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CALSCALE:GREGORIAN
METHOD:PUBLISH
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260628T133718Z
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20241001T120000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20261026T170000
SUMMARY:In Conversation: Exploring the Philosophy of Money and Finance
UID:20260630T130425Z-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:20260628T133718Z
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20251001T000000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20260630T170000
SUMMARY:STAL Seminar
UID:20260630T130426Z-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:20260628T133718Z
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Lisbon:20251001T090000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Lisbon:20260630T170000
SUMMARY:Polysemy in the Evaluative Sphere
UID:20260630T130427Z-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:20260628T133718Z
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
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260628T133718Z
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:20260628T133718Z
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Bucharest:20251028T090000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Bucharest:20260930T170000
SUMMARY:DFT-CELFIS research seminar\, University of Bucharest
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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:20260628T133718Z
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20260201T090000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20260630T170000
SUMMARY:Inquiry Network WIP Talks (Spring 2026)
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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
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260628T133718Z
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20260218T090000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20261209T170000
SUMMARY:Reconstructing Carnap Webinar Series 2026
UID:20260630T130432Z-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:20260628T133718Z
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20260317T170000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20261117T170000
SUMMARY:Wittgenstein's Lecture on Ethics: Online Lecture Series
UID:20260630T130433Z-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:20260628T133718Z
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Athens:20260404T180000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Athens:20261219T170000
SUMMARY:Η ΜΕΤΑ - ΦΙΛΟΣΟΦΙΚΗ ΣΚΕΨΗ - ΑΛΕΞΗΣ ΚΑΡΠΟΥΖΟΣ
UID:20260630T130434Z-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:20260628T133718Z
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20260422T181500
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20260715T170000
SUMMARY:InterChair Kolloquium
UID:20260630T130435Z-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:20260628T133718Z
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20260422T180000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20260715T170000
SUMMARY:Representations in Minds\, Brains\, and AI
UID:20260630T130436Z-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:20260628T133718Z
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20260429T210000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20261126T170000
SUMMARY:Séminaire Arendt 2026
UID:20260630T130437Z-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:20260628T133718Z
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20260528T163000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20260924T170000
SUMMARY:Inner Speech Colloquium
UID:20260630T130438Z-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:20260628T133718Z
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260601T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260731T170000
SUMMARY:AI and Data Ethics Summer Training Program
UID:20260630T130439Z-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:20260628T133718Z
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Paris:20260604T090000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Paris:20261024T170000
SUMMARY:Stanley Cavell at 100. An International Centennial Conference
UID:20260630T130440Z-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:20260628T133718Z
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20260605T090000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20260717T170000
SUMMARY:Italian Phenomenology Today 2026
UID:20260630T130441Z-iCalPlugin-Grails@philevents-web-bd7db559-gt5qm
TZID:Europe/Berlin
LOCATION:Kerpener Str. 30\, Cologne\, Germany
DESCRIPTION:<p><strong>Description</strong></p>\n<p>This lecture series draws together scholars interested in the rich history and ongoing evolution of phenomenology within the Italian philosophical tradition. It provides a forum for regular discussions where participants can present their latest research or recent publications. Topics will span from the historical and cultural roots of Italian phenomenology and its dialogues with other philosophical traditions&mdash\;including Marxism\, Existentialism\, Pragmatism\, Idealism\, Hermeneutics\, (Post-)Structuralism\, and Neo-Thomism&mdash\;to its intersections with disciplines such as psychology\, psychoanalysis\, sociology\, anthropology\, political theory\, and art. A key objective of the series is also to examine how Italian phenomenological concepts and frameworks can contribute to contemporary debates in fields such as the philosophy of mind\, social and political philosophy\, aesthetics\, and the theory of art and literature. By doing so\, the series fosters dialogue within the phenomenological tradition and across broader philosophical and interdisciplinary contexts.</p>\n<p><strong>Participation</strong></p>\n<p>The series will be conducted in a&nbsp\;<strong>hybrid format</strong>\, both in person at the Husserl Archive in Cologne and online via Zoom. To register\, please email&nbsp\;italianphenomenology@gmail.comwith the subject &ldquo\;Registration Lecture Series 2026.&rdquo\; The Zoom link will be provided the day before each session.</p>\n<p>Organizers: Marco Cavallaro\, Sara Dameno</p>\n<p>This series is organized as part of the&nbsp\;<em>ItaPhen</em>&nbsp\;project&nbsp\;and hosted by the Husserl Archive in Cologne.</p>\n<p>This lecture series is funded by the&nbsp\;<strong>German Research Foundation (DFG)</strong>&nbsp\;as part of the&nbsp\;<em>ItaPhen</em>&nbsp\;project.</p>\n<p><strong>Program</strong></p>\n<p>Please find the program of the Lecture Series in the PDF attached.&nbsp\;</p>
ORGANIZER:
METHOD:PUBLISH
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260628T133718Z
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:20260630T130442Z-iCalPlugin-Grails@philevents-web-bd7db559-gt5qm
TZID:Europe/Istanbul
LOCATION:İstanbul\, Turkey
ORGANIZER:
METHOD:PUBLISH
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260628T133718Z
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:20260630T130443Z-iCalPlugin-Grails@philevents-web-bd7db559-gt5qm
TZID:Europe/Istanbul
LOCATION:İstanbul\, Turkey
ORGANIZER:
METHOD:PUBLISH
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260628T133718Z
DTSTART;TZID=America/Indiana/Indianapolis:20260622T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/Indiana/Indianapolis:20260628T170000
SUMMARY:Patience in Adversity Summer Seminar
UID:20260630T130444Z-iCalPlugin-Grails@philevents-web-bd7db559-gt5qm
TZID:America/Indiana/Indianapolis
LOCATION:Notre Dame\, United States
DESCRIPTION:<p>This seminar aims to equip doctoral students and early career scholars in philosophy and religion to explore patience in adversity. We hope participants will emerge ready to contribute to the growing research on patience as it relates to courage\, anger\, self-control\, awe\, as well as how virtues interact with personal and structural hardship.</p>\n<p><br>The seminar will cover cutting-edge research in philosophy and religion and will feature senior scholars who will present their own work and advise students on their writing projects in this general area. Participants will benefit from mentoring and engagement with their own research during daily sessions.</p>\n<p>Together\, we will consider questions such as:</p>\n<ul>\n<li>What are viable conceptions of patience?</li>\n<li>How is patience related to other moral psychological phenomena\, like peace\, self-control\, moral anger\, courage? How might it shape or be developed by patterns of attention?</li>\n<li>What social and cultural practices impact the experience and expression of patience?</li>\n<li>Do different theologically or culturally embedded ideas of time change the experience of patience or its value?</li>\n<li>Does patience have special political value in certain societies\, such as religiously plural societies? What other virtues might have to be operative for patience to have that value?</li>\n<li>How does a patient person properly relate to feelings of anger and sorrow in adversity?</li>\n</ul>\n<p><strong>Logistics and Funding:</strong> Seminar main meetings will convene each day and involve discussion of invited scholars&rsquo\; work\, breakout sessions\, and small group mentoring workshops. Seminar participants will receive a $5\,000 honorarium for their participation and time. All payments will be made in US dollars.Cost of travel and lodging for award recipients is expected to be covered by the individuals themselves.</p>\n<p><strong>Application Deadline: </strong>January 9\, 2026.</p>\n<p><br><strong>Application Instructions:</strong> Applicants must submit the following materials at this link (https://baylor.app.box.com/f/e71a529d377840e896baddc6ed936914) using the document names indicated below each document description:</p>\n<p>1) Letter of application of no more than 1 page explaining: what topics regarding patience interest you\; connection of these topics with your previous or ongoing research\; how research you do or plan to do impacts populations facing adversity\; level of familiarity with moral psychology and virtue ethics generally.</p>\n<p>Name Document: [Your Last Name\, Your First Name] &ndash\; Letter of Application</p>\n<p>2) A 250-word statement describing the scholar&rsquo\;s capacity for successful collaboration with scholars from diverse disciplines and backgrounds (psychology\, religion\, philosophy).</p>\n<p>Name Document: [Your Last Name\, Your First Name] - Collaboration Statement</p>\n<p><br>3) Curriculum Vitae</p>\n<p>Name Document: [Your Last Name\, Your First Name] - CV</p>\n<p><br>4) Short bio (less than 200-word) for posting on a website featuring participants.</p>\n<p>Name Document: [Your Last Name\, Your First Name] - Short Bio</p>\n<p><br>5) Letter of support from primary advisor (PhD mentor for graduate students\, supervisor for postdoctoral researchers) stating the advisor&rsquo\;s supports for the advisee's participation and time commitment.</p>\n<p>Name Document: [Your Last Name\, Your First Name] - Letter of Support</p>\n<p><br>6) Contact information for an additional 2-3 professional references (no letter is required from these additional references at time of application.)</p>\n<p>Name Document: [Your Last Name\, Your First Name] - Professional References</p>
ORGANIZER;CN=Anne Jeffrey;CN=Fannie Bialek:
METHOD:PUBLISH
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260628T133718Z
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260622T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260630T170000
SUMMARY:2026 Philosophy in Media Fellowships 
UID:20260630T130445Z-iCalPlugin-Grails@philevents-web-bd7db559-gt5qm
TZID:America/New_York
LOCATION:Tarrytown House Estate\, Tarrytown\, United States
DESCRIPTION:<p>Directed by Barry Lam\, Associate Director of Marc Sanders Foundation\, Professor of Philosophy at UC Riverside\, and Host/Executive producer of the&nbsp\;<em>Hi-Phi Nation</em>&nbsp\;Podcast\, Philosophy in Media aims to identify and develop academically-trained philosophers to write\, speak to\, and produce for the general public in the major media market spaces. We concluded a year-long initial run of the program here with support from the John D. Templeton Foundation. Now\, with a three-year grant from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation and generous funding from the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation and Princeton University&rsquo\;s Center for Human Values and the Department of Philosophy\, we are pleased to share that we are now accepting applications for our third and final year of fellowships in 2026. Fellows will be academically-trained philosophers of all career stages who aim to write\, speak to\, and produce media for the general public in the form of essays (long- and short-form)\, trade-book writing\, or podcasting.</p>\n<p>Fellows will be accepted from all areas of philosophy\, but should indicate both their professional areas of specialization and competence\, as well as the topics or areas they would like to talk about when they speak to the public. Special consideration will be given to applicants whose professional or public-facing work focuses on race and racism\, social justice\, applied ethics of biology\, technology\, or other special sciences\, and to applicants who are affiliated with HBCUs\, Hispanic-serving institutions\, Tribal colleges/universities\, or underserved/under-resourced smaller regional or state schools.</p>\n<p>Successful fellows will receive a $1500 stipend and full room and board at one of our three media workshops\, to be held between June 22 &ndash\; June 30\, 2026. Workshops will be held in Tarrytown\, NY\, just north of New York City. One workshop will focus on essay writing (short- and long-form)\, one on trade books and publication\, and one on podcast production and distribution. All will be led by esteemed media editors\, producers\, publishers\, and agents.</p>\n<p>Each workshop will be three days long. Travel to and from the venue will be covered by Media Fellows.</p>\n<p>The schedule of the workshops are organized as follows:</p>\n<ul>\n<li><strong>June 22-June 24\, 2026: Essay Writing (Short- and Long-form)</strong><br>Fellows will arrive the evening of June 21 and depart after the workshop concludes on June 24 at noon.</li>\n<li><strong>June 25-June 27\, 2026: Trade Books and Publication</strong><br>Fellows will arrive the evening of June 24 and depart after the workshop concludes on June 27 at noon.</li>\n<li><strong>June 28 -June 30\, 2026: Podcasting and Production</strong><br>Fellows will arrive the evening of June 27 and depart after the workshop concludes on June 30 at noon.</li>\n</ul>
ORGANIZER;CN=Barry Lam:
METHOD:PUBLISH
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260628T133718Z
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Paris:20260626T010000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Paris:20260629T170000
SUMMARY:18th Philosophy of Management Annual Conference
UID:20260630T130446Z-iCalPlugin-Grails@philevents-web-bd7db559-gt5qm
TZID:Europe/Paris
LOCATION:30-32 Rue Henri Barbusse\, 92110 Clichy\, Paris\, France
DESCRIPTION:<p>The 18th edition of the Philosophy of Management Annual Conference moves to Paris\, France\, and will be held at the EM Normandie from&nbsp\;<strong>26&nbsp\;</strong>to 29<strong>&nbsp\;June 2026</strong>. As usual\, each paper will be guaranteed a&nbsp\;<strong>45-minute slot&nbsp\;for an unhurried presentation and in-depth discussion</strong>.&nbsp\; We are looking forward to receiving your submissions by&nbsp\;<strong>1 February 2026.</strong></p>\n<p>We welcome submissions that explore the diverse facets of management in private or public organizations through a philosophical lens. Whether it&rsquo\;s applied ethics\, social\, moral\, and political philosophy\, ontology\, epistemology\, axiology\, or aesthetics\, we encourage scholars to propose novel\, critical\, timely\, and/or controversial arguments. Submissions can also adopt a &lsquo\;meta-&rsquo\; standpoint for raising and answering questions such as:&nbsp\;<em>What is philosophy of management?</em>&nbsp\;<em>Is philosophy useful for managers?</em>&nbsp\;<em>Is management a science or an art?</em>&nbsp\;<em>Can management be part of the humanities and\, if not\, what else should it be part of?</em></p>\n<p><strong>Special Tracks</strong></p>\n<p><u>Track 1: Politization of Business</u> -&nbsp\;This special track invites scholars to critically examine the emergence of Political CSR and the growing politicization of business. We seek contributions that investigate how and why corporations adopt political roles\, when they should or should not adopt such roles\, the forms such involvement takes\, and the consequences for firms\, societies\, and global governance.</p>\n<p><u>Track 2: The Virtues of the Manager: Rethinking MacIntyre's Critique</u> -&nbsp\;Can managers be understood not as the manipulators of MacIntyre&rsquo\;s early critique\, but as practitioners of virtue whose work sustains common goods? Might management itself be reconceived as a practice requiring virtues such as justice\, constancy\, and practical wisdom?</p>
ORGANIZER;CN=Marian Eabrasu:
METHOD:PUBLISH
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260628T133718Z
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20260626T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20260628T170000
SUMMARY:Southwest Seminar in Continental Philosophy
UID:20260630T130447Z-iCalPlugin-Grails@philevents-web-bd7db559-gt5qm
TZID:America/Los_Angeles
LOCATION:Merced\, United States
DESCRIPTION:<p>The Southwest Seminar in Continental Philosophy is an annual gathering and growing community of scholars. This year\, the seminar will be hosted by UC Merced in Merced\, California.</p>
ORGANIZER;CN=Moriah Q. Poliakoff;CN=Robin M. Muller:
METHOD:PUBLISH
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260628T133718Z
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Stockholm:20260627T091500
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Stockholm:20260628T170000
SUMMARY:Workshop: Free Will Revisionism
UID:20260630T130448Z-iCalPlugin-Grails@philevents-web-bd7db559-gt5qm
TZID:Europe/Stockholm
LOCATION:Göteborg\, Sweden
DESCRIPTION:<p>In June this year the&nbsp\;Free Will Foundations project&nbsp\;will arrange a workshop on Revisionism about Free Will&nbsp\;at the University of Gothenburg. (<a href="https://www.gu.se/en/research/free-will-foundations-metaethical-and-methodological-underpinnings-of-free-will-theories">https://www.gu.se/en/research/free-will-foundations-metaethical-and-methodological-underpinnings-of-free-will-theories</a>)</p>\n<p>A free will&nbsp\;theory is revisionist if it involves rejecting and/or changing what one takes to be (problematic) commitments built into relevant concepts or common-sense assumptions. Revisionist accounts provide a way to avoid argumentative stalemate based on conflicting intuitions (between e.g.\, compatibilists and incompatibilists about free will). But they also raise methodological questions about the role of common-sense intuitions in philosophical arguments. This workshop gathers proponents and critics of revisionist views about free will.&nbsp\;</p>
ORGANIZER;CN="Ragnar Francén";CN="Alva Stråge":
METHOD:PUBLISH
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260628T133718Z
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Istanbul:20260628T090000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Istanbul:20260703T170000
SUMMARY:IVR 2026 Istanbul
UID:20260630T130449Z-iCalPlugin-Grails@philevents-web-bd7db559-gt5qm
TZID:Europe/Istanbul
LOCATION:Kadir Has University\, İstanbul\, Turkey
DESCRIPTION:<p>We propose to organize the IVR Congress 2026 with the aim of deepening the relationship between law and philosophy in the face of the complex problems of today&rsquo\;s world. In our times\, the task of philosophical thought is not only to identify problems\, but also to examine their origins and possible solutions from an ethical perspective. Similarly\, law must develop new approaches to the protection of human rights and the realization of justice today.</p>\n<p>First\, we must ask what role law can play in addressing the urgent problems of our times such as climate crisis\, poverty\, migration\, and the various conflicts. These issues are not only technical or political\, but also ethical. Legal systems must approach these challenges from a perspective that places at the center human dignity.</p>\n<p>Second\, we have to rethink the legal framework needed to protect human rights in a globalized world. Human rights are ethical principles based on the knowledge of the value of the human being. The law must develop universal mechanisms that can protect these rights in different cultural and social contexts.</p>\n<p>Third\, the impact of technological developments on human life and society requires philosophical inquiry beyond legal regulation. Artificial intelligence and digital technologies force us to reevaluate fundamental values such as human autonomy\, privacy\, and freedom. Our congress will provide a platform to discuss the impact of these technological changes on the basic concepts of law.</p>\n<p>Finally\, the theme &ldquo\;Law in the Face of the Changing Problems of the World &rdquo\; emphasizes the critical and constructive role of legal thought. Law should not only react to existing problems\, but also provide guiding principles for a more just and humane world order.</p>\n<p>By bringing together academics\, legal practitioners and philosophers from a variety of disciplines\, this congress aims to contribute to an in-depth reflection on how law can be more effective in the face of the changing problems of the world.</p>\n<p>Please send an email to info@ivr2026istanbul.org in case of any query.</p>
ORGANIZER:
METHOD:PUBLISH
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260628T133718Z
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Istanbul:20260628T090000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Istanbul:20260703T170000
SUMMARY:'Sex between Law and Morality' IVR Special Workshop
UID:20260630T130450Z-iCalPlugin-Grails@philevents-web-bd7db559-gt5qm
TZID:Europe/Istanbul
LOCATION:İstanbul\, Turkey
ORGANIZER;CN=Maciej Juzaszek;CN="Karolina Śliwecka";CN=Klaudyna Horniczak:
METHOD:PUBLISH
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260628T133718Z
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Istanbul:20260628T090000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Istanbul:20260703T170000
SUMMARY:Non-ideal Approaches in Migration Ethics: Movement\, Membership\, and Asylum - IVR Special Workshop
UID:20260630T130451Z-iCalPlugin-Grails@philevents-web-bd7db559-gt5qm
TZID:Europe/Istanbul
LOCATION:İstanbul\, Turkey
DESCRIPTION:<p><strong>Special Workshop &ldquo\;Non-ideal Approaches in Migration Ethics: Movement\, Membership\, and Asylum in the Contemporary World&rdquo\;</strong></p>\n<p><strong>IVR World Congress 2026 Istanbul</strong></p>\n<p>June 28 &ndash\; July 3\, 2026</p>\n<p>https://ivr2026istanbul.org/</p>\n<p><strong>Convenors</strong>: Konstantinos Farmakidis-Markou (Aristotle University of Thessaloniki)\, Anna Milioni (Center for Research in Ethics\, Montreal)\, Jan Turlej (Jagiellonian University)</p>\n<p><strong>Workshop Description</strong></p>\n<p>Migration raises difficult questions against the background of an imperfect global order. Cross-border movement &ndash\; whether voluntary\, driven by constraining circumstances\, or the absence of meaningful life opportunities\, and forced &ndash\; poses enduring ethical problems of admission and reception\, exclusion\, protection\, responsibility\, and belonging. At the same time\, recent and emerging developments &ndash\; including climate-induced displacement\, digitalized border control\, the securitization of migration\, shifting labour markets\, the externalization of responsibility\, and evolving legal regimes of asylum and citizenship &ndash\; are putting established legal and moral-political frameworks under increasing strain. Non-ideal theory\, first systematized for global society by John Rawls in The Law of Peoples\, has since served as a framework for justifying and specifying international duties and as a widely adopted account of the responsibilities that peoples bear toward fellow human beings. At the same time\, it has been strongly\, yet fruitfully\, criticized by proponents of more morality-centred approaches to global justice\, especially in the context of migration. This workshop invites contributions that engage with the ethics of migration across its full spectrum\, approached especially through a non-ideal normative-theoretical perspective\, including: immigration and emigration\, refugee protection\, statelessness\, and citizenship. The workshop aims to provide a forum for philosophical reflection on how moral obligations toward migrants are shaped\, justified\, constrained\, and sometimes transformed under contemporary conditions. Rather than focusing on a single doctrinal or policy issue\, the workshop aims to explore the normative principles underlying migration governance\, as well as the tensions between state sovereignty\, individual rights\, collective self-determination and global justice.</p>\n<p><strong>Themes and Questions</strong></p>\n<p><strong></strong>We welcome theoretical\, normative\, critical\, and empirically informed contributions on\, among others\, the following topics:</p>\n<ul>\n<li>The ethics of admission and exclusion: What moral principles should guide immigration policies? Are borders morally permissible\, or is the abolition of borders morally permissible?</li>\n<li>Emigration and exit rights: Do individuals have a moral right to leave their state? Under what conditions\, if any\, can restrictions on emigration be morally justified?</li>\n<li>Refugees\, asylum\, and forced displacement: What obligations do states and international institutions owe to refugees and displaced persons?</li>\n<li>Climate migration and future displacement: How should ethical frameworks be revised to address migration and displacement driven by environmental degradation and climate change?</li>\n<li>Citizenship and membership: Is citizenship best understood as a matter of state discretion\, or as something to which individuals can have moral (and possibly legal) claims? When\, if ever\, do long-term residence\, contribution\, or vulnerability give rise to obligations of inclusion?</li>\n<li>Statelessness and legal invisibility: How should law and ethics respond to individuals who fall outside established regimes of protection?</li>\n<li>Global justice and responsibility-sharing: How should the burdens and benefits of migration be distributed fairly at the global level? &nbsp\;</li>\n</ul>\n<p>The workshop is open call. Contributions may draw from:</p>\n<ul>\n<li>philosophy (moral\, political\, legal philosophy)\,</li>\n<li>legal theory and jurisprudence\,</li>\n<li>political theory\,</li>\n<li>and a normative analysis informed by empirical research.</li>\n</ul>\n<p>The workshop aims to:</p>\n<ul>\n<li>foster dialogue among different approaches to migration ethics\,</li>\n<li>clarify the normative assumptions underlying contemporary migration regimes\,</li>\n<li>and contribute to broader debates on responsibility\, membership\, and justice.</li>\n</ul>\n<p>The workshop may provide the foundation for future collaboration\, a themed publication\, or a subsequent research network.</p>
ORGANIZER;CN=Anna Milioni;CN=Jan Turlej;CN=Konstantinos Farmakidis-Markou:
METHOD:PUBLISH
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260628T133718Z
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Warsaw:20260628T230000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Warsaw:20260628T230000
SUMMARY:Algorithmic Randomness and Quantum Mechanics
UID:20260630T130452Z-iCalPlugin-Grails@philevents-web-bd7db559-gt5qm
TZID:Europe/Warsaw
LOCATION:Grodzka 52\, Kraków\, Poland
DESCRIPTION:<p>The term &ldquo\;randomness&rdquo\; often appears in the context of Quantum Mechanics. The behaviour of quantum systems is said to be random\, the outcomes of quantum mechanical experiments are said to be random\, certain devices based on quantum processes are said to operate in a random way&hellip\; However\, the concept of randomness is rarely made precise in these contexts. Meanwhile\, in another branch of science &ndash\; computability theory\, also called recursion theory &ndash\; a fully precise concept of randomness has been developed\, termed &ldquo\;algorithmic randomness&rdquo\;. How are these two uses of the term &ldquo\;randomness&rdquo\; related? Is the concept of algorithmic randomness relevant to Quantum Mechanics? The aim of this workshop is to address various facets of this question in an interdisciplinary gathering. The event will take place at the Jagiellonian University in <strong>Krak&oacute\;w</strong> on <strong>August 31st</strong> and <strong>September 1st</strong>\, 2026. The format of the workshop will be hybrid: it is possible to participate either in person or online (but the organizers strongly encourage in-person participation).</p>\n<p>Our keynote speakers are:</p>\n<ul>\n<li>Jeffrey Barrett (UC Irvine)</li>\n<li>Eddy Keming Chen (UCSD)</li>\n<li>Nino Dekkers (Technical University Eindhoven)</li>\n<li>Carl Hoefer (University of Barcelona)</li>\n<li>Klaas Landsman (Radboud University)</li>\n<li>Karl Svozil (TU Wien)</li>\n</ul>\n<p>In addition to talks by our invited speakers\, we plan a few contributed talks. We invite submissions concerning any aspect of the relationship between algorithmic randomness and Quantum Mechanics\, including (but not limited to) the following questions and topics:</p>\n<ul>\n<li>Does Quantum Mechanics involve algorithmic randomness?</li>\n<li>Does the answer to this question depend on the choice of interpretation of Quantum Mechanics? In particular\, can deterministic interpretations of Quantum Mechanics be reconciled with quantum events/measurement outcomes being random?</li>\n<li>Does discussion of the relationship between algorithmic randomness and Quantum Mechanics shed light on other issues in the philosophy of science\, such as laws of nature\, interpretations of probability etc.?</li>\n<li>Algorithmic randomness in quantum experiments and technology\, including random number generators</li>\n<li>Algorithmic randomness vs. other senses of randomness in physics</li>\n<li>Generalisations of the standard concept of algorithmic randomness and their relevance for physics</li>\n</ul>\n<p>Abstracts of about 500 words should be sent to joanna.luc@uj.edu.pl by <strong>28.06.2026</strong>.</p>\n<p>To participate without giving a talk (either in person or online)\, please register by sending an e-mail to joanna.luc@uj.edu.pl.</p>
ORGANIZER;CN=Joanna Luc;CN=Tomasz Placek:
METHOD:PUBLISH
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260628T133718Z
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Belgrade:20260629T070000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Belgrade:20260629T070000
SUMMARY:Charles Taylor Annual Summer Institute on Democratic Agendas 2026
UID:20260630T130453Z-iCalPlugin-Grails@philevents-web-bd7db559-gt5qm
TZID:Europe/Belgrade
LOCATION:Kraljice Natalije 45\, Belgrade\, Serbia\, 11000
DESCRIPTION:We are pleased to announce the Call for Applications for\n<p><strong>Charles Taylor Annual Summer Institute on Democratic Agendas 2026</strong></p>\n<p><strong>Institutions in Motion: Democracy Between Social Struggle and the State</strong></p>\nInstitute for Philosophy and Social Theory (IFDT)\, University of Belgrade\n<strong>June 29 &ndash\; July 4\, 2026</strong>\nThe central focus of the Summer Institute is the open question of what potential democratic institutions hold for responding to the political challenges of the twenty-first century. How are claims articulated in the language of protest\, resistance\, and social justice transformed into durable institutions? When do bottom-up initiatives succeed in producing institutions that are both democratically legitimate and practically effective? How are democratic institutions failing: through cooptation\, bureaucratic neutralization\, or repression? How can institutions remain open to contestation without losing their capacity to govern? Amid polarized publics\, contested rights regimes\, and declining trust how can democratic institutions be restored?\nThe Summer University is convened by:&nbsp\;Gazela Pudar Dra&scaron\;ko&nbsp\;(Political Sociology\, IFDT\, University of Belgrade)\,&nbsp\;Dilip Gaonkar&nbsp\;(Rhetoric\, Media\, and Publics\, Northwestern University)\,&nbsp\;Luka Glu&scaron\;ac&nbsp\;(Political Science\, IFDT\, University of Belgrade) and&nbsp\;Liam Mayes&nbsp\;(Media Studies\, Rice University).&nbsp\;\nThe Institute brings together an interdisciplinary and globally diverse faculty\, including:\nPrathama Banerjee&nbsp\;(History and Politics\, Center for the Study of Developing Societies\, New Delhi)<br>Craig Calhoun&nbsp\;(Sociology and Social Science\, Arizona State University)<br>Harris Feinsod&nbsp\;(English\, Johns Hopkins University)<br>Shalini Randeria&nbsp\;(Social Anthropology\, Central European University)<br>Stephen Sawyer&nbsp\;(History and Politics\, American University of Paris)<br>Roman Zinigrad&nbsp\;(Law\, American University of Paris)<br>Srđan Prodanović&nbsp\;(Sociology\, IFDT\, University of Belgrade)<br>Irena Fiket&nbsp\;(Political Science\, IFDT\, University of Belgrade)\nThe Summer Institute is organized by the Center for Transcultural Studies (Chicago &amp\; New York)\, the Institute for Philosophy and Social Theory\, University of Belgrade and the Center for Global Culture and Communication\, Northwestern University. It is supported by the Mastercard Foundation\, Arizona State University\, the Buffett Institute for Global Affairs\, Northwestern University\, and the Rockefeller Brothers Fund.\nWe aim to admit a minimum of 25 advanced MA and PhD students from around the world and to provide substantial funding to support participation.\n<strong>Application deadline:</strong>&nbsp\;March 15\, 2026\nAPPLY HERE</a>\n<p>Admitted students receive:</p>\n<ul>\n<li>\n<p>Tuition waiver</p>\n</li>\n<li>\n<p>Free accommodation (for students traveling from abroad)</p>\n</li>\n<li>\n<p>Partially covered meals</p>\n</li>\n<li>\n<p>Travel assistance provided on a case-by-case basis (with priority for students from Asia\, Africa\, and Latin America)</p>\n</li>\n<li>\n<p>Dedicated travel support for students from the Western Balkans (Rockefeller Brothers Fund)</p>\n</li>\n</ul>\nStudents from North America and Europe are strongly encouraged to seek additional travel funding from their home institutions. Participants requiring visas are advised to apply as early as possible.
ORGANIZER;CN="Mirjana Nećak":
METHOD:PUBLISH
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260628T133718Z
DTSTART;TZID=Asia/Yerevan:20260629T090000
DTEND;TZID=Asia/Yerevan:20260710T170000
SUMMARY:Yerevan Academy for Linguistics and Philosophy
UID:20260630T130454Z-iCalPlugin-Grails@philevents-web-bd7db559-gt5qm
TZID:Asia/Yerevan
LOCATION:40 Marshal Baghramyan Ave\, Yerevan\, Armenia\, 0019
DESCRIPTION:<p>CALL FOR APPLICATIONS</p>\n<p><strong>Yerevan Academy of Linguistics and Philosophy (YALP)</strong>&nbsp\;</p>\n<p>2026\, June 29-July 10\, 2026</p>\n<p>I. General Information</p>\n<p>The Yerevan Academy for Linguistics and Philosophy (YALP) is an annual intensive summer program in linguistics and philosophy. YALP started out in 2017 and brings each year over 50 undergraduate and graduate students together. It hosts students from Armenia and other countries in the region (broadly construed).&nbsp\; &nbsp\;</p>\n<p>The purpose of the academy is to provide an opportunity for students to develop their knowledge and skills\, possibly with a view toward applying to doctoral programs in philosophy or linguistics (including programs in the USA and Europe).</p>\n<p>Participation in the Yerevan Academy for Linguistics and Philosophy is free of charge. &nbsp\;</p>\n<p>YALP is generously hosted by the American University of Armenia (AUA) and funded by the European Union.&nbsp\;</p>\n<p>YALP has received generous funding from the Center for Ethics in Public Affairs (ETICA)\, enabling us to host a launch reception\, organize a cultural tour for all participants and to provide accommodation for up to eight international participants at the Mashikian Student Residence Hall in Dzoragyugh throughout YALP 2026.</p>\n<p>This support is available\, on the basis of financial need\, to participants from Georgia\, Iran\, Turkey\, the Baltic and the Central Asian countries.</p>\n<p>II. People</p>\n<p>Organizers</p>\n<p><strong>Daniel Altshuler</strong> (University of Oxford\, Linguistics)&nbsp\;</p>\n<p><strong>Arshak Balayan</strong> (The American University of Armenia\, Philosophy)</p>\n<p><strong>Susanna Melkonian-Altshuler</strong> (Birkbeck\, University of London\, Philosophy)</p>\n<p>Consultants</p>\n<p><strong>Maria Baghramian</strong> (Philosophy\, University College Dublin)</p>\n<p><strong>Paul Boghossian</strong> (Philosophy\, New York University)</p>\n<p><strong>Maria Polinsky</strong> (Linguistics\, University of Maryland)&nbsp\;</p>\n<p>Confirmed Teaching Faculty</p>\n<p>1. <strong>Farbod Akhlaghi</strong> (University of Dublin\, Philosophy)</p>\n<p>2. <strong>Arshak Balayan</strong> (American University of Armenia\, Philosophy)</p>\n<p>3. <strong>Lev Blumenfeld</strong> (Carleton University\, Linguistics)</p>\n<p>4. <strong>Ludovica Conti</strong> (University of Vienna\, Philosophy)</p>\n<p>5. <strong>Setayesh Dashti</strong> (University of G&ouml\;ttingen\, Linguistics)</p>\n<p>6. <strong>Filippo Ferrari</strong> (University of Bologna\, Philosophy)</p>\n<p>7. <strong>Chelsea Harry</strong> (Southern Connecticut State University\, Philosophy)&nbsp\;</p>\n<p>8. <strong>Paloma Jeretič</strong> (University of Pennsylvania\, Linguistics)</p>\n<p>9. <strong>Armen Marsoobian</strong> (Southern Connecticut State University\,&nbsp\;</p>\n<p>&nbsp\; &nbsp\; Philosophy)&nbsp\;</p>\n<p>10. <strong>Aleksandre Maskharashvili</strong> (University of Illinois\, Linguistics)</p>\n<p>11. <strong>Dean McHugh</strong> (University of Edinburgh/NYU\, Linguistics/Philosophy)</p>\n<p>12. <strong>Anthony Nguyen</strong> (Florida State University\, Philosophy)</p>\n<p>13. <strong>Maria Polinsky</strong> (University of Maryland\, Linguistics)</p>\n<p>14. <strong>Gonzalo Rodriguez-Pereyra</strong> (University of Oxford\, Philosophy)</p>\n<p>15. <strong>Miriam Ronzini</strong> (University of Manchester\, Philosophy)</p>\n<p>16. <strong>Luisa Seguin</strong> (CNRS\, Linguistics)</p>\n<p>17. <strong>Tatevik Yolyan</strong> (Rutgers\, Linguistics)</p>\n<p>III. Important Dates</p>\n<p>The application deadline is April 20\, 2026. Participants will be notified by May 1. To apply\, please fill out the application form (<strong>https://sites.google.com/view/yalp2017/yalp-2026/application</strong>) and send it to 2026yalp@gmail.com by <strong>April 20\, 2026</strong>.&nbsp\;</p>\n<p>Students are expected to demonstrate commitment and to attend all classes\, which will be held on weekdays from June 29 through July\, 2026. &nbsp\;</p>\n<p>This summer program will have parallel sessions of linguistics and philosophy. Students are expected to participate in 3-4 classes per day.&nbsp\;</p>\n<p>Additional details about the courses will be published soon on the YALP webpage. We also have a facebook group that interested participants can join. &nbsp\;</p>\n<p>IV. Venue</p>\n<p>All classes will be held in Paramaz Avedisian Building (PAB) of the American University of Armenia (AUA).&nbsp\;</p>
ORGANIZER;CN=Daniel Altshuler;CN=Arshak Balayan;CN=Susanna Melkonian-Altshuler:
METHOD:PUBLISH
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260628T133718Z
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Athens:20260629T090000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Athens:20260701T170000
SUMMARY:Wittgenstein and Ancient Philosophy
UID:20260630T130455Z-iCalPlugin-Grails@philevents-web-bd7db559-gt5qm
TZID:Europe/Athens
LOCATION:Tholou 5\, Athens\, Greece\, 10556
DESCRIPTION:<p>Ludwig Wittgenstein&rsquo\;s relation to ancient philosophy constitutes a riddle. Wittgenstein was certainly not a philosopher who would have commented at large on classical works like Aristotle&rsquo\;s <em>Metaphysics</em>\, or entered disputes concerning their correct interpretation<em>. </em>On the other hand\, it is well known that Wittgenstein had read select classical philosophical authors and was deeply impressed by them: after all\, he started his <em>Philosophical Investigations </em>with a Latin quotation from St. Augustine&rsquo\;s <em>Confessiones</em>\, and he refers or alludes several times to Plato&rsquo\;s dialogues (e.g. PI &sect\;46). Some manuscripts and typescripts contain further references to various ancient philosophers.</p>\n<p>The conference <em>Wittgenstein and Ancient Philosophy</em> hosts scholars to discuss Wittgenstein&rsquo\;s relation to the heritage of ancient (Greek and Roman) philosophy in a broad fashion\, including not only Wittgenstein&rsquo\;s references and discussions of ancient philosophers\, but also more implicit parallels and contrast between Wittgenstein&rsquo\;s philosophy and the ancient classics.</p>\n<p>The event is organized by the National and Kapodistrian University of Athens and the Finnish Institute at Athens\, in collaboration with the Nordic Wittgenstein Society.</p>\n<p>There is no participation fee.</p>\n<p><strong>Keynote speakers:</strong></p>\n<p>James Conant (University of Chicago)</p>\n<p>Constantine Sandis (University of Oxford)</p>\n<p>Thomas Wallgren (University of Helsinki)</p>\n<p><strong>Organizing committee:</strong></p>\n<p>Prof. Vasso Kindi (National and Kapodistrian University of Athens)</p>\n<p>Dr. Lassi Jakola (Finnish Institute of Athens and University of Helsinki)</p>\n<p>Prof. Anthony Hatzimoyzis (National and Kapodistrian University of Athens)</p>\n<p>More details and the conference's program is available at:&nbsp\;</p>
ORGANIZER;CN=Vasso Kindi;CN=Lassi Jakola;CN=Anthony Hatzimoysis:
METHOD:PUBLISH
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260628T133718Z
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Istanbul:20260629T090000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Istanbul:20260703T170000
SUMMARY:Nature of Law and Legal Reality (IVR Special Workshop)
UID:20260630T130456Z-iCalPlugin-Grails@philevents-web-bd7db559-gt5qm
TZID:Europe/Istanbul
LOCATION:Cibali\, Kadir Has Cd.\, 34083 Cibali / Fatih/Fatih/İstanbul\, Турция\, İstanbul\, Turkey
DESCRIPTION:<p>The workshop &ldquo\;Nature of Law and Legal Reality&rdquo\; explores how contemporary legal philosophy and jurisprudence understand what law is and how legal phenomena exist in social and empirical reality. It is designed as an intensive discussion where participants reconsider classical debates in the philosophy of law in light of new empirical\, ontological\, and interdisciplinary developments.</p>\n<p>The workshop aims to bring together philosophers of law\, legal theorists\, doctrinal scholars to articulate more refined accounts of both the nature of law and the structure of legal reality. By confronting traditional jurisprudential questions with contemporary disputes about ontology\, pluralism\, and empirical method\, participants will seek to map promising directions for future research and to clarify what is at stake in ongoing controversies.</p>\n<p>Topics for discussion include\, among others:</p>\n<p>(1) Concept and nature of law</p>\n<p>&ndash\; What do we mean when we claim that law has a &ldquo\;nature&rdquo\;: are we identifying essential properties\, common patterns\, or merely theoretical constructs?</p>\n<p>&ndash\; Is it still plausible to think that philosophy of law must provide necessary and sufficient conditions for the existence of legal systems\, or should we adopt more modest\, pluralistic\, or practice‑oriented frameworks?</p>\n<p>&ndash\; How should we understand the relationship between law and morality today: as strict separation\, necessary connection\, or context‑sensitive interaction between moral and institutional facts?</p>\n<p>(2) Legal Reality and Ontology</p>\n<p>&ndash\; In what sense do legal entities&mdash\;rights\, duties\, persons\, corporate bodies\, or digital assets&mdash\;&ldquo\;exist\,&rdquo\; and how does their mode of existence differ from that of physical objects or social conventions?</p>\n<p>&ndash\; How do courts and other legal actors exercise &ldquo\;ontological discretion&rdquo\; when they choose among competing ways of construing the reality of contested objects such as death\, incapacity\, or intoxication?</p>\n<p>&ndash\; Can we speak of multiple\, overlapping legal realities generated by different legal orders and epistemic communities\, and if so\, how do these realities interact in transnational or pluralist settings?</p>\n<p>(3) Legal Methodology and Interdisciplinarity</p>\n<p>&ndash\; What is the proper role of conceptual analysis in contemporary legal theory when empirical\, sociological\, and psychological research increasingly shape our understanding of law in action?</p>\n<p>&ndash\; How can philosophy of law integrate insights from empirical legal studies\, new legal realism\, and social ontology without losing its distinctive normative and analytical focus?</p>\n<p>&ndash\; To what extent should theories of the nature of law be evaluated not only on their internal coherence\, but also on their explanatory power regarding actual institutional practices and disputes about legal reality?</p>\n<p>&nbsp\;Prospective participants are invited to submit abstracts (500&ndash\;1000 words) by 15 May to a_didikin@kazguu.kz and abdidikin@mail.kz.</p>\n<p>To facilitate discussion\, participants are warmly encouraged to circulate a final paper by 1 June 2026.</p>
ORGANIZER;CN=Anton Didikin:
METHOD:PUBLISH
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260628T133718Z
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Lisbon:20260629T080000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Lisbon:20260629T080000
SUMMARY:16th Braga Meetings on Ethics and Political Philosophy
UID:20260630T130457Z-iCalPlugin-Grails@philevents-web-bd7db559-gt5qm
TZID:Europe/Lisbon
LOCATION:University of Minho - Campus de Gualtar\, Braga\, Portugal\, Braga\, Portugal
DESCRIPTION:<p><strong>16th&nbsp\;BRAGA&nbsp\;MEETINGS&nbsp\;ON ETHICS AND POLITICAL PHILOSOPHY</strong></p>\n<p><strong>June 29\, 30\, and July 1\, 2026</strong> |&nbsp\;Braga\, Portugal</p>\n<p>Website:&nbsp\;https://16bragameetings.weebly.com</p>\n<p><strong>INVITED SPEAKERS&nbsp\;</strong></p>\n<p>ROBIN CELIKATES&nbsp\;// Freie Universit&auml\;t Berlin</p>\n<p>CHIARA CORDELLI&nbsp\;// University of Chicago</p>\n<p>SALLY HASLANGER&nbsp\;// Massachusetts Institute of Technology</p>\n<p>The&nbsp\;Braga&nbsp\;Meetings&nbsp\;on Ethics and Political Philosophy is an annual event organized by the&nbsp\;Centre for Ethics\, Politics and Society (CEPS)&nbsp\;at the University of Minho (Braga\, Portugal). The&nbsp\;Meetings&nbsp\;have established a reputation for providing scholars with an excellent opportunity to present both advanced and exploratory work to a welcoming audience.&nbsp\;</p>\n<p><strong>CALL FOR PANELS</strong></p>\n<p>The&nbsp\;Meetings&nbsp\;host closed panels organized by researchers who are not affiliated with CEPS\, both junior and senior. If you are interested in organizing a panel\, check the submission guidelines&nbsp\;here. We kindly request you to submit the panel description and all abstracts using&nbsp\;this form. The deadline for panel submissions is&nbsp\;February 15th.</p>\n<p><strong>CALL FOR ABSTRACTS</strong></p>\n<p>A series of panels organized by CEPS has been pre-selected for this year's&nbsp\;Meetings.&nbsp\;If you are interested in submitting an abstract for one or more of our panels\, please do it through the form you can find&nbsp\;here.</p>\n<p>1 /&nbsp\;FOOD JUSTICE&nbsp\;</p>\n<p>2 /&nbsp\;DISTRIBUTION\, POWER RESOURCES\, AND DOMINATION</p>\n<p>3 /&nbsp\;FREEDOM\, EQUALITY AND WHAT ELSE?</p>\n<p>4 /&nbsp\;BEYOND IDENTITY FROM WITHIN: CRITICAL REFLECTIONS ON IDENTITY</p>\n<p>5 /&nbsp\;STRUCTURAL INJUSTICE: CONCEPTIONS AND NORMATIVE IMPLICATIONS</p>\n<p>6 /&nbsp\;SCIENTIFIC AUTHORITY AND DEMOCRATIC LEGITIMACY: PHILOSOPHICAL REFLECTIONS ON THE MORAL AND POLITICAL ROLE OF SCIENCE&nbsp\;</p>\n<p>7 /&nbsp\;RETHINKING POLITICAL PARTIES IN CONTEMPORARY DEMOCRACY</p>\n<p>8 /&nbsp\;NEW AND OLD METHODOLOGICAL CHALLENGES IN NORMATIVE POLITICAL THEORY</p>\n<p>9 /&nbsp\;RETHINKING LOVE: CLICH&Eacute\;S\, NORMATIVITY\, AND NEW MODELS OF INTIMACY</p>\n<p>10 /&nbsp\;BETWEEN TRENCHES AND IVORY TOWERS: SOCIETAL\, INSTITUTIONAL AND PROFESSIONAL ROLES IN THE ETHICS OF CONTEMPORARY CONFLICT</p>\n<p>11 /&nbsp\;PARTIALITY AND IMPARTIALITY IN ETHICS AND POLITICS</p>\n<p>The deadline for abstract submissions is&nbsp\;February 15th.</p>\n\n<p>REGISTRATION AND FEES</p>\n<p>Details to be announced soon.</p>\n\n<p>CONTACT</p>\n<p>For any further questions\, email us at:&nbsp\;16thbragameetings@gmail.com.</p>
ORGANIZER:
METHOD:PUBLISH
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260628T133718Z
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Zurich:20260629T090000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Zurich:20260630T170000
SUMMARY:Climate Change and Animal Ethics
UID:20260630T130458Z-iCalPlugin-Grails@philevents-web-bd7db559-gt5qm
TZID:Europe/Zurich
LOCATION:Chemin de Musée 4\, Fribourg\, Switzerland\, 1700
DESCRIPTION:<p>Climate change raises urgent questions of justice. Yet nonhuman animals remain an extremely neglected group within dominant climate justice frameworks\, despite being among the most vulnerable to climate-related harms. Habitat loss\, extreme weather events\, ecosystem disruption\, ocean acidification\, and biodiversity collapse due to climate change profoundly affect wild and domesticated animals alike.</p>\n<p>While philosophical discussions on climate justice have grown substantially over the past decade\, they have largely focused on duties owed to present and future human populations. By contrast\, comparatively little attention has been given to the moral responsibilities humans bear toward animals in the context of climate change. Few recent studies have started to investigate the ethical implications of mitigation and adaptation policies\, but many open questions remain. Moreover\, a significant gap concerns duties owed to animals in situations of Loss and Damage (L&amp\;D) &mdash\; particularly where mitigation and adaptation measures prove insufficient to prevent serious and irreversible harm.</p>\n<p>As climate impacts intensify year after year\, and as animal vulnerability becomes increasingly evident\, especially in wild environments\, it is crucial to clarify the ethical frameworks guiding our responsibilities toward non-human beings.</p>\n<p>This two-day workshop at the University of Fribourg aims to bring together researchers from different institutions working on climate change and animal ethics. The meeting seeks to foster scholarly exchange on ongoing and future research projects\; identify conceptual and practical challenges in the field\; encourage networking and new collaborations\; and explore potential synergies in research and teaching initiatives.</p>\n<p>The workshop will provide a focused environment for in-depth discussion and collective reflection on emerging questions at the intersection of climate ethics and animal ethics.</p>\n<p>Organizers:</p>\n<ul>\n<li>Gabrielle Tabares Fagundez</li>\n<li>Angela&nbsp\;Martin</li>\n<li>Ivo Wallimann-Helmer</li>\n<li>Miriam Zemanova</li>\n</ul>\n<p>Call for Contributions</p>\n<p>We invite junior and senior researchers working on topics related to&nbsp\;Climate Change and Animal Ethics&nbsp\;to submit an abstract for presentation at the workshop.</p>\n<p>Submission Guidelines</p>\n<ul>\n<li>Abstract length:&nbsp\;max. 500 words (blinded for review)</li>\n<li>Presentation length:&nbsp\;15&ndash\;25 minutes\, followed by discussion</li>\n<li>Format: Presentations may focus on ongoing projects\, future research\, or both</li>\n<li>Submission deadline:&nbsp\;20 March 2026</li>\n</ul>\n<p>Please submit your abstract by completing the online form available on the following website:&nbsp\;https://www.unifr.ch/env/de/info/workshop-climate-change-and-animal-ethics.html&nbsp\;</p>
ORGANIZER;CN=Angela K. Martin;CN=Ivo Wallimann-Helmer;CN=Gabrielle Fagundez:
METHOD:PUBLISH
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260628T133718Z
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Vilnius:20260629T100000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Vilnius:20260702T170000
SUMMARY:Levinas as Educator
UID:20260630T130459Z-iCalPlugin-Grails@philevents-web-bd7db559-gt5qm
TZID:Europe/Vilnius
LOCATION:Universiteto str. 9\, Vilnius\, Lithuania
DESCRIPTION:<p>How to teach philosophy has always been one of philosophy&rsquo\;s central questions. &nbsp\;In person\, in some sense\, but how precisely\, and why? The traditional answers usually rely on distinguishing between opinion and knowledge and aligning this epistemological distinction with an ontological-metaphysical distinction between appearance and reality: truth\, based in the real\, can be taught.&nbsp\; Socrates\, seeking definition\, interrogated his interlocutors face-to-face\; Plato established an Academy and published Dialogues\; Aristotle set up a Lyceum and published his lectures. &nbsp\;Levinas calls for a fundamental reorientation of intelligibility\, finding its source not in knowledge and being but in moral responsibility\, in ethics. &nbsp\;Levinas\, throughout his adult life\, was a teacher\, from 1930 at a Jewish school in Paris through to the 1980s\, when\, after WWII\, he became Director of the same school\, and for fifteen years\, from 1961 to 1976\, he was also a French university professor. His life and thought are devoted to teaching as an integral part of ethics. &ldquo\;Teaching\,&rdquo\; Levinas wrote at the start of Totality and Infinity (1964)\, &ldquo\;is not reducible to maieutics\; it comes from the exterior and brings me more than I contain.&nbsp\; In its non-violent transitivity\, the very epiphany of the face is produced.&rdquo\;&nbsp\;</p>
ORGANIZER:
METHOD:PUBLISH
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260628T133718Z
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Belgrade:20260629T090000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Belgrade:20260704T170000
SUMMARY:Charles Taylor Annual Summer Institute on Democratic Agendas 2026
UID:20260630T130500Z-iCalPlugin-Grails@philevents-web-bd7db559-gt5qm
TZID:Europe/Belgrade
LOCATION:Kraljice Natalije 45\, Belgrade\, Serbia\, 11000
DESCRIPTION:<p><strong>Charles Taylor Annual Summer Institute on Democratic Agendas 2026</strong></p>\n<p><strong>Institutions in Motion: Democracy Between Social Struggle and the State</strong></p>\n<p>Institute for Philosophy and Social Theory (IFDT)\, University of Belgrade <strong>June 29 &ndash\; July 4\, 2026</strong> The central focus of the Summer Institute is the open question of what potential democratic institutions hold for responding to the political challenges of the twenty-first century. How are claims articulated in the language of protest\, resistance\, and social justice transformed into durable institutions? When do bottom-up initiatives succeed in producing institutions that are both democratically legitimate and practically effective? How are democratic institutions failing: through cooptation\, bureaucratic neutralization\, or repression? How can institutions remain open to contestation without losing their capacity to govern? Amid polarized publics\, contested rights regimes\, and declining trust how can democratic institutions be restored? The Summer University is convened by:&nbsp\;Gazela Pudar Dra&scaron\;ko&nbsp\;(Political Sociology\, IFDT\, University of Belgrade)\,&nbsp\;Dilip Gaonkar&nbsp\;(Rhetoric\, Media\, and Publics\, Northwestern University)\,&nbsp\;Luka Glu&scaron\;ac&nbsp\;(Political Science\, IFDT\, University of Belgrade) and&nbsp\;Liam Mayes&nbsp\;(Media Studies\, Rice University).&nbsp\; The Institute brings together an interdisciplinary and globally diverse faculty\, including: Prathama Banerjee&nbsp\;(History and Politics\, Center for the Study of Developing Societies\, New Delhi)<br>Craig Calhoun&nbsp\;(Sociology and Social Science\, Arizona State University)<br>Harris Feinsod&nbsp\;(English\, Johns Hopkins University)<br>Shalini Randeria&nbsp\;(Social Anthropology\, Central European University)<br>Stephen Sawyer&nbsp\;(History and Politics\, American University of Paris)<br>Roman Zinigrad&nbsp\;(Law\, American University of Paris)<br>Srđan Prodanović&nbsp\;(Sociology\, IFDT\, University of Belgrade)<br>Irena Fiket&nbsp\;(Political Science\, IFDT\, University of Belgrade) The Summer Institute is organized by the Center for Transcultural Studies (Chicago &amp\; New York)\, the Institute for Philosophy and Social Theory\, University of Belgrade and the Center for Global Culture and Communication\, Northwestern University. It is supported by the Mastercard Foundation\, Arizona State University\, the Buffett Institute for Global Affairs\, Northwestern University\, and the Rockefeller Brothers Fund.</p>
ORGANIZER;CN="Mirjana Nećak":
METHOD:PUBLISH
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260628T133718Z
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20260629T083000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20260630T170000
SUMMARY:“Tracing Genealogy” — Warwick Continental Philosophy Conference 2026
UID:20260630T130501Z-iCalPlugin-Grails@philevents-web-bd7db559-gt5qm
TZID:Europe/London
LOCATION:S0.21\, The Social Sciences Building\, Central Campus\, Coventry\, United Kingdom\, CV4 7AL
DESCRIPTION:<p><strong>Keynote Speakers</strong></p>\n<p><strong>Catarina Dutilh Novaes</strong> (Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam)</p>\n<p><strong>Alexander Prescott-Couch</strong> (University of Oxford)</p>\n<p><strong>Contributed Speakers</strong></p>\n<p><strong>Giulio M. Cavalli</strong> (University of Parma)<br> <em>Metaphysics and the Genealogy of Thought: Bradley between (and beyond) Nietzsche and Collingwood</em></p>\n<p><strong>Wallace G&oacute\;is</strong> (Pontifical Catholic University of S&atilde\;o Paulo)<br> <em>Courage to Be\, Courage of Truth: Ontology\, Genealogy\, and Political Spirituality at the Intersection of Tillich and Foucault</em></p>\n<p><strong>Cameron Hubbard</strong> (University of California\, Riverside)<br> <em>To Have In One&rsquo\;s Power: The Use of Perspectives in Genealogy</em></p>\n<p><strong>Abbas Jamaliarmandi</strong> (UNSW Sydney)<br> <em>Foucault\, Agamben\, and the Poetic Function of Genealogy: Historical Intelligibility and Critical Subjectivity</em></p>\n<p><strong>Rong-Shih Li</strong> (National Chengchi University)<br> <em>The Playful Agent: Resolving the Problem of the Self in</em> <em>On the Genealogy of Morality</em></p>\n<p><strong>Julian Ratcliffe</strong> (University of Oxford)<br> <em>Who&rsquo\;s Afraid of Friedrich Nietzsche? Genealogical Anxiety\, Normative Nihilism\, and Rule-Following</em></p>\n<p><strong>Ronya Ramrath</strong> (University of Oxford)<br> <em>Herkunft Ursprung</em></p>\n<p><strong>Tuomo Tiisala</strong> (University of Vienna)<br> <em>Why History Matters to the Evaluation of Concepts</em></p>\n<p><strong>Jan Th&uuml\;mmel</strong> (Max Josef Metzger Institute for Dialogue and Reconciliation)<br> <em>Mythology as Genealogy in F. W. J. Schelling&rsquo\;s Early Writings</em></p>\n<p><strong>Lin Zijie</strong> (Sun Yat-sen University)<br> <em>Primitive Accumulation as Genealogy without Reconciliation: On the Disjunction of Logic and History in</em> <em>Capital\, Vol. I</em></p>\n<p>Please register your attendence on the website:&nbsp\;https://warwick.ac.uk/fac/soc/philosophy/research/activities/postkantian/events/wcpc/registration24/</p>\n<p>For more information\, please visit:&nbsp\;https://warwick.ac.uk/fac/soc/philosophy/research/activities/postkantian/events/wcpc/</p>\n<p>For any enquiries\, please contact: wcpc@warwick.ac.uk.</p>\n<p>The WCPC is an annual event within The Centre for Research in Post-Kantian European Philosophy (University of Warwick). The conference complies with the BPA/SWIP guidelines for accessible conferences\, the BPA/SWIP good practice scheme for gender equality\, and the BPA environmental travel scheme (ETS).</p>
ORGANIZER;CN=Rozemin Keshvani;CN=Keyu Qiu;CN=Oscar Crocker;CN=Shifan Zhou;CN=Sam Ronalds:
METHOD:PUBLISH
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260628T133718Z
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Lisbon:20260629T090000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Lisbon:20260629T170000
SUMMARY:Workshop on Theoretical Computer Science and Computational Creativity (TCS&CS-ICCC’26)
UID:20260630T130502Z-iCalPlugin-Grails@philevents-web-bd7db559-gt5qm
TZID:Europe/Lisbon
LOCATION:Coimbra\, Portugal
DESCRIPTION:<p>This half-day workshop provides a dedicated space to discuss connections between theoretical computer science and computational creativity\, highlighting how formal methods can deepen our understanding of creativity and help strengthen the role of theory within the ICCC community. The workshop is motivated by longstanding links between computational creativity and fields such as computability theory\, algorithmic information theory\, formal learning theory\, complex networks\, and related theoretical areas.</p>
ORGANIZER;CN="Luís Espírito Santo";CN=Nadia M. Ady;CN=Max Peeperkorn:
METHOD:PUBLISH
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260628T133718Z
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20260629T090000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20260630T170000
SUMMARY:Philosophising with the Greats
UID:20260630T130503Z-iCalPlugin-Grails@philevents-web-bd7db559-gt5qm
TZID:Europe/London
LOCATION:Oxford\, United Kingdom
DESCRIPTION:<p><a href="https://withthegreats.org">Philosophising with the Greats</a> seeks to showcase leading examples of current work in ancient philosophy that engages (in content or in method) with contemporary philosophy\, as well as work in contemporary philosophy that significantly draws on ancient philosophical ideas. The theme of the conference will thus accord closely with that of the journal <em><a href="https://www.euppublishing.com/journal/anph">Ancient Philosophy Today: DIALOGOI</a></em>.&nbsp\;</p>
ORGANIZER;CN=Anna Marmodoro;CN=John Pemberton:
METHOD:PUBLISH
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260628T133718Z
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20260629T090000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20260701T170000
SUMMARY:MYSTICISM(S) BEYOND THE WEST
UID:20260630T130504Z-iCalPlugin-Grails@philevents-web-bd7db559-gt5qm
TZID:Europe/London
LOCATION:Oxford\, United Kingdom
ORGANIZER;CN=Szilvia Szanyi:
METHOD:PUBLISH
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260628T133718Z
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Lisbon:20260629T090000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Lisbon:20260701T170000
SUMMARY:16th Braga Meetings on Ethics and Political Philosophy
UID:20260630T130505Z-iCalPlugin-Grails@philevents-web-bd7db559-gt5qm
TZID:Europe/Lisbon
LOCATION:University of Minho - Campus de Gualtar\, Braga\, Portugal\, Braga\, Portugal
DESCRIPTION:<p>16th BRAGA MEETINGS ON ETHICS AND POLITICAL PHILOSOPHY</p>\n<p>June 29\, 30\, and July 1\, 2026 | Braga\, Portugal</p>\n<p>Website:&nbsp\;https://16bragameetings.weebly.com</p>\n<p>INVITED SPEAKERS&nbsp\;</p>\n<p>ROBIN CELIKATES&nbsp\;// Freie Universit&auml\;t Berlin</p>\n<p>CHIARA CORDELLI&nbsp\;// University of Chicago</p>\n<p>SALLY HASLANGER&nbsp\;// Massachusetts Institute of Technology</p>\n<p>The Braga Meetings on Ethics and Political Philosophy is an annual event organized by the&nbsp\;Centre for Ethics\, Politics and Society (CEPS)&nbsp\;at the University of Minho (Braga\, Portugal). The Meetings have established a reputation for providing scholars with an excellent opportunity to present both advanced and exploratory work to a welcoming audience.&nbsp\;</p>\n<p>CALL FOR PANELS</p>\n<p>The Meetings host closed panels organized by researchers who are not affiliated with CEPS\, both junior and senior. If you are interested in organizing a panel\, check the submission guidelines&nbsp\;here. We kindly request you to submit the panel description and all abstracts using&nbsp\;this form. The deadline for panel submissions is&nbsp\;February 15th.</p>\n<p>CALL FOR ABSTRACTS</p>\n<p>A series of panels organized by CEPS has been pre-selected for this year's Meetings.&nbsp\;If you are interested in submitting an abstract for one or more of our panels\, please do it through the form you can find&nbsp\;here.</p>\n<p>1 /&nbsp\;FOOD JUSTICE&nbsp\;</p>\n\n<p>2 /&nbsp\;DISTRIBUTION\, POWER RESOURCES\, AND DOMINATION</p>\n\n<p>3 /&nbsp\;FREEDOM\, EQUALITY AND WHAT ELSE?</p>\n\n<p>4 /&nbsp\;BEYOND IDENTITY FROM WITHIN: CRITICAL REFLECTIONS ON IDENTITY</p>\n\n<p>5 /&nbsp\;STRUCTURAL INJUSTICE: CONCEPTIONS AND NORMATIVE IMPLICATIONS</p>\n\n<p>6 /&nbsp\;SCIENTIFIC AUTHORITY AND DEMOCRATIC LEGITIMACY: PHILOSOPHICAL REFLECTIONS ON THE MORAL AND POLITICAL ROLE OF SCIENCE&nbsp\;</p>\n\n<p>7 /&nbsp\;RETHINKING POLITICAL PARTIES IN CONTEMPORARY DEMOCRACY</p>\n\n<p>8 /&nbsp\;NEW AND OLD METHODOLOGICAL CHALLENGES IN NORMATIVE POLITICAL THEORY</p>\n\n<p>9 /&nbsp\;RETHINKING LOVE: CLICH&Eacute\;S\, NORMATIVITY\, AND NEW MODELS OF INTIMACY</p>\n\n<p>10 /&nbsp\;BETWEEN TRENCHES AND IVORY TOWERS: SOCIETAL\, INSTITUTIONAL AND PROFESSIONAL ROLES IN THE ETHICS OF CONTEMPORARY CONFLICT</p>\n\n<p>11 /&nbsp\;PARTIALITY AND IMPARTIALITY IN ETHICS AND POLITICS</p>\n<p>The deadline for abstract submissions is&nbsp\;February 15th.</p>\n<p>REGISTRATION AND FEES</p>\n<p>Details to be announced soon.</p>\n<p>CONTACT</p>\n<p>For any further questions\, email us at:&nbsp\;16thbragameetings@gmail.com.</p>
ORGANIZER:
METHOD:PUBLISH
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260628T133718Z
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Lisbon:20260629T090000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Lisbon:20260701T170000
SUMMARY:16th Braga Meetings on Ethics and Political Philosophy
UID:20260630T130506Z-iCalPlugin-Grails@philevents-web-bd7db559-gt5qm
TZID:Europe/Lisbon
LOCATION:University of Minho - Campus de Gualtar\, Braga\, Portugal\, Braga\, Portugal
DESCRIPTION:<p><strong>16th&nbsp\;BRAGA&nbsp\;MEETINGS&nbsp\;ON ETHICS AND POLITICAL PHILOSOPHY</strong></p>\n<p>June 29\, 30\, and July 1\, 2026 |&nbsp\;Braga\, Portugal</p>\n<p>Website:&nbsp\;https://16bragameetings.weebly.com</p>\n<p><strong>INVITED SPEAKERS&nbsp\;</strong></p>\n<p>ROBIN CELIKATES&nbsp\;// Freie Universit&auml\;t Berlin</p>\n<p>CHIARA CORDELLI&nbsp\;// University of Chicago</p>\n<p>SALLY HASLANGER&nbsp\;// Massachusetts Institute of Technology</p>\n<p>The&nbsp\;Braga&nbsp\;Meetings&nbsp\;on Ethics and Political Philosophy is an annual event organized by the&nbsp\;Centre for Ethics\, Politics and Society (CEPS)&nbsp\;at the University of Minho (Braga\, Portugal). The&nbsp\;Meetings&nbsp\;have established a reputation for providing scholars with an excellent opportunity to present both advanced and exploratory work to a welcoming audience.&nbsp\;</p>\n<p><strong>CALL FOR PANELS</strong></p>\n<p>The&nbsp\;Meetings&nbsp\;host closed panels organized by researchers who are not affiliated with CEPS\, both junior and senior. If you are interested in organizing a panel\, check the submission guidelines&nbsp\;here. We kindly request you to submit the panel description and all abstracts using&nbsp\;this form. The deadline for panel submissions is&nbsp\;February 15th.</p>\n<p><strong>CALL FOR ABSTRACTS</strong></p>\n<p>A series of panels organized by CEPS has been pre-selected for this year's&nbsp\;Meetings.&nbsp\;If you are interested in submitting an abstract for one or more of our panels\, please do it through the form you can find&nbsp\;here.</p>\n<p>1 /&nbsp\;FOOD JUSTICE&nbsp\;</p>\n<p>2 /&nbsp\;DISTRIBUTION\, POWER RESOURCES\, AND DOMINATION</p>\n<p>3 /&nbsp\;FREEDOM\, EQUALITY AND WHAT ELSE?</p>\n<p>4 /&nbsp\;BEYOND IDENTITY FROM WITHIN: CRITICAL REFLECTIONS ON IDENTITY</p>\n<p>5 /&nbsp\;STRUCTURAL INJUSTICE: CONCEPTIONS AND NORMATIVE IMPLICATIONS</p>\n<p>6 /&nbsp\;SCIENTIFIC AUTHORITY AND DEMOCRATIC LEGITIMACY: PHILOSOPHICAL REFLECTIONS ON THE MORAL AND POLITICAL ROLE OF SCIENCE&nbsp\;</p>\n<p>7 /&nbsp\;RETHINKING POLITICAL PARTIES IN CONTEMPORARY DEMOCRACY</p>\n<p>8 /&nbsp\;NEW AND OLD METHODOLOGICAL CHALLENGES IN NORMATIVE POLITICAL THEORY</p>\n<p>9 /&nbsp\;RETHINKING LOVE: CLICH&Eacute\;S\, NORMATIVITY\, AND NEW MODELS OF INTIMACY</p>\n<p>10 /&nbsp\;BETWEEN TRENCHES AND IVORY TOWERS: SOCIETAL\, INSTITUTIONAL AND PROFESSIONAL ROLES IN THE ETHICS OF CONTEMPORARY CONFLICT</p>\n<p>11 /&nbsp\;PARTIALITY AND IMPARTIALITY IN ETHICS AND POLITICS</p>\n<p>The deadline for abstract submissions is&nbsp\;February 15th.</p>\n\n<p>REGISTRATION AND FEES</p>\n<p>Details to be announced soon.</p>\n\n<p>CONTACT</p>\n<p>For any further questions\, email us at:&nbsp\;16thbragameetings@gmail.com.</p>
ORGANIZER:
METHOD:PUBLISH
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260628T133718Z
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Lisbon:20260629T090000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Lisbon:20260701T170000
SUMMARY:PANEL 2 -  DISTRIBUTION\, POWER RESOURCES\, AND DOMINATION
UID:20260630T130507Z-iCalPlugin-Grails@philevents-web-bd7db559-gt5qm
TZID:Europe/Lisbon
LOCATION:University of MInho\, Braga\, Portugal
DESCRIPTION:<p>PANEL 2&nbsp\;/&nbsp\;DISTRIBUTION\, POWER RESOURCES\, AND DOMINATION</p>\n<p>The deadline for abstract submissions is now February 28th.</p>\n<p><strong><br></strong></p>\n<p><strong>CONVENOR&nbsp\;</strong><strong>NUNZIO AL&Igrave\;&nbsp\;<br>&nbsp\;</strong><br><strong>All inquiries about the panel should be sent to&nbsp\;</strong><strong>nunzioali@gmail.com.</strong><br><br>Talking about the &ldquo\;distribution&rdquo\; of power is common in political philosophy\, political science\, and public debate. We often claim\, for instance\, that democracy ideally requires political power to be distributed equally&mdash\;or at least widely&mdash\;among citizens. However\, the literature remains unclear about what\, if anything\, should actually be distributed when we speak of power. Although it is widely recognized that the exercise of power depends on the possession of certain material and non-material bases of power\, or power resources &ndash\; such as wealth\, knowledge\, or reputation &ndash\; there is still no consensus that the distribution of these resources is essential to prevent the arbitrary exercise of power\, namely domination.<br><br>This panel seeks to advance the discussion on the role that power resources play in the<br>conceptualization of social justice and domination. In this regard\, several key questions arise: Does a distributive perspective misconstrue the meaning of power? Does reasoning in terms of power resources fall into the so-called &ldquo\;vehicle fallacy&rdquo\;? If power resources are usually understood in terms of &ldquo\;power to\,&rdquo\; how can they be related to &ldquo\;power over&rdquo\;? Why do classical theories of justice so often underestimate the role of power? Are power resources an adequate conceptual vocabulary for theorizing gender and racial inequalities? Are poverty and inequality forms of power deprivation?<br><br>The purpose of this panel is to promote interdisciplinary dialogue across political philosophy\, political theory\, and critical social theory\, in order to investigate whether\, and how\, the distribution of power resources is relevant to securing freedom as non-domination\, equality of status\, and social fairness.<br><br>Possible topics include\, but are not limited to:</p>\n<ul>\n<li>Power as a distributive issue.</li>\n<li>&nbsp\;How to identify and classify power resources.</li>\n<li>Structural domination and the role of power resources.</li>\n<li>Power concentration\, oligarchy\, and the erosion of democratic participation.</li>\n<li>The role of power resources in republican and neo-republican theories.</li>\n<li>Social justice and the problem of power.</li>\n<li>Power resources and gender or racial relations.</li>\n</ul>
ORGANIZER;CN="Nunzio Alì":
METHOD:PUBLISH
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260628T133718Z
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Lisbon:20260629T170000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Lisbon:20260629T173000
SUMMARY:Why a Formal Definition of Computational Creativity Might be Elusive
UID:20260630T130508Z-iCalPlugin-Grails@philevents-web-bd7db559-gt5qm
TZID:Europe/Lisbon
LOCATION:Coimbra\, Portugal
DESCRIPTION:<p>This half-day workshop provides a dedicated space to discuss connections between theoretical computer science and computational creativity\, highlighting how formal methods can deepen our understanding of creativity and help strengthen the role of theory within the ICCC community. The workshop is motivated by longstanding links between computational creativity and fields such as computability theory\, algorithmic information theory\, formal learning theory\, complex networks\, and related theoretical areas.</p>
ORGANIZER;CN="Luís Espírito Santo";CN=Nadia M. Ady;CN=Max Peeperkorn:
METHOD:PUBLISH
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260628T133718Z
DTSTART;TZID=Asia/Shanghai:20260630T010000
DTEND;TZID=Asia/Shanghai:20260630T010000
SUMMARY:Asian Epistemology Network Meeting 2026
UID:20260630T130509Z-iCalPlugin-Grails@philevents-web-bd7db559-gt5qm
TZID:Asia/Shanghai
LOCATION:Yuhangtang Road 866\, Hangzhou\, China
DESCRIPTION:<p>We are pleased to announce the inaugural meeting of the Asian Epistemology Network\, to be held on November 14&ndash\;15\, 2026\, at Zhejiang University in Hangzhou\, China. This meeting aims to bring together epistemologists working in and with the Asian region to foster collaboration\, exchange ideas\, and advance research in all areas of epistemology.</p>\n<p><strong>Keynote Speakers:</strong></p>\n<p>Timothy Williamson (University of Oxford)</p>\n<p>Lei Zhong (Chinese University of Hong Kong)</p>\n<p>Jennifer Nado (University of Hong Kong)</p>\n<p>Simon Goldstein (University of Hong Kong)</p>\n<p><strong>Confirmed Speakers:</strong></p>\n<p>Nikolaj Pedersen (Yonsei University)</p>\n<p>Jing Zhu (Xiamen University)</p>\n<p>Bo Chen (Wuhan University)</p>\n<p>Ru Ye (Chinese University of Hong Kong)</p>\n<p>Weng Hong Tang (National University of Singapore)</p>\n<p>Masashi Kasaki (Nagoya University)</p>\n<p><strong>Submission Guidelines:</strong></p>\n<p>We invite submissions of abstracts in English\, prepared for blind review. Abstracts of 400-500 words should be sent to submission@asianepistemology.com\, by June 30\, 2026.<br><br></p>\n<p><strong>Contact:</strong></p>\n<p>For any inquiries\, please contact: submission@asianepistemology.com&nbsp\;</p>
ORGANIZER;CN=Jie Gao;CN=Davide Fassio;CN=Nikolaj Jang Lee Linding Pedersen;CN=Masashi Kasaki;CN=Weng Hong Tang:
METHOD:PUBLISH
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260628T133718Z
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260629T140000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260629T170000
SUMMARY:Intercultural Academic Exchange Symposium: Understanding Across Cultures
UID:20260630T130510Z-iCalPlugin-Grails@philevents-web-bd7db559-gt5qm
TZID:America/New_York
LOCATION:China Institute of America\, New York\, United States
DESCRIPTION:<p>Pre-registration is not required\, but is appreciated\, please email Paul J. D&rsquo\;Ambrosio (his email is: paul j dambrosio &ndash\;at&mdash\;Hotmail.com (no spaces\, no dashes)</p>\n<p>Schedule (2-6 p.m.)</p>\n<p>&ldquo\;四海为学&rdquo\;: Intercultural Academic Exchange Symposium Roundtable: Understanding Across Cultures Total Duration: 2 Hours 30 Minutes (150 Minutes)</p>\n<p>Session I: Comparative Thought and Intercultural Exchange (70 Minutes)<br>Moderator: Tim Connolly (East Stroudsburg University)<br>1. Durba Mitra (Harvard University)<br>&bull\; Presentation (8 minutes): &ldquo\;What if We Collaborate Across Borders?&rdquo\;<br>&bull\; Response (5 minutes): Sarah Rubio (Princeton University)<br>&bull\; Brief Audience Questions / Comments (2&ndash\;3 minutes)<br>2. Hagop Sarkissian (City University of New York)<br>&bull\; Presentation (8 minutes): &ldquo\;Moral Psychology and Agency in Early Chinese Thought&rdquo\;<br>&bull\; Response (5 minutes): Jin Li (Brown University)<br>&bull\; Brief Audience Questions / Comments (2&ndash\;3 minutes)<br>3. Nicholas Tampio (Fordham University)<br>&bull\; Presentation (8 minutes): &ldquo\;Two Conceptions of Comparative Political Theory&rdquo\;<br>&bull\; Response (5 minutes): Robert Carleo (Wesleyan University)<br>&bull\; Brief Audience Questions / Comments (2&ndash\;3 minutes)<br>4. Brian Vivier (University of Pennsylvania)<br>&bull\; Presentation (8 minutes): &ldquo\;Cross-cultural Bibliography and Building the Future of Research&rdquo\;<br>&bull\; Response (5 minutes): He Jing (East China Normal University)<br>&bull\; Brief Audience Questions / Comments (2&ndash\;3 minutes)</p>\n<p>Break (20 Minutes)</p>\n<p>Session II: Ethics\, Agency\, and Philosophical Practice (60 Minutes)<br>Moderator: Paul J. D&rsquo\;Ambrosio (East China Normal University)<br>5. Andrew Lambert (City University of New York)<br>&bull\; Presentation (8 minutes): &ldquo\;Methodological Issues in Comparative Philosophy&rdquo\;<br>&bull\; Response (5 minutes): Daniel Sarafinas (East China Normal University)<br>&bull\; Brief Audience Questions / Comments (2&ndash\;3 minutes)<br>6. Tao Jiang (Rutgers University)<br>&bull\; Presentation (8 minutes): &ldquo\;Challenges in Doing Cross-Cultural Comparative Philosophy: A Personal Reflection&rdquo\;<br>&bull\; Response (5 minutes): Shuyi Wei (Stanford University)<br>&bull\; Brief Audience Questions / Comments (2&ndash\;3 minutes)<br>7. Jin Li (Brown University)<br>&bull\; Presentation (8 minutes): &ldquo\;Being or Becoming: The Philosophy and Psychology of Selfhood&rdquo\;<br>&bull\; Response (5 minutes): Tim Connolly (East Stroudsburg University)<br>&bull\; Brief Audience Questions / Comments (2&ndash\;3 minutes)<br>Conclusion (10 Minutes)<br>&bull\; Moderator&rsquo\;s Summary and Brief Closing Remarks</p>\n<p>Organizer:</p>\n<p>Dr. Paul J. D&rsquo\;Ambrosio<br>Dean of the Center for Intercultural Research<br>Fellow of the Institute of Modern Chinese Thought<br>Professor in Chinese Philosophy<br>East China Normal University<br>Shanghai\, Minhang<br>500 Dongchuan road\, 200241<br>Cell Phone: (86) 18217372088</p>
ORGANIZER:
METHOD:PUBLISH
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260628T133718Z
DTSTART;TZID=Australia/Sydney:20260630T090000
DTEND;TZID=Australia/Sydney:20260703T170000
SUMMARY:HPS Winter School & Australia/New Zealand Philosophy of Biology Workshop
UID:20260630T130511Z-iCalPlugin-Grails@philevents-web-bd7db559-gt5qm
TZID:Australia/Sydney
LOCATION:Q-station\, Manly\, Sydney\, Australia
DESCRIPTION:<p>The University of Sydney&rsquo\;s History and Philosophy of Science Program is inviting submissions to take part in their 2026 Winter School. This year\, the winter school is&nbsp\;hosting&nbsp\;the fourth annual <a href="https://anzphilbio.weebly.com/">Australia/New Zealand Philosophy of Biology (ANZPB) workshop</a>\,&nbsp\;with further support from the International Society for the History\, Philosophy\, and Social Studies of Biology (ISHPSSB) as an ISHPSSB off-year workshop.</p>\n<p>The workshop will be held from <strong>30th June-3rd July 2026 </strong>at the Quarantine Station in Sydney Harbour\, Australia -situated on the traditional lands of the Gayamaygal people. The event will include short and long talks with a focus on highlighting work by graduate students\, early career researchers and visiting scholars. In addition to research talks\, the program will include early-career focussed discussion sessions.</p>\n<p>We welcome submissions from those wishing to give a talk on&nbsp\;any&nbsp\;topic in the philosophy\, history and social studies of biology. Priority for speaking slots will be given to submissions from&nbsp\;graduate students&nbsp\;and early career&nbsp\;researchers.&nbsp\;</p>\n<p>Abstracts of no longer than 200 words should be submitted <a href="https://forms.gle/X9HQwo1qw36oFFJv9">here</a> by&nbsp\;13 April 2026.</p>\n<p>The <a href="https://www.sydney.edu.au/science/schools/school-of-history-and-philosophy-of-science.html">School of History and Philosophy of Science</a> at the University of Sydney is in the Faculty of Science where it has been contributing historical and philosophical perspectives to scientific insight since 1942. The HPS Winter School is part of HPS's goal to bring together international humanities and science scholars for network-building and ongoing collaboration.&nbsp\;<a href="https://www.ishpssb.org/">ISHPSSB</a> is an international organisation bringing together scholars the life sciences\, history\, philosophy\, and social studies of science. The biennial ISHPSSB summer meetings are held during odd-years\, and the society supports workshops such as this one during off-years.</p>\n<p>ANZPB aims to provide a regular workshop for the philosophy of biology community across Australia and New Zealand\, and this year thanks to the generous support from both the HPS winter school and ISHPSSB \, we wish to extend&nbsp\;invitations to&nbsp\;international participants\, particularly early-career researchers.</p>\n<p>We are pleased to offer&nbsp\;limited&nbsp\;travel subsidies for graduate students and early-career scholars presenting at the conference. Applications for funding can be made using the same link above.&nbsp\;<strong>&nbsp\;</strong></p>\n<p>We have booked the&nbsp\;Quarantine&nbsp\;Station (Q station) for the event. This is easily reachable from Sydney by public ferry\, and from Sydney airport by train and ferry. Transport details will be posted shortly on the <a href="https://url.au.m.mimecastprotect.com/s/qllLCyojxQT2BkX73cZf4SxoSZn?domain=anzphilbio.weebly.com/">event website</a>.</p>\n<p>Further information about the meeting is available at&nbsp\;<a href="https://url.au.m.mimecastprotect.com/s/6Ku5CYW8NocNJQwW1cMtvSxeIAq?domain=anzphilbio.weebly.com/">https://anzphilbio.weebly.com/</a>. If you have any questions about the workshop\, please contact&nbsp\;<a href="mailto:kate.lynch@sydney.edu.au">kate.lynch@sydney.edu.au</a></p>
ORGANIZER;CN=Kate E. Lynch;CN=Emily Parke;CN=John Matthewson;CN=Rachael L. Brown;CN=Rebecca Catherine Mann:
METHOD:PUBLISH
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260628T133718Z
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20260630T000000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20260630T000000
SUMMARY:Journal of Law\, Society\, and Authority (Volume 15\, Issue2\,  September 2026)
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TZID:Europe/London
DESCRIPTION:<p><strong>Call for Papers</strong><strong><br> Journal of Law\, Society\, and Authority (JLSA)</strong><br> Volume 15\, Issue 2 &ndash\; September 2026</p>\n<p><strong>a peer-reviewed\, open-access academic journal published biannually.</strong><strong></strong></p>\n<p>The <strong><em>Journal of Law\, Society\, and Authority</em> </strong>invites original research articles and theoretical contributions for its upcoming <strong>Volume 15\, Issue 2 (September 2026).</strong> The journal welcomes rigorous interdisciplinary scholarship addressing contemporary transformations in legal systems\, governance structures\, political authority\, and international dynamics.</p>\n<p>Topics of interest include\, but are not limited to:</p>\n<ul>\n<li>Legal systems and institutional reforms.</li>\n<li>Social and political rights.</li>\n<li>International relations and global governance.</li>\n<li>Public policy and societal impact.</li>\n<li>Political theory and ideological developments.</li>\n</ul>\n<p><strong>&nbsp\;</strong></p>\n<p><strong>Languages</strong><br> Submissions are accepted in <strong>English</strong> and <strong>French</strong>.</p>\n<p><strong>Submission Process</strong></p>\n<p>-&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\; Manuscripts must comply with the journal&rsquo\;s formatting and ethical requirements and be submitted through the Algerian Scientific Journal Platform (ASJP):&nbsp\;<a href="https://asjp.cerist.dz/en/submission/153">Access the Submission Portal</a></p>\n<p>Submission by email will be considered only in exceptional circumstances and upon prior communication with the editorial office (jlsa.journal@gmail.com). </p>\n<p>-&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\; Comprehensive author guidelines are available on the journal&rsquo\;s OJS website:&nbsp\;&nbsp\;<a href="https://revue.univ-oran2.dz/Revue/DSP/index.php/DSP/Author-guidelines">Author Guidelines</a></p>\n<p> <br> </p>\n<p><strong>Indexation and Identification</strong></p>\n<p>The journal is indexed in the Directory of Open Access Journals<a href="https://doaj.org/toc/2253-0266">DOAJ</a>\, and all published articles are assigned a<a href="https://search.crossref.org/?q=+2600-6219&amp\;from_ui=yes">CrossRef DOI</a>.</p>\n\n<p><strong>Deadline for Submissions:</strong></p>\n<p><strong><em>&nbsp\; &nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\; </em></strong><strong><em>June 30\, 2026</em></strong><em></em></p>\n<p><strong>Contact:</strong> <br> <a href="mailto:jlsa.journal@gmail.com">jlsa.journal@gmail.com</a></p>
ORGANIZER:
METHOD:PUBLISH
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260628T133718Z
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20260630T034500
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Dublin:20260630T170000
SUMMARY:Looking Past the Collingridge Dilemma:  Interventions for Responsible Digital Societies
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TZID:Europe/Dublin
LOCATION:TU Dublin\, Grangegorman\, Dublin\, Ireland\, D07 H6K8
DESCRIPTION:<p>On Tuesday\, June 30th\, the Digital Transformation group of EUt+&rsquo\;s ACCELERATE project will be hosting an open session designed as a <strong>hybrid seminar and panel discussion</strong> with multidisciplinary experts from across the European University of Technology. The topic is <em>&ldquo\;Looking Past the Collingridge Dilemma:&nbsp\; Interventions for Responsible Digital Societies&rdquo\;. </em><strong>The event will be taking place in TU Dublin\, Grangegorman campus.</strong></p>\n<p>This event will be of interest to staff\, students\, and academics interested in technology assessment\, science and technology studies\, sustainability\, economics\, &nbsp\;responsible innovation\, and engineering ethics.</p>\n<p><strong>This is an <u>in-person</u> and <u>online</u> event&mdash\;those present in Dublin are encouraged to join us in person.</strong></p>\n<p>Certificates of attendance can be provided on request.</p>\n<p><a href="https://forms.cloud.microsoft/e/HTkxKNxk4F">In order to join the event\, you must first register here</a>. After you do\, venue details and/or a Zoom link will be shared with you closer the day.</p>\n<p><strong>Title:&nbsp\;</strong><em>&ldquo\;Looking Past the Collingridge Dilemma:&nbsp\; Interventions for Responsible Digital Societies&rdquo\;</em></p>\n<p><strong>Date and Time:</strong>&nbsp\;June 30th\, 15:45 WEST (Dublin)\, 16:45 CEST (Berlin)\, 17.45 EEST (Bucharest)</p>\n<p><strong>Registration Link:&nbsp\;</strong>&nbsp\; <a href="https://forms.cloud.microsoft/e/HTkxKNxk4F">https://forms.cloud.microsoft/e/HTkxKNxk4F</a></p>\n<p><strong>Abstract:</strong> The Collingridge Dilemma poses a double-bind problem\; that the impacts of technology elude prediction and often only become apparent upon widespread adoption in society\, and that once its risks are known it becomes too late to alter the course of the technology&rsquo\;s development. Many technological breakthroughs--especially in recent years where we are witnessing acute and accelerated digital transformation--would seem to evidence a &ldquo\;runaway train&rdquo\; thesis that once new technologies have developed a certain momentum\, their progress cannot be stopped or altered\, and with potentially disastrous or unknowable societal results--including ethical\, economic\, political\, and ecological ramifications (such as socio-ecological rebound effects).</p>\n<p>The concept and framework of Prospective Technology Assessment (ProTA)\, and the variety of tools of responsible innovation\, oppose such a dilemma and thesis\, and argue instead that reflexive\, inclusive\, anticipatory and responsive technological development can help identify and avert the wide-ranging risks and impacts of novel technologies. The university is a centre of development and experimentation with novel digital technologies and also a key site for deploying the methodologies of responsible innovation\, including methods of technology and technological impact assessment (e.g.\, ethical impact assessment\, environmental impact assessment\, and Prospective Technology Assessment). This event will foreground the role of ProTA as an introduction to technology assessment.</p>\n<p>The university is also a place of learning for students who need to be equipped with the skills to critically engage in methods of responsible innovation and critical thinking about technology\, to be empowered to contribute to the development of technologies that serve rather than undermine human values\, including those of ecological flourishing.</p>\n<p>This event will provide a critical background to overcoming the Collingridge Dilemma with a focus on the role of technology assessment\, socio-ecological rebound effects\, as well as critical interdisciplinary discussion on the impacts of digital technology and the role the university has in pioneering pedagogical and research interventions for responsible innovation for sustainable digital societies.</p>\n<p><strong>Agenda</strong></p>\n<p><strong>Seminar: Introduction to Technology Assessment &ndash\; and the Challenge of the Collingridge Dilemma for an Early Shaping of Technology (1 hour)</strong></p>\n<p>&ndash\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\; Professor Jan C Schmidt\, h_da</p>\n<p><strong>Panel Discussion:&nbsp\; Interventions for Responsible Digital Societies</strong> <strong>(1 hour)</strong><strong></strong></p>\n<p>&ndash\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\; Assoc. Prof. Raffaele Giammetti\, UNICAS</p>\n<p>&ndash\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\; Prof. Shannon Chance\, TU Dublin</p>\n<p>&ndash\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\; Dr. Mael Jambou\, UTT</p>\n<p>&ndash\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\; Prof. Jan C Schmidt\, h_da</p>\n<p>Panel chaired by Dr. Jye O&rsquo\; Sullivan\, NCAD</p>
ORGANIZER;CN=Paul Hayes:
METHOD:PUBLISH
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260628T133718Z
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20260630T003000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20260630T003000
SUMMARY:Big Bioethics Workshop (Updated Call and Extended Deadline)
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TZID:America/Chicago
LOCATION:South Dakota State University\, Brookings\, United States\, 57007
DESCRIPTION:<p>South Dakota State University will be hosting a workshop on &ldquo\;Big Bioethics&rdquo\;\, September 17-19\, 2026. The workshop aims to host 10-12 scholars to present works in progress in any area of ethics related to theoretical and applied biological science including work in medical ethics\, genetic ethics\, environmental ethics\, ethics of biology and biotechnology\,&nbsp\;neuroethics\, ethics of psychology\, bioethics and law\, experimental bioethics\, and ethics-related work in philosophy of biology\, philosophy of medicine\, and philosophy of health.&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;</p>\n<p>The workshop will be part of a larger Bioethics Day\, which will include other events\, including the Annual Bioethics Lecture\, featuring Leslie Francis (University of Utah) on Friday\, September 18.&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;</p>\n<p><strong>Stipend\, Transportation\, and Lodging</strong></p>\n<p>Selected participants will receive a $500 stipend provided through the SDSU Ethics Lab. Participating scholars will be encouraged to share and read each other&rsquo\;s papers prior to the workshop.</p>\n<p>The conference&nbsp\;is located in&nbsp\;Brookings\, South Dakota\, 45 minutes north of Sioux Falls\, South Dakota. The conference will provide a shuttle service for individuals flying into Sioux Falls\, but participants may use Lyft\, Uber\, or public transport as well. &nbsp\;Brookings provides several hotel options in addition to the many options in Sioux Falls.</p>\n<p>Questions&nbsp\;regarding&nbsp\;the conference may be sent to Dr. Gregory Peterson (Philosophy\, School of American and Global Studies) at&nbsp\;<a href="mailto:greg.peterson@sdstate.edu">greg.peterson@sdstate.edu</a>&nbsp\;</p>\n<p><strong>Call for Papers</strong>&nbsp\;</p>\n<p>For full consideration\, proposals for individual papers will consist of an anonymized abstract (4000 characters or approximately 550-600 words) submitted through the application <a href="https://forms.cloud.microsoft/r/xE8nsLN5jV">portal</a>. Participants should plan for approximately 20 minutes to present their paper and 20 minutes for discussion and feedback.</p>\n<p>Proposals are due Tuesday\, June 30\,&nbsp\;2026&nbsp\;and may be&nbsp\;submitted&nbsp\;<a target="_blank">here</a>.&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;</p>
ORGANIZER;CN=Gregory Peterson:
METHOD:PUBLISH
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