Distinguished Speaker Event at Temple U


GPPC member institution, Temple University's Philosophy Department, announces:

Distinguished Speaker Event

Paul Boghossian
Sterling Professor of Philosophy at NYU

Thursday and Friday, December 5-6, 2013
Temple University
Philadelphia, PA

Event 1: Lecture, "Relativism about Morality."
Thursday, December 5
5:30 - 7:30pm
Weigley Room (Room 914)
9th floor, Gladfelter Hall
Temple University
Event 2: Seminar on intuitions and the a priori
Thursday, December 6
3:00 - 5:30pm
Center for Humanities at Temple (CHAT)
10th floor, Gladfelter Hall
Temple University
Prof. Boghossian has offered a paper relating to the seminar. The paper is a critical notice of Herman Cappelen's recent book Philosophy without Intuitions (OUP 2012). The paper is intended to serve as background and orientation to the seminar.

If you would like to receive a copy of the paper, need directions, or have any other questions relating to the events, please contact David Wolfsdorf at dwolfsdo@temple.edu.

Canceled: Peter Singer at Rosemont College


GPPC member institution, Rosemont College, regrets to announce that:

The Life You Can Save:
An Evening with Peter Singer

scheduled for
Tuesday, November 12, 2013
7:00pm

has been canceled.


Sponsored by Rosemont College's Institute for Ethical Leadership and Social Responsibility

Work in Progress in Epistemology


Work in Progress in Epistemology Discussion Group

will meet to discuss:

Rodrigo Borges (Rutgers University)
"Inferential Knowledge and the Gettier Conjecture"

Friday, 1 November 2013
Swarthmore College
Papazian Hall 325

Persons in the Greater Philadelphia area (guests welcome) who are interested in epistemology in a broad sense (including, e.g., Philosophy of Science) meet 2-4 times per semester in an informal setting to discuss the work in progress of some member of the group. The paper under discussion is circulated in advance so that everyone can read it and fully participate.

For more information and to receive a copy of the paper, contract Peter Baumann (Swarthmore College): pbauman1@swarthmore.edu.

Undergraduate Philosophy Conference


Undergraduate Philosophy Conference

Saturday, February 8, 2014
10am - 4pm
The College of New Jersey
PO Box 7718
Ewing, NJ 08628

Keynote Speaker: Joshua Knobe, Associate Professor of Philosophy and Cognitive Science (Yale University) Coordinators:
Richard Kamber: rkamber@tcnj.edu
James S. Taylor: jtaylor@tcnj.edu

CALL FOR PAPERS

Undergraduates are invited to submit a philosophical essay on any topic, approximately 2,000-2,500 words (8-10 pages, double-spaced) and suitable for a fifteen minute presentation followed by discussion. Papers must be prepared for blind review.

Reviewers will include undergraduate philosophy majors.

Electronic submissions should be .doc, .pdf, or .rtf files. If you are interested in being a commentator, whether or not you submit a paper, please contact Professor Taylor.

Notification of accepted papers will be sent by January 4, 2014. Accepted papers will be published on the web in the Annual Proceedings of the GPPC Undergraduate Philosophy Conference. Cash prizes will be awarded to top papers.

The deadline for submissions is Friday, November 29, 2013. Please send submissions by email attachment to Mrs. Joanne Cantor, Deptment Secretary, at jcantor@tcnj.edu or in hard copy to:
Professor Taylor
Department of Philosophy and Religion
The College of New Jersey
PO Box 7718
Ewing, NJ 08628-0718
Further Information will be posted at http://www.tcnj.edu/~philos/

For further information contact Professor Kamber at rkamber@tcnj.edu

Charles Mills Lecture at Haverford College


GPPC member institution, Haverford College, announces:

The 2013 Roland Altherr Memorial Symposium

“Decolonizing Western Political Philosophy”

Saturday, November 2, 2013
4:00pm - 6:00pm
Gest 101
Haverford College
Haverford, PA

Speaker: Charles Mills
John Evans Professor of Moral and Intellectual Philosophy
(Northwestern University)
Sponsored by the Roland Altherr Memorial Fund

Peter Hacker Lecture at Swarthmore


GPPC member institution, Swarthmore College, Department of Philosophy presents:

Methodology in Linguistic Analysis:
Consciousness as a Case Study

Friday, November 8, 2013
4:30pm
Science Center 105
Swarthmore College
500 College Avenue
Swarthmore, PA 19081

Speaker: Peter Hacker, PhD
Emeritus Research Fellow
St. Johns College
Oxford University
Dr. Peter Hacker is one of the most notable authorities on Wittgenstein and a distinguished historian of the analytic tradition. His interests include Philosophy of Mind, Epistemology and Metaphysics, Philosophy of Wittgenstein, Philosophy of Language, Philosophy and Neuroscience.

He has written and lectured extensively on the philosophy of language and the philosophy of mind, as well as the relationship between philosophy and neuroscience. His most recent publication, The Intellectual Powers: A Study of Human Nature is a philosophical investigation into the cognitive and cogitative powers of mankind.

GPPC Undergraduate Philosophy Journal


The Greater Philadelphia Philosophy Consortium proudly announces the creation of:

A New Undergraduate Philosophy Journal

Submission Deadline:
Friday, 29 November 2013

The editorial board of this online journal will be comprised of students and will be advised by a faculty member from one of the GPPC institutions.

Editorial Board: Students from GPPC schools who are interested in serving on the editorial board should send a brief (i.e., 3-10 pages) philosophical writing sample to M.G. Piety: mgpiety@drexel.edu. GPPC faculty members will select the editorial board based on these writing samples and material from the writing samples of the students on the editorial board will be included in the first issue.

General Submissions: Students from any GPPC institution, as well as students from across the country, are invited to submit short philosophical musings on topics of their choice for inclusion in the first issue of the GPPC online undergraduate journal.

We encourage students to submit papers they have completed for philosophy classes, but they are also welcome to submit original material. We are particularly interested in short pieces (i.e., 1-10 pages in length) because the format we envision for the journal lie between a blog and a traditional academic journal.

Deadline: All submissions must be received by 29 November 2013.

Please direct any questions to M.G. Piety.

The Critical Theory Workshop


GPPC member institution, Villanova University, co-sponsors:

The Critical Theory Workshop /
Atelier de Théorie Critique

Theme 2014: The Janus Face of Democracy:
Urgency of an Untimely Question

4 weeks in July 2014
Université Paris Descartes
45 rue des Saints-Pères
Paris, France

The Critical Theory Workshop or Atelier de Théorie Critique is an intensive graduate-level seminar, which takes place every summer in Paris. The primary objective of the Workshop is to provide an international forum for interdisciplinary and comparative research in critical theory, broadly construed. Students are exposed to the work of contemporary thinkers and engage with current debates in the Francophone world.

The Workshop is comprised of a research seminar at the Université Paris Descartes as well as a series of public debates and discussions with leading intellectuals (past guests include Jacques Rancière, Nathalie Heinich and Olivier Voirol).

For more information and how to apply see: http://www1.villanova.edu/villanova/artsci/philosophy/critworkshop.html.

Contact: Gabriel Rockhill (Villanova University) gabriel.rockhill@villanova.edu

Sponsored by Villanova University (Department of Philosophy), Université Paris Descartes and Institut Mines-Télécom (Laboratoire mixte de recherche “Sens et compréhension du monde contemporain”), and Collège International de Philosophie

Interdisciplinary Philosophy


Interdisciplinary Philosophy

Friday, October 25, 2013
1pm - 5pm
Berman Museum, Room 016
Ursinus College
Collegeville, Pennsylvania

Speakers: Megan Craig (Stony Brook) - commentator: Joshua Ramey (Haverford College)
Edouard Machery (Pittsburgh) - commentator: Carlos Santana (University of Pennsylvania)
For more information contact John Carvalho (john.carvalho@villanova.edu) or Roger Florka (rflorka@ursinus.edu)

Victor Caston Lecture at Haverford College


GPPC member institution, Haverford College, hosts:

"Aristotle on Illusions, Hallucinations, and Dreams:
Was He a Direct Realist?"

Thursday, October 24, 2013
4:30pm
Stokes 102 (Humanities Center)
Haverford College
Haverford, PA

Speaker: Victor Caston, Professor of Philosophy and Classics (University of Michigan) This event is co-sponsored by the Bryn Mawr and Haverford College Philosophy Departments

2013-14 Program

The GPPC is pleased to announce its 2013-14 program of events. All GPPC events are open to the public and, except where otherwise noted, free of charge.

Calendar of Events

Click on any of the following events for more information.

OCTOBER 2013
A Symposium on the Philosophy of F.W.J. Schelling - October 4-5, 2013

Interdisciplinary Philosophy - October 25, 2013

NOVEMBER 2013
GPPC Public Affairs Symposium - November 16, 2013
FEBRUARY 2014
Undergraduate Philosophy Conference - February 8, 2014

Community Lecture: Robert Louis Stevenson and Friendship - February 13, 2014

MARCH 2014
Alexander Baumgarten's Metaphysics - March 27-29, 2014

Philosophy on Film Series 2014 - March 20, 27 & April 3, 2014

APRIL 2014
37th Annual Ancient Philosophy Workshop - April 4-5, 2014
MAY 2014
Eastern Study Group of the North American Kant Society - May 2-3, 2014

Please also note our ongoing Philosophy Discussion Groups:

Philosophy Discussion Groups
Asian and Comparative Philosophy Discussion Group - West Chester University
Epistemology Group - Work in Progress - Swarthmore College
Philosophy of Religi­on Discussion Group - Saint Joseph's University
Philosophy of Science Discussion Group - Philadelphia Area Center for the History of Science

More information on these is available under Discussion Groups and in periodic updates on the home page.

Alexander Baumgarten's Metaphysics


Alexander Baumgarten's Metaphysics:
Sources, Interpretation and Influence


March 27-29, 2014
La Salle University
Philadelphia, PA

Confirmed Speakers:
Henry Allison (UCSD)
Corey Dyck (University of Western Ontario)
Ursula Goldenbaum (Emory University)
Paul Guyer (Brown University)
Gary Hatfield (University of Pennsylvania)
Desmond Hogan (Princeton University)
Brandon Look (University of Kentucky)
Rudolf Makkreel (Emory University)
Three-hundred years after the birth of Alexander Baumgarten, La Salle University is hosting a conference devoted to his influential Metaphysica. In addition to being the scientific foundation for all of Baumgarten’s other writings, the Metaphysica is arguably the single most important textbook on the topic published in the German tradition prior to Immanuel Kant. It provides by far the richest, clearest, most concise and most systematic presentation of a complete metaphysical system of the kind envisioned by Leibniz and Wolff. It went through seven Latin and two German editions over a span of twenty-seven years during which it provided the model of philosophical instruction for thinkers such as Mendelssohn, Abbt, Kant, Herder, Eberhard and Maimon. In particular, it formed the basis of Kant’s lectures on metaphysics, anthropology and religion over four decades. Now, for the first time, it is available to scholars in both German (holzboog-frommann, 2011) and English (Bloomsbury, 2013).

Funding for this conference has been provided by the Greater Philadelphia Philosophical Consortium, La Salle University, the North American Kant Society and the American University of Beirut.

Philosophy on Film Series


Philosophy on Film Series 2014
The Early Godard: Existentialist Anti-Hero

Sponsored by the GPPC and the Bryn Mawr Film Institute.

Three consecutive Thursdays
7pm - 10pm
Bryn Mawr Film Institute
824 West Lancaster Avenue
Bryn Mawr, PA 19010

Presenter: Marc Moreau Ph.D., Philosophy Department (La Salle University) Fee: $30.00 per person (for the whole series)
Registration opens on March 1, 2014.
Register on the BMFI website: http://brynmawrfilm.org/education/

March 20: À bout de souffle (Breathless) 1961
March 27: Vivre sa vie (To Live One’s Life) 1962
April 3: Le Mépris (Contempt) 1963

Contacts:
Marc Moreau: moreau@lasalle.edu

37th Annual Ancient Philosophy Workshop


37th Annual Ancient Philosophy Workshop

Friday, April 4, 2014
Saturday, April 5, 2014
Temple University, Center City Campus
University of Pennsylvania, Main Camppus
Philadelphia, PA

Keynote Speaker: Stephen Menn (McGill and Munich) Eight papers and a keynote address will be presented. A call for papers from across the history of ancient Greek and Roman philosophy will go out in late autumn. Graduate students and faculty will be encouraged to submit and participate. Some funding will be available for travel and expenses.

Contacts:
David Wolfsdorf: dwolfsdo@temple.edu
Susan Sauvé Meyer: smeyer@phil.upenn.edu

For more information: http://philosophy.sas.upenn.edu/events/2014/37th-ancient-philosophy-workshop

Community Lecture


Community Lecture:
Robert Louis Stevenson and Friendship

Thursday, February 13, 2014
7pm - 8:30pm
Cherry Hill High School East
1750 Kresson Road
Cherry Hill, NJ 08003

Speaker: Andrew Payne, Associate Professor of Philosophy (Saint Joseph's University)

GPPC Public Affairs Symposium


GPPC Public Affairs Symposium:
America the Philosophical by Carlin Romano
Public Philosophy in the U.S

Saturday, November 16, 2013
1pm - 4:30pm
Main Auditorium, Free Library of Philadelphia (Central Branch)
1900 Vine Street
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19103
215.686.5300

Panelists:
Peter Catapano, Editor, "The Stone," The New York Times
Cheryl Misak, University of Toronto and New York University
Carlin Romano, Ursinus College

Contact: Carlin Romano (cromano@ursinus.edu)

This event is co-sponsored by the GPPC Board of Governors, the GPPC, and Ursinus College.

2013-14 Discussion Groups

The GPPC sponsors the following discussion groups:

Asian and Comparative Philosophy Discussion Group
Mondays, 5pm - 6:30pm
Main Hall 415
West Chester University
700 South High Street
West Chester, PA 19383

Start Date: Monday, September 23

Book Details:
David Loy, Nonduality: A Study in Comparative Philosophy (Amherst, NY: Humanity Books, 1997)

Contact:
Frank Hoffman fhoffman@wcupa.edu.

Epistemology Discussion Group - Work in Progress
Check main page for meeting times.
Papazian, Room 325
Swarthmore College
Swarthmore, PA 19081

Contact:
Peter Bauman, Department of Philosophy, Swarthmore College, Swarthmore, PA 19081, pbauman1@swarthmore.edu or phone: 610.328.8433.

Email or call for confirmation, more information and directions to the meeting place and information for subsequent discussion meetings.

Philosophy of Religion Discussion Group
Meets on the 2nd Wednesday of each month, 7:30pm - 9:30pm
Greaton Room - Barbelin-Lonergan Building, 116
Saint Joseph’s University

Dates:
9/11, 10/9, 12/11, 1/8, 2/12, 3/12, 4/9

Book Details:
Alvin Plantinga, Where the Conflict Really Lies: Science, Religion, and Naturalism (New York: Oxford University Press 2011)

Contact:
Joseph Godfrey, Saint Joseph’s University, jgodfrey@sju.edu

Philosophy of Science Discussion Group
Meets on the 2nd Wednesday of the month to discuss a colleague’s work in progress or to discuss readings that are of particular interest to participants.

6pm - 7:30pm
Philadelphia Area Center for the History of Science
431 Chestnut Street
Philadelphia, PA 19106

Contact:
Miriam Solomon, Temple University, msolomon@temple.edu or Gary Hatfield, University of Pennsylvania, hatfield@sas.upenn.edu.

For more information visit History and Philosophy of Science.

Schelling Symposium at Temple University


'Freedom - The Beginning and End of All Philosophy'
A Symposium on the Philosophy of FWJ Schelling

Co-organized by the Department of Philosophy at Temple University
and the International Center for Philosophy at Bonn University

Friday, October 4, 2013
Saturday, October 5, 2013
9am - 6pm
Temple University
Philadelphia, PA

Speakers: Jennifer Dobe (Grinnell College, USA)
Michael Forster (University of Bonn, Germany)
Markus Gabriel (University of Bonn, Germany)
Marcela Garcia (Universidad Iberoamericana, Mexico City, Mexico)
Sebastian Gardner (University College London, UK)
Yitzhak Melamed (Johns Hopkins, USA)
Dalia Nassar (Villanova University, Philadelphia, USA; University of Sidney, Sidney Australia)
Lara Ostaric (Temple University, USA)
Richard Velkley (Tulane University, USA)
Eric Watkins (University of California, San Diego, USA)
Jason Wirth (Seattle University, USA)
The sponsors for this event include: The Greater Philadelphia Philosophy Consortium, The University of Bonn International Center for Philosophy, the Department of Philosophy at Temple University, the Office of International Affairs at Temple University, and the Center for the Humanities at Temple (CHAT)-Temple University.

For more information: http://schelling2013.weebly.com/index.html

Contacts:
Dr. Lara Ostaric: lostaric@temple.edu
Dr. Owen Ware: owenjware@temple.edu

Call for Papers: Baumgarten Conference


CALL FOR PAPERS
Alexander Baumgarten's Metaphysics:
Sources, Interpretation and Influence


March 27-29, 2014
La Salle University
Philadelphia, PA


Three-hundred years after the birth of Alexander Baumgarten, La Salle University is hosting a conference devoted to his influential Metaphysica. In addition to being the scientific foundation for all of Baumgarten’s other writings, the Metaphysica is arguably the single most important textbook on the topic published in the German tradition prior to Immanuel Kant. It provides by far the richest, clearest, most concise and most systematic presentation of a complete metaphysical system of the kind envisioned by Leibniz and Wolff. It went through seven Latin and two German editions over a span of twenty-seven years during which it provided the model of philosophical instruction for thinkers such as Mendelssohn, Abbt, Kant, Herder, Eberhard and Maimon. In particular, it formed the basis of Kant’s lectures on metaphysics, anthropology and religion over four decades. Now, for the first time, it is available to scholars in both German (holzboog-frommann, 2011) and English (Bloomsbury, 2013).

Confirmed Speakers:
Henry Allison (UCSD)
Paul Guyer (Brown University)
Gary Hatfield (University of Pennsylvania)
Desmond Hogan (Princeton University)
We invite abstracts of 500-600 words for papers focusing on the Metaphysica. Possible topics include: its sources in such philosophers as Leibniz and Wolff; comparisons with other early modern philosophers such as Descartes or Spinoza; interpretations of the work’s central ideas; its relation to Baumgarten's aesthetics or moral philosophy; its relation to later thinkers such as Mendelssohn, Kant, Herder, or Maimon.

The best graduate student submission will receive a $200 travel stipend, courtesy of the North American Kant Society.

Please send abstracts prepared for blind review to baumgartenatlasalle@gmail.com by 1 August 2013 for full consideration. All papers will be considered for inclusion in an edited volume now in preparation.

Organization and selection committee:
Courtney D. Fugate (AUB), John Hymers (La Salle University) and Chris Johns (AUB).

Funding for this conference has been provided by the Greater Philadelphia Philosophical Consortium, La Salle University, the North American Kant Society and the American University of Beirut.

2nd Annual Adorno Studies Meeting

The GPPC member philosophy department of Temple University hosts:

The 2nd Annual Adorno Studies Meeting
Firday - Saturday, 22-23 March 2013
Temple University Center City (TUCC)
1515 Market Street, Room 422
Philadelphia, PA

The confirmed list of speakers includes:
Gordon Finlayson
Roger Foster
Espen Hammer
Robert Kaufman
Kathy Kiloh
Iain Macdonald
Alastair Morgan
Brian O’Connor
Max Pensky
Henry Pickford
Paula Schwebel
Xander Selene
Martin Shuster
For a full schedule of speakers, topics, and times, please consult the Association for Adorno Studies blog.

Public Issues Forum: Morality in the Marketplace

The GPPC Board of Governors, the GPPC, and the Institute for Ethical Leadership and Social Responsibility at Rosemont College invite you to:

Public Issues Forum: Morality in the Marketplace
Saturday, March 9, 2013, 1pm to 5pm.
Rosemont College, McShain Auditorium, Brown Science Building
1400 Montgomery Ave., Rosemont, PA 19010

this event is free and the public is encouraged to attend.

Speakers:

"The Problems of Business Ethics and the Virtues of Management:
Affirmative Action, Executive Compensation, and Marketing"

Robert Audi (John A. O’Brien Professor of Philosophy at the University of Notre Dame)

"Righteousness and Self-Righteousness:
Greg Smith and the Relevance of Virtues in Business"

Joe DesJardins (Vice Provost & Professor of Philosophy at the College of St. Benedict & St. John’s University)

"The Ethics of CEO Apologies:
Why Saying ‘I'm Sorry’ Isn't Good Enough"

Daryl Koehn (Professor of Ethics and Business Law at the University of St. Thomas)

Chair: Frank J. Hoffman, West Chester University, Chair, GPPC Board of Directors

Coordinator: Alan Preti, Rosemont College, GPPC Board of Directors

For more information or to register, please visit our website at www.rosemont.edu/ethics or contact Alan Preti at apreti@rosemont.edu or 610.527.0200

Drexel Philosophy Week


Drexel Philosophy Week
Monday, 4 March 2013 - Friday, 8 March 2013
Drexel University

Schedule
Monday, 4 March, 5pm - 7pm
“Meanings of Life: Feminist Resources in Michel Foucault's Theory of Biopolitics”
Dr. Sarah Hansen (Drexel University)
Location: PISB 106
Tuesday, 5 March, 3pm - 4:30pm
Panel Discussion: “Philosophy and the Law”
Pre-Law Advisor Michael Vitlip
Attorney Michael Filoromo B.S. PSYCH ‘05
Katie Devanney B.S. PSYCH ‘12
Location: MacAlister 2019
Tuesday, 5 March, 5pm - 7pm
“Religiosity and Amelioration: Thoreau, Anzaldúa, and Bob Marley”
Dr. Douglas Anderson (Southern Illinois University)
Location: MacAlister 2019
Wednesday, 6 March, 5pm - 7pm
Panel Discussion: “Religion and Philosophy”
Dr. Robert Audi (University of Notre Dame)
Dr. Paula Marantz Cohen, English
Dr. James Herbert, Psychology
Dr. Marilyn Piety, Philosophy
Dr. Doug Porpora, Sociology
Location: Disque 108
Thursday, 7 March, 5pm - 7pm
“Governmental Secularity and Religious Citizenship”
Dr. Robert Audi (University of Notre Dame)
Location: PISB 120
Friday, 8 March, 3pm - 4:30pm
Panel Discussion: “Why Study Philosophy?”
Dr. Jacques Catudal, Philosophy
Anthony Harrison B.A. PHIL ‘12
Andrew Hurd B.A. PHIL ‘12
and current students
Location: PISB 106

For further information, contact Peter Amato at: peterama@drexel.edu

For a copy of the flyer (including directions), click here (PDF).