosophical questions: What does it mean to act and think autonomously in contexts mediated by algorithms? How do algorithmic environments affect inquiry or deliberation? What are the implications for democratic autonomy? Furthermore\, how are we to assess all this normatively?</p>\n<p>This workshop aims to examine these issues within the frameworks of philosophy of autonomy\, ethics of AI\, social epistemology\, and political philosophy. We welcome contributions that address conceptual foundations\, engage in normative evaluation\, analyze epistemic dynamics in algorithmic environments\, and reflect on their institutional or societal implications.</p>\n<p>Topics of interest include\, but are not limited to:</p>\n<ul>\n<li>Conceptual analysis of&nbsp\;autonomy&nbsp\;under algorithmic influence</li>\n<li>Epistemic autonomy and algorithmic recommendation systems</li>\n<li>Responsibility gaps and distributed agency</li>\n<li>Algorithmic nudging\, manipulation\, and consent</li>\n<li>Autonomy in surveillance and data-intensive environments</li>\n</ul>\n<p>The workshop will take place&nbsp\;from 11.06.2026 to 12.06.2026&nbsp\;at the&nbsp\;Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT) and is organized within the DFG project "The Ethics of State Mass Surveillance". Invited speakers who have confirmed their participation include Simona Chiodo\, Keith Harris\, Nicola M&ouml\;&szlig\;ner\, Carina Prunkl\, and Otto Sahlgren.</p>\n<p>Organizers: Alina Jacobs &amp\; Christian Seidel&nbsp\;</p>\n<p>For inquiries\, please contact the organizers via&nbsp\;alina.jacobs@kit.edu.</p>\n<p>Modus: Pr&auml\;senzveranstaltung</p>\n<p>Veranstaltungszeitraum:&nbsp\;11.06.2026-12.06.2026</p>\n<p>Kontaktadresse:&nbsp\;alina.jacobs@kit.edu</p>\n<p>Bewerbungsfrist:&nbsp\;31.01.2026</p>
ORGANIZER;CN=Alina Jacobs;CN=Christian Seidel:
METHOD:PUBLISH
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DTSTAMP:20260611T195224Z
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20260611T090000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20260612T170000
SUMMARY:Workshop: Causal Models\, Causal Abstraction\, and Levels of Causation
UID:20260618T014220Z-iCalPlugin-Grails@philevents-web-bd7db559-gt5qm
TZID:Europe/Berlin
LOCATION:Edmund-Siemers-Allee 1\, Hamburg\, Germany\, 20146
DESCRIPTION:<p>We are pleased to announce the workshop <em>&ldquo\;Causal Models\, Causal Abstraction\, and Levels of Causation&rdquo\;</em>\, which will take place on 11&ndash\;12 June 2026 at the University of Hamburg. The schedule and further updates will be posted on the workshop website: <a href="https://beyondcausalexclusion.org/about-2/">https://beyondcausalexclusion.org/about-2/</a></p>\n<p>The workshop is part of the project <em>&ldquo\;Beyond Causal Exclusion: New Challenges for Multi-Level Causal Models.&rdquo\;</em>&nbsp\;The project is a collaboration between the Universities of Bern and Hamburg\, funded by SNSF and DFG. More information: <a href="https://beyondcausalexclusion.org/">https://beyondcausalexclusion.org/</a></p>\n<p>If you would like to attend\, please register by sending an email to: <a href="mailto:brian.ortmann@uni-hamburg.de">brian.ortmann@uni-hamburg.de</a></p>\n<p>We would be very happy to welcome you in Hamburg.</p>
ORGANIZER;CN=Thomas Kroedel;CN=Brian Ortmann:
METHOD:PUBLISH
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260611T195224Z
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Paris:20260611T090000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Paris:20260612T170000
SUMMARY:Existential Threats and Other Disasters: Novel (Bio)ethical Solutions for Novel Challenges
UID:20260618T014221Z-iCalPlugin-Grails@philevents-web-bd7db559-gt5qm
TZID:Europe/Paris
LOCATION:4 Rue de Chevreuse \, Paris\, France\, 75006 
DESCRIPTION:<p>The Center for the Study of Bioethics&rsquo\; (CSB) is pleased to collaborate with The Hastings Center\, The Chinese University of Hong Kong (CUHK) Centre for Bioethics\, and Columbia University&rsquo\;s Master of Bioethics Program to organize the conference.</p>\n<p>In 2024\, CSB\, with The Hastings Center and The Oxford Uehiro Centre for Practical Ethics coorganized&nbsp\;&ldquo\;Existential Threats and Other Disasters: How Should We Address Them?&rdquo\; Held in&nbsp\;Budva\, Montenegro\, it featured a distinguished lineup\, including Peter Singer\, Julian Savulescu\,&nbsp\;Arthur Caplan\, Josephine Johnston\, Ingmar Persson\, Anders Sandberg\, as well as the conference&nbsp\;organizers Vardit Ravitsky\, Roger Crisp and Vojin Rakić.</p>\n<p>The 2026 Paris conference continues this trajectory. It will assess the critical questions raised in&nbsp\;2024 in light of the rapid evolution of global crises.&nbsp\;Building on the foundation established in the&nbsp\;2024 conference\, the Paris event will adopt a broader scope\, adding novel and diverse&nbsp\;perspectives\, organizers and participants\, explicitly addressing not only catastrophic risks but also&nbsp\;the constructive ethical deployment of emerging technologies.</p>
ORGANIZER;CN="The Center for the Study of Bioethics’ (CSB) Csb";CN=The Hastings Center The Hastings Center;CN=The Chinese University of Hong Kong (CUHK) Centre for Bioethics;CN=Columbia University Master of Bioethics Program:
METHOD:PUBLISH
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260611T195224Z
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Paris:20260611T090000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Paris:20260612T170000
SUMMARY:Diversity and Unity: The Metaphysical Challenge of Scientific Pluralism
UID:20260618T014222Z-iCalPlugin-Grails@philevents-web-bd7db559-gt5qm
TZID:Europe/Paris
LOCATION:17 Rue de la Sorbonne\, Paris\, France\, 75005
DESCRIPTION:<p>This workshop aims to extend the scientific pluralist stance into the domain of scientific metaphysics. Although the metaphysics of science is a vast field\, pluralism offers both a way to pose new questions and a means of addressing long-standing debates. Recent debates in metaphysics suggest that concerns of this kind are far from out of place.&nbsp\;</p>\n<p>In the contemporary landscape of the general philosophy of science\, scientific pluralism has emerged as a prominent and wide-ranging research program (Ludwig &amp\; Ruphy 2021\; Ruphy 2016). According to the pluralist agenda\, there is no universal methodology (Feyerabend 1975)\; reductionism fails to capture the complexity of scientific theories and models (Fodor 1975\; Mitchell 2009)\; and no single\, fundamental ontology (Dupr&eacute\; 1995) underlies scientific practice. Instead\, the diversity of scientific methods\, aims\, and practices (Chang 2012) has become a central focus of analysis\, leading philosophers of science toward what Wylie (2015) aptly describes as a &ldquo\;pluralism of pluralisms.&rdquo\;</p>\n<p>Recent debates in metaphysics suggest that concerns of this kind are far from out of place. Markus Schrenk (2023)\, for instance\, advances a pluralist interpretation of David Lewis&rsquo\;s Best System Analysis of laws\, proposing a proliferation of best systems across the special sciences\, each retaining the autonomy to articulate its own vocabulary. Michela Massimi (2022) similarly highlights the pluralism inherent in the classification of natural kinds\, emphasizing their historically and culturally contingent\, open-ended character. In the debate about the metaphysical nature of probability\, Mauricio Su&aacute\;rez (Su&aacute\;rez 2020) proposes a tripartite pluralist ontology comprising propensities\, probabilities\, and frequencies.&nbsp\;</p>\n<p>In a related vein\, H&uuml\;ttemann (2003\, 2021) argues that part&ndash\;whole scientific explanations are non-hegemonic and grounded in relations of mutual dependence\, thereby giving rise to a form of &ldquo\;pragmatic pluralism.&rdquo\; Similarly\, James Ladyman (2024\; Ladyman &amp\; Ross 2007) defends the scale relativity of ontology\, according to which entities\, processes\, and structures exist at different scales of measurement\, potentially supporting a fruitful form of ontic pluralism.</p>
ORGANIZER;CN=Adrien Avramoglou;CN=Daian Bica:
METHOD:PUBLISH
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DTSTAMP:20260611T195224Z
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Warsaw:20260611T090000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Warsaw:20260612T170000
SUMMARY:The New Political Order and the Digital Era
UID:20260618T014223Z-iCalPlugin-Grails@philevents-web-bd7db559-gt5qm
TZID:Europe/Warsaw
LOCATION:Poznań\, Poland
DESCRIPTION:<p>Contemporary societies are undergoing a profound transformation of the political order\, with digital technologies serving as a key driving force. The algorithmization of decision-making processes\, the platformization of public communication\, and the growing role of data in social governance are generating fundamental changes in the exercise of power\, the functioning of democracy\, and the understanding of political subjectivity. These developments exceed the explanatory scope of classical political theories and call for new analytical categories as well as critical normative reflection. This transformation unfolds amid intensifying geopolitical competition over digital infrastructure\, artificial intelligence\, and control over data flows\, leading to the emergence of new forms of digital sovereignty and a redefinition of the relationship between the state\, the market\, and global technology corporations. The development of artificial intelligence systems\, including generative models\, not only automates administrative and communicative processes but also reshapes the epistemic foundations of public life\, influencing the production of knowledge\, the status of truth\, and the mechanisms through which political opinion is formed. The aim of the conference &ldquo\;The New Political Order and the Digital Era&rdquo\; is to create an interdisciplinary forum for debate on the philosophical\, political\, and institutional consequences of digital transformation. The conference seeks to examine the relationship between technology\, power\, and democracy\, with particular emphasis on algorithmic forms of governance\, transformations of the public sphere\, and emerging configurations of political responsibility.&nbsp\; &nbsp\; &nbsp\; &nbsp\; &nbsp\; Registration: Deadline for submission of abstracts: 30 April 2026 Notification of acceptance: 15 May 2026 Conference fee payment deadline: 30 May 2026 Deadline for submission of accepted full papers for publication: 30 September 2026 Conference fee: 600 PLN (The fee covers conference materials\, accommodation\, catering\, and publication costs for papers accepted for print.) Participants are kindly requested to submit an abstract of 300&ndash\;500 words\, along with a short academic biography\, in Microsoft Word or PDF format to the conference organizer. The final deadline for submissions is 30 April 2026. For further information\, please contact Dr. Lidia Godek-Ostrouch at: godly@amu.edu.pl</p>
ORGANIZER;CN=Krzysztof Przybyszewski:
METHOD:PUBLISH
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DTSTAMP:20260611T195224Z
DTSTART;TZID=Africa/Johannesburg:20260611T090000
DTEND;TZID=Africa/Johannesburg:20260612T170000
SUMMARY:Thinking about Philosophical Counselling and Philosophy as a Way of Life from a South African Place
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TZID:Africa/Johannesburg
LOCATION:Ryneveld and Andringa Street\, Stellenbosch\, South Africa
DESCRIPTION:<p>Philosophical counselling and philosophy as a way of life are experiencing a period of renewed interest\, marked by several significant forthcoming publications and the emergence of new scholarly societies internationally. Within this broader international context\, a growing and sustained conversation has begun to take shape in South Africa\, one that asks what these practices mean when thought from&nbsp\;<em>a South African place</em>\, and what such situated reflection might contribute to the wider field.</p>\n<p>This symposium\,&nbsp\;<em>Thinking about Philosophical Counselling and Philosophy as a Way of Life from a South African Place</em>\, is a direct response to this conversation. It aims to bring together philosophers\, practitioners\, postgraduate students\, and those with a shared interest in these questions to foster a space for sustained and open dialogue.</p>\n<p>The aim of the symposium is to think about philosophical counselling and philosophy as a way of life from within South African contexts.</p>
ORGANIZER;CN=Jaco Louw:
METHOD:PUBLISH
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DTSTAMP:20260611T195224Z
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20260611T090000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20260612T170000
SUMMARY:Privacy at the margins
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TZID:Europe/Berlin
LOCATION:Munich\, Germany
DESCRIPTION:<p>Invited speakers:</p>\n<ul>\n<li>Sam Berstler (MIT)</li>\n<li>Lauritz Munch (Aarhus)</li>\n</ul>\n\n<p>Traditionally\, analyses of privacy start from hard cases of breach\, such as reading other people&rsquo\;s diaries and letters without permission\, wiring houses and passing on medical records\, and these are well covered\, for instance\, by the so-called control account of the right to privacy (Marmor 2015\, Menges 2024). Yet there are many actions and attitudes which are\, as it were\, on the margins of privacy\, and which either are sketchy or uncouth but not obviously wrong\, or are clearly wrong but not obviously a breach of privacy: passing on intimate information but in an anonymised way\, novelists using others&rsquo\; intimate information in writing\, gossip\, stalking\, off- or online\, gathering too much public information about a public person\, deep-fakes\, asking someone questions about their personal life\, and the list can go on. Some of these have been recently discussed by philosophers\, within or without the context of privacy. The conference thus aims to bring people together in order to discuss these in-between cases\, and many other similar ones\, and to think:</p>\n<ul>\n<li>To what extent are these practices wrong?</li>\n<li>If so\, is it helpful to think of them using the concept of privacy?</li>\n<li>Do we need new concepts in the ethics of information and observation that go beyond privacy in order to cover these cases?</li>\n</ul>
ORGANIZER;CN="Radu Bumbăcea":
METHOD:PUBLISH
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260611T195224Z
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20260611T090000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20260612T170000
SUMMARY:17th London Graduate Conference in the History of Political Thought
UID:20260618T014226Z-iCalPlugin-Grails@philevents-web-bd7db559-gt5qm
TZID:Europe/London
LOCATION:London\, United Kingdom
DESCRIPTION:<p>It gives us great pleasure to present the 17th Annual London Graduate Conference in the History of Political Thought. This year&rsquo\;s theme is &lsquo\;Vice\, Corruption and Decay&rsquo\;.</p>\n<p>The conference will take place at UCL on 11&ndash\;12 June\, and is a really great conference to attend regardless of your research interests or stage of your academic career.</p>\n<p>The keynote speaker will be Dr Shiru Lim (Leiden University).</p>\n<p>The first day is scheduled to take place in the Moot Court\, Bentham House XG03.</p>\n<p>The second day is scheduled to take place in the Sir Ambrose Fleming Lecture Theatre\, Roberts Building G06.</p>\n<p>Please use the link below to register.</p>\n<p>https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/17th-annual-london-graduate-conference-in-the-history-</p>\n<p>of-political-thought-tickets-1989096535282</p>
ORGANIZER:
METHOD:PUBLISH
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260611T195224Z
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20260611T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20260612T170000
SUMMARY:Legal Philosophy Workshop 2026
UID:20260618T014227Z-iCalPlugin-Grails@philevents-web-bd7db559-gt5qm
TZID:America/Chicago
LOCATION:Chicago-Kent College of Law\, 565 West Adams Street\, Chicago\, United States\, 60661
DESCRIPTION:<p>The Legal Philosophy Workshop (LPW) is an annual conference designed to foster reflection on the nature of law and the philosophical issues underlying its different areas. Our aim is to promote work that connects legal philosophy with other branches of philosophy (e.g. moral and political philosophy\, metaphysics\, philosophy of language\, epistemology\, or philosophy of action) and to create a venue for the critical examination of different viewpoints about law.</p>\n<p>LPW 2026 will be hosted on&nbsp\;June 11-12&nbsp\;at the Chicago-Kent College of Law.&nbsp\;You can find the Call for Abstracts here.&nbsp\;The LPW is an annual\, read-ahead\, event\, hosted in venues alternating between North America and Europe.&nbsp\;Previous workshops&nbsp\;have been hosted by the University of Amsterdam\, University of Michigan\,&nbsp\;&nbsp\;Trinity College Dublin\,&nbsp\;the University of Pennsylvania\, University of Edinburgh\, Queens University\, University College London\, Rutgers University\, University of Surrey\, and the University of Southern California.&nbsp\;</p>\n<p>If you would like to be on our mailing list\, attend\, or host a future LPW\,&nbsp\;please join the Legal Philosophy Workshop Google Group.&nbsp\;</p>
ORGANIZER;CN=Wendy Salkin;CN=Raff Donelson;CN=Hadassa Anne Noorda:
METHOD:PUBLISH
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260611T195224Z
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20260612T090000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20260612T170000
SUMMARY:Ethical Theory and Obligatory Ends
UID:20260618T014228Z-iCalPlugin-Grails@philevents-web-bd7db559-gt5qm
TZID:Europe/Berlin
LOCATION:Bielefeld\, Germany
DESCRIPTION:<p>The concept of an&nbsp\;obligatory&nbsp\;end is commonly associated with Kantian ethics\, specifically\, with Kant's idea that there are duties to adopt the happiness of others and one's own perfection as ends. However\, the notion of&nbsp\;obligatory&nbsp\;ends has been recently attracting philosophical interest from outside Kantian tradition and there is good reason to think that this notion can be fruitfully employed in moral theorising beyond Kantian ethics.&nbsp\;Obligatory&nbsp\;ends play an important role in recent treatments of topics such as supererogation (Portmore&nbsp\;2023)\, moral demandingness and justification of moral options (Hanser 2014\, Igneski 2008\, Noggle 2009\, Sticker 2024)\, collective harm (Albertzart 2019)\, and moral and non-moral normativity more generally (Bastian 2025\, Greenspan 2010\,&nbsp\;Portmore&nbsp\;<em>ms</em>\, van Ackeren &amp\; Sticker 2018). The aim of this workshop is to further investigate the nature of&nbsp\;obligatory&nbsp\;ends and the role they can play in ethical theory broadly construed.</p>\n<p>The following is a non-exhaustive list of questions\, with which this workshop is concerned:</p>\n<ul>\n<li>What is the nature of&nbsp\;obligatory&nbsp\;ends? How are they related to other kinds of moral requirements? What&nbsp\;obligatory&nbsp\;ends are there?</li>\n<li>How does the concept of an&nbsp\;obligatory&nbsp\;end relate to other normative concepts\, such as rights\, duties to act\, reasons for action and reasons for attitudes?</li>\n<li>Should morality be conceived as fundamentally end-based?</li>\n<li>What are the implications of admitting&nbsp\;obligatory&nbsp\;ends as part of the moral landscape?&nbsp\;How well do&nbsp\;obligatory&nbsp\;ends fit within non-consequentialist moral theories that admit of options and constraints?</li>\n</ul>\n<p>Participation is free\, but registration is required and places are limited.</p>\n<p>Registration deadline: 08 June&nbsp\;2026</p>\n<p>Register at obligatory.ends(at)uni-bielefeld(dot)de</p>\n<p>Please visit our website for further information:</p>
ORGANIZER;CN=Dmitry Ananiev;CN=Benjamin Kiesewetter:
METHOD:PUBLISH
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260611T195224Z
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Paris:20260612T090000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Paris:20260612T170000
SUMMARY:Réceptions de la République de Platon au XIXe siècle : Utopies\, socialismes et féminismes
UID:20260618T014229Z-iCalPlugin-Grails@philevents-web-bd7db559-gt5qm
TZID:Europe/Paris
LOCATION:Campus Condorcet - 5\, cours des Humanités\, Aubervilliers\, France\, 93300
DESCRIPTION:<p>9h30 | Patrice Vermeren : Mot d'ouverture<br><br>10h00 | Julie Mestery : Comment lisait-on le livre V de la R&eacute\;publique dans l&rsquo\;universit&eacute\; du XIXe si&egrave\;cle ?"<br><br>11h20 | Clara Chauvel-Th&eacute\;bault : La r&eacute\;ception de Platon dans la presse f&eacute\;ministe du XIXe si&egrave\;cle<br>___<br><br>14h00 | Fran&ccedil\;ois Fourn : Le communisme d'&Eacute\;tienne Cabet avant 1840<br><br>15h10 | Etienne Lamarche : &Ecirc\;tre &laquo\; fou avec Platon &raquo\; : l&eacute\;gitimation et d&eacute\;l&eacute\;gitimation du communisme icarien par l'invocation platonicienne<br><br>16h30 | Nicolas Le Merrer : Le conflit entre utopistes et universitaires pour l&rsquo\;h&eacute\;ritage platonicien : une voie d&rsquo\;acc&egrave\;s au &laquo\; communisme &raquo\; de la R&eacute\;publique</p>
ORGANIZER;CN=M. K. Pollaert:
METHOD:PUBLISH
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DTSTAMP:20260611T195224Z
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Zurich:20260612T090000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Zurich:20260613T170000
SUMMARY:The aesthetics of games
UID:20260618T014230Z-iCalPlugin-Grails@philevents-web-bd7db559-gt5qm
TZID:Europe/Zurich
LOCATION:Neuchâtel\, Switzerland
DESCRIPTION:<p><strong>Confirmed&nbsp\;speakers:</strong></p>\n<p><strong></strong>Christopher Bartel (Appalachian State University)</p>\n<p>Alexandre Declos (University of Neuch&acirc\;tel)</p>\n<p>Nele&nbsp\;van de Mosselaer (Tilburg University)</p>\n<p>Nathan Wildman (Tilburg University)</p>\n<p><br><strong>Workshop description:</strong>&nbsp\;Whether games qualify as artworks remains a matter of debate. It is\, however\, uncontroversial that games can possess aesthetic value and exhibit aesthetic properties. But what is distinctive about the aesthetic appeal of games\, and how should we theorize it?<br>Several influential answers have been proposed. Some argue that the distinctive aesthetics of games lies in their interactivity (Tavinor 2009\; Lopes 2010) or in the sculpted agencies they afford (Nguyen 2020). Christopher Bartel has recently argued that the aesthetics of videogames depends not only on their formal features\, but also on players&rsquo\; attitudes\, distinguishing several aesthetically relevant modes of play (goal-seeking\, narrative\, or &ldquo\;dollhouse&rdquo\; play). Frank Lantz (2024)\, by contrast\, maintains that games exhibit a sui generis form of beauty grounded in their systemic features. It remains an open question how these approaches can be reconciled\, and&nbsp\;where they fundamentally diverge.<br>This workshop aims to engage with these debates and to explore the aesthetics of games more broadly. Bringing together philosophers of art and game scholars\, the workshop will examine how games challenge inherited categories of aesthetic theory\, and how aesthetic theory can\, in turn\, illuminate the nature of game-playing.<br><br>We welcome contributions addressing the intersection of aesthetics and game studies.&nbsp\;Possible topics include (but are not limited to):</p>\n<ul>\n<li>What kind of aesthetic objects are games\, and how do they differ from traditional artworks?</li>\n<li>How do gameplay\, interactivity\, and player attitudes shape aesthetic experience?</li>\n<li>Should we distinguish between the aesthetics of the player\, the spectator\, and the designer&nbsp\;- and can these perspectives be reintegrated?</li>\n<li>How do the aesthetics of games relate to&nbsp\;the aesthetics&nbsp\;of sports or other performative practices?</li>\n<li>Should we differentiate between the aesthetics of play and the aesthetics of gameplay?</li>\n<li>In what sense can games be artworks\, and what forms of aesthetic value do they realize?</li>\n<li>How do sound\, music\, narrative\, level design\, and visual composition interact with agency and affect in-game aesthetics?</li>\n<li>What can the study of games teach us about the nature and scope of aesthetic experience itself?</li>\n</ul>\n<p><strong>Submission details</strong></p>\n<p>Please submit proposals by email to: N.W.Wildman@tilburguniversity.edu> and alexandre.declos@unine.ch><br><br>Submissions should consist of a PDF prepared for blind review\, containing an abstract of 300 words (references excluded). Please make sure to put "Aesthetics of games submission" in the subject.<br><br><u>Deadline for submission</u>: April 15\, 2026<br><br>Please note that participants are expected to cover their own transport and accomodation costs\; however\, lunches and a workshop dinner will be covered.</p>
ORGANIZER;CN=Alexandre Declos;CN=Nathan Wildman:
METHOD:PUBLISH
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260611T195224Z
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20260612T090000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20260613T170000
SUMMARY:AI and decision-making: tools\, hybrids\, and collectives
UID:20260618T014231Z-iCalPlugin-Grails@philevents-web-bd7db559-gt5qm
TZID:Europe/Berlin
LOCATION:Theaterstrasse 14\, Aachen\, Germany\, 52062
DESCRIPTION:<p>On behalf of the Chair of Applied Ethics at RWTH Aachen\, we invite abstract submissions for participation in the workshop &ldquo\;<em>AI and decision-making: tools\, hybrids\, and collectives</em>&rdquo\;\, funded by the German Federal Ministry Research\, Technology and Space.&nbsp\;</p>\n<p>The workshop is scheduled for 12-13th June\, 2026 and will take place at RWTH Aachen University. It aims to be a discussion-focused event seeking to discuss the relationship between so-called AI technologies and our individual and especially our collective decision-making. Confirmed speakers include Prof. Karl de Fine Licht (Gothenburg\, Sweden)\, Prof. Tobias Schlicht (Bochum\, Germany)\, Prof. Pekka M&auml\;kel&auml\; (Helsinki\, Finland). Details on the topic can be found in the abstract below.&nbsp\;</p>\n<p>-------------&nbsp\;</p>\n<p><strong>Abstract:&nbsp\;</strong><strong></strong></p>\n<p>Many of the &ldquo\;AI&rdquo\; technologies currently impacting our shared world have significant consequences for our individual and collective decision-making. This can be through permitting cognitive offloading\, nudging or otherwise being designed to optimize or alter our choices. LLMs are used pervasively by those needing to make decisions about everything from paint colours to public policy\, smart technologies are incorporated into medical devices to assist in maintaining healthy habits and treatment regimes\, machine-learning enabled systems play a role in identifying and selecting targets for active militaries\, and sorting algorithms help shape the choice architecture of our digital lives. How then should we understand the dynamics of these impacts on our individual and collective decision-making? Should we understand these technologies <em>as tools\, as partners or as co-constituents of decision-making hybrids or collectives? </em>When might they manipulate us\, lead us stray\, or enhance our decision-making? And what sort of relationship to us as decision-makers should these technologies have\, and we to them? These are the central animating questions of this workshop\, each encompassing a vast array of important topics. These include\, among others:&nbsp\;</p>\n<ol>\n<li>What are the advantages and limits of &ldquo\;AI&rdquo\;-enabled <em>enhancement </em>of decision-making?&nbsp\;</li>\n<li>Whether\, and how\, making decisions using or collaboratively with these technologies affects our <em>reasoning process and skills</em>?&nbsp\;</li>\n<li>Do the impacts of &ldquo\;AI&rdquo\; on decision-making\, especially in realms like public policy\, warfare or healthcare require us to change how we think about the role of <em>trust and trustworthiness </em>within these domains\, both toward and about these technologies but also the decisions that originate from our interactions with them.&nbsp\;</li>\n<li>Who is <em>responsible </em>for a decision that has been impacted or collaboratively arrived at with &ldquo\;AI&rdquo\;?&nbsp\;</li>\n<li>Is there an important difference when considering the impacts of &ldquo\;AI&rdquo\; on <em>collective decisions </em>rather than individual ones?&nbsp\;</li>\n</ol>\n\n<p>------------&nbsp\;</p>\n<p>This workshop aims to engage with these intertwined topics through a wide range of conceptual tools and angles. To this end\, we invite submissions of abstracts of up to 300 words that should be accompanied by a title\, name of the submitter\, institutional affiliation\, and contact information. This should be sent as a .pdf to niel.conradie@humtec.rwth-aachen.de by the deadline of April\, 10th.&nbsp\;</p>
ORGANIZER;CN=Camilla Francesca Colombo;CN="Niël Conradie";CN=Saskia Nagel:
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260611T195224Z
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Stockholm:20260612T090000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Stockholm:20260614T170000
SUMMARY:Swedish Congress of Philosophy (Filosofidagarna) 2026
UID:20260618T014232Z-iCalPlugin-Grails@philevents-web-bd7db559-gt5qm
TZID:Europe/Stockholm
LOCATION:Campus Albano\, Stockholm\, Sweden
DESCRIPTION:<p>The Swedish Congress of Philosophy (&rdquo\;Filosofidagarna&rdquo\;) is a biennial philosophy conference that circulates between universities in Sweden. The 2026 conference is organised by the Department of Philosophy at Stockholm University\, between June 12 and June 14.</p>\n<p><strong>Keynote Speakers</strong></p>\n<ul>\n<li>Paulina Sliwa\, University of Vienna</li>\n<li>Roman Frigg\, London School of Economics and Political Science (LSE)</li>\n<li>Theoria Lecturer Timothy Williamson\, University of Oxford</li>\n</ul>\n<p><strong>Sections and Invited Speakers</strong></p>\n<ul>\n<li><em>Aesthetics</em> Nils-Hennes Stear\, Uppsala University</li>\n<li><em>Applied Ethics</em> Eric Brandstedt\, Lund University</li>\n<li><em>Epistemology</em> Ylwa Sj&ouml\;lin Wirling University of Gothenburg</li>\n<li><em>Ethics</em> Antti Kauppinen\, University of Helsinki</li>\n<li><em>History of Philosophy</em> Charlotta Weigelt\, S&ouml\;dert&ouml\;rn University</li>\n<li><em>Logic</em> John Cantwell\, KTH Royal Institute of Technology</li>\n<li><em>Metaethics</em> Bart Streumer\, University of Groningen</li>\n<li><em>Metaphysics</em> Daniel Giberman\, University of Gothenburg</li>\n<li><em>Philosophy of Language</em> Jessica Pepp\, Uppsala University</li>\n<li><em>Philosophy of Mind</em> Sofia Jeppsson\, Ume&aring\; University</li>\n<li><em>Philosophy of Science</em> Harald Wiltsche\, Link&ouml\;ping University</li>\n<li><em>Political Philosophy</em> Kasper Lippert-Rasmussen\, Aarhus University</li>\n</ul>\n<p>Submission and registration information\, along with further details will be available on the conference website in due course.&nbsp\;</p>
ORGANIZER;CN=James Nguyen;CN="Gunnar Björnsson";CN=Katharina Berndt;CN=Miira Tuominen:
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260611T195224Z
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20260612T090000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20260612T170000
SUMMARY:Fragility and the Aesthetics of Sensitivity 
UID:20260618T014233Z-iCalPlugin-Grails@philevents-web-bd7db559-gt5qm
TZID:Europe/London
LOCATION:55-59 Penrhyn Rd\, Kingston upon Thames\, London\, United Kingdom\, KT1 2EE
DESCRIPTION:<p>Under the dual themes of fragility and sensitivity\, and in light of contemporary systemic crises\, the symposium aims to examine changing disciplinary conditions in the production of knowledge and the practice of research at the intersection of science\, politics\, and aesthetics</p>\n\n<p>The symposium will feature keynote presentations by Brigitte Hart and Andrew Goffey. Brigitte Hart is a sound artist whose recent work explores the sonic textures of found objects along the Thames\, examining the relationships between ecosystems\, soundscape\, and society. Andrew Goffey is Associate Professor of Critical Theory and Cultural Studies at the University of Nottingham. His work has extensively engaged with questions of transdisciplinarity and the thought of F&eacute\;lix Guattari.</p>\n\n<p>The programme also includes four research papers and an open discussion between Anca-Maria Pop\, a PhD student in Philosophy\, and Julia Schauerman\, an electroacoustic composer\, improviser\, and community artist whose current research explores acousmatic storytelling as a collaborative creative practice for engaging complex contemporary issues.</p>\n\n<p>This is a hybrid event. Full programme details and registration information are available below with a link for online participation.&nbsp\;</p>\n\n<p><a#1155cc\;"  href="https://www.tickettailor.com/events/radicalphilosphyarchiveltd/2221571"  target="_blank" data-saferedirecturl="https://www.google.com/url?q=https://www.tickettailor.com/events/radicalphilosphyarchiveltd/2221571&amp\;source=gmail&amp\;ust=1781038420309000&amp\;usg=AOvVaw1nKVvh8Dpb1hpWyC7MUwDp">https://www.tickettailor.com/events/radicalphilosphyarchiveltd/2221571</a></p>\n\n<p>Please note: The venue for the symposium has changed from Clattern Lecture Theatre to JG0002.</p>
ORGANIZER:
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DTSTAMP:20260611T195224Z
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Stockholm:20260612T101500
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Stockholm:20260613T170000
SUMMARY:On Getting It Right
UID:20260618T014234Z-iCalPlugin-Grails@philevents-web-bd7db559-gt5qm
TZID:Europe/Stockholm
LOCATION:Helgonavägen 3\, Lund\, Sweden
DESCRIPTION:<p>We are pleased to announce the workshop On Getting It Right\, taking place at the Department of Philosophy at Lund University on June 12th - 13th\, 2026. The theme of the conference has its origin in a dispute where Bernard Williams accuses Richard Rorty of failing to respect that\, in philosophy\, there must be something that counts as getting it right. The central question of the workshop is: what does it mean to get it right in philosophy? Or\, more specifically\, what can count as getting it right if we take worries about anti-foundationalism and the contingency of our concepts seriously? Of course\, these worries might turn out to be misguided or not provide any obstacle to making sense of what it is to get things right.</p>\n<p><strong>Friday June 12th</strong><br>8:45 Welcome and Coffee&nbsp\;<br>8:50 Matthieu Queloz (University of Bern) - <em>Is the Contingency of Our Concepts an Obstacle to Getting It Right?&nbsp\;</em><br>10:20 Break&nbsp\;<br>10:25 Niklas Dahl (Lund University) &ndash\; <em>Explanatory Unity as a Sense of Reality&nbsp\;</em><br>11:55 Lunch&nbsp\;<br>13:30 Martin Gustafsson (&Aring\;bo Akademi) &ndash\; <em>Philosophy as a Crisis Phenomenon&nbsp\;</em><br>15:00 Break&nbsp\;<br>15:15 Amie Thomasson (Dartmouth College) &ndash\; <em>Yeah to Truth: Or\, the Functions of Truth Talk&nbsp\;</em><br>16:45 End of Day&nbsp\;<br>19:30 Dinner</p>\n<p><strong>Saturday June 13th</strong><br>10:30 Anton Emilsson (KU Leuven) &ndash\; <em>On the Deepest Sense of Style</em>&nbsp\;<br>12:00 Lunch&nbsp\;<br>13:00 Huw Price (University of Cambridge) &ndash\; <em>The Hand-Made Mirror: Rorty\, Davidson\, and Brandom</em>&nbsp\;<br>14:30 Break&nbsp\;<br>14:35 David Owens (University of Oxford) &ndash\; <em>The Method of Cases</em>&nbsp\;<br>16:05 Break&nbsp\;<br>16:30 Sophie Grace Chappell (The Open University) &ndash\; <em>The Sense of a Difficulty</em>&nbsp\;<br>18:00 End of Day&nbsp\;<br>19:00 Dinner</p>\n\n<p>The workshop aims to shed light on these questions by bringing together a variety of perspectives\, such as pragmatism\, conceptual ethics\, and a broadly post-Wittgensteinian tradition\, as well as views more critical to the underlying assumption that our concepts are sufficiently contingent for there to be any serious worry about what it can mean to get it right.</p>\n<p>Additional guests are more than welcome to attend\, but we ask that you fill out the following form: https://forms.gle/qBu2aYrMzzECosHJ9</p>\n<p>We will\, however\, not be able to cover dinner and lunch costs for non-invited participants and cannot guarantee that there will be space at the conference dinners.</p>\n<p>Hope to see many of you there!</p>\n<p>The organisers\, Niklas Dahl\, Anton Emilsson\, and Elsa Magnell.</p>
ORGANIZER;CN=Niklas Dahl;CN=Anton Emilsson;CN=Elsa Magnell:
METHOD:PUBLISH
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260611T195224Z
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20260612T110000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20260612T170000
SUMMARY:Migration and Asylum in Scotland: A Philosophical Perspective
UID:20260618T014235Z-iCalPlugin-Grails@philevents-web-bd7db559-gt5qm
TZID:Europe/London
LOCATION:Sir Duncan Rice Library\, Aberdeen\, United Kingdom\, AB24 3AA
DESCRIPTION:<p>The Department of Philosophy at the University of Aberdeen is hosting the upcoming workshop\, &ldquo\;<strong>Migration and Asylum in Scotland: A Philosophical Perspective</strong>&rdquo\;. This one-day event will explore how a distinctively philosophical voice might be added to the existing scholarly literature on migration and asylum in Scotland in particular\, and in sub-state regions more generally. &nbsp\;</p>\n<p><strong>Workshop Date:</strong>&nbsp\;Friday 12th June 2026<br>(rescheduled from&nbsp\;Wednesday 29th April 2026)</p>\n<p><strong>Confirmed Speakers:</strong></p>\n<ul>\n<li>David Owen (University of Southampton)</li>\n<li>Kerri Woods (University of Leeds)</li>\n<li>Natasha Saunders (University of St Andrews)</li>\n<li>Bradley Hillier-Smith (University of St Andrews)</li>\n</ul>\n<p><strong>Organiser:&nbsp\;</strong>Eilidh Beaton (University of Aberdeen)</p>\n<p>Expressions of interest in attending should be sent to Eilidh Beaton at eilidh.beaton@abdn.ac.uk.</p>\n<p><strong>Details</strong></p>\n<p>The philosophy of migration and asylum is often state-centric. Much work in this area focuses on migrants&rsquo\; entitlements against states\, and states&rsquo\; corresponding responsibilities to fulfil these entitlements (e.g. Carens 2013\, Miller 2016\, Gibney 2018). In recent years\, however\, calls have been made to move beyond this state-centric lens\, including by paying more attention to the role of sub-state political authorities (e.g. Sager 2016\, Buxton 2024).&nbsp\;</p>\n<p>Against this background\, Scotland presents itself as a promising case study. As a devolved nation within the UK\, the Scottish Parliament retains control over a wide range of social matters\, including housing\, benefits\, and social services. Hence\, as Gareth Mulvey (2018) nicely summarises\, while immigration policy is reserved to Westminster\, immigrant policy&mdash\;what happens once people arrive&mdash\;is largely devolved to the Scottish government. Layered legal landscapes of this sort raise questions which remain as-yet under-explored in the philosophical literature. For instance\, how should existing recommendations for migrant integration and inclusion (e.g. Carens 2013\, De Schutter &amp\; Ypi 2015\, Miller 2016) be (re-) interpreted and applied in such contexts\, given their distinctive features\, promises\, and risks (e.g. Arrighi 2014\; Galandini et al 2018)?</p>\n<p>Socio-culturally too\, the Scottish context is ripe for further exploration. It is common across sub-state regions to find discourse portraying the regional government as more progressive and welcoming than the &lsquo\;exclusionary and hostile&rsquo\; central state (Edwards &amp\; Wisthaler 2023)\, and Scotland is no exception (e.g. SNP 2025\, Brand Scotland). However\, the reality of Scottish attitudes toward migration is more complex than these announcements suggest (e.g. Kyambi &amp\; Kay 2025)\, and this discourse of progressiveness often serves regional nation-building projects (Edwards &amp\; Wisthaler 2023\, Wisthaler 2023). Again\, this context raises normative questions worthy of greater philosophical attention&mdash\;for instance\, the extent to which advocates seeking meaningful material support for migrants should support or oppose such rhetoric.&nbsp\;</p>\n<p>This one-day workshop aims to explore how a distinctively philosophical voice might be added to the existing scholarly literature on migration and asylum in Scotland in particular\, and in sub-state regions more generally.</p>\n<p>This workshop is sponsored by the Scots Philosophical Association\, the Society of Applied Philosophy\, and CEKAS at the University of Aberdeen.</p>\n<p><strong>References</strong></p>\n<p>Arrighi\, Jean-Thomas\, &lsquo\;Managing Immigration in a Multinational Context. Border Struggles and Nation-Building in Contemporary Scotland and Catalonia&rsquo\;\, in The Politics of Immigration in Multi-Level States: Governance and Political Parties ed. by ed. by E. Hepburn and R. Zapata-Barrero (London: Palgrave MacMillan\, 2014)\, 108-129.</p>\n<p>Brand Scotland\, &lsquo\;Scotland Welcomes Refugees&rsquo\; (accessed Jan 2026). Available at .</p>\n<p>Buxton\, Rebecca\, &lsquo\;The State by Philip Pettit&rsquo\;\, Mind (2024)\, 1-7.</p>\n<p>Carens\, Joseph\, The Ethics of Immigration (Oxford: Oxford University Press\, 2013).</p>\n<p>De Schutter\, Helder and Lea Ypi\, &lsquo\;Mandatory Citizenship for Immigrants&rsquo\;\, British Journal of Political Science 45:2 (2015)\, 235-251.</p>\n<p>Edwards\, Catrin Wyn and Verena Wisthaler\, &lsquo\;The Power of Symbolic Sanctuary: Insights from Wales on the Limitations and Potential of a Regional Approach to Sanctuary&rsquo\;\, Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies 49:14 (2023)\, 3602-3628.</p>\n<p>Galandini\, Silvia\, Gareth Mulvey\, and Laurence Lessard-Phillips\, &lsquo\;Stuck Between Mainstreaming and Localism: Views on the Practice of Migrant Integration in a Devolved Policy Framework&rsquo\;\, Journal of International Migration and Integration 20 (2019)\, 685-702.</p>\n<p>Gibney\, Matthew J.\, &lsquo\;The Ethics of Refugees&rsquo\;\, Philosophy Compass 13:10 (2018)\, 1-9.</p>\n<p>Hepburn\, Eve and Ricard Zapata Barrero\, The Politics of Immigration in Multi-Level States: Governance and Political Parties (London: Palgrave Macmillan\, 2014).</p>\n<p>Kyambi\, Sarah and Rebecca Kay\, &lsquo\;Attitudes to Immigration in Scotland: Changing\, complex\, contradictory&rsquo\;\, Migration Policy Scotland (2025). Available at .</p>\n<p>Miller\, David\, Strangers in Our Midst (Cambridge MA: Harvard University Press\, 2016).</p>\n<p>Mulvey\, Gareth. &lsquo\;Refugee Integration Policy: The Effects of UK Policy-Making on Refugees in Scotland&rsquo\;\, Journal of Social Policy 44:2 (2015)\, 357-375.</p>\n<p>&ndash\;&ndash\;&ndash\;&ndash\;&ndash\;.\, &lsquo\;Social Citizenship\, Social Policy and Refugee Integration: a Case of Policy and Divergence in Scotland?&rsquo\;\, Journal of Social Policy 47:1 (2018)\, 161-178.</p>\n<p>Sager\, Alex\, &lsquo\;Methodological Nationalism\, Migration and Political Theory&rsquo\;\, Political Studies 64:1 (2016)\, 42-59.</p>\n<p>SNP\, &lsquo\;First Minister John Swinney addresses the nation about Scotland&rsquo\;s right to decide &ndash\; Full Speech&rsquo\;. Available at .</p>\n<p>Wisthaler\, Verena\, &lsquo\;Migrants\, New Citizens\, Co-Citizens and Citizens by Adoption &ndash\; Regionalist Parties&rsquo\; Framing of Immigrants in the Basque Country\, Corsica\, South Tyrol\, Scotland and Wales&rsquo\;\, in Revising the Integration-Citizenship Nexus in Europe ed. by Roxana Barbulescu\, Sara Wallace Goodman\, Luicy Pedroza (Cham\, Switzerland: Springer Nature\, 2023)\, 91-109.</p>
ORGANIZER;CN=Eilidh Beaton:
METHOD:PUBLISH
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