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King's Philosophy

~ Official blog of the philosophy department at King's College London.

King's Philosophy

Monthly Archives: May 2017

MM McCabe will be giving this year’s Mark Sainsbury Lecture at King’s College London.

30 Tuesday May 2017

Posted by Vlad Cadar in Events, History of Philosophy, Public talks, Research

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MM McCabe, Plato

The Keeling Scholar in Residence in Philosophy at UCL, MM McCabe will be speaking on ‘Giving and Taking an Account: Plato on the Language of Conversation’.

– 1st June, 2017, 4.15-6pm.

– Edmond J. Safra Lecture Theatre, King’s College London, Strand WC2R 2LS.

Ellen Fridland gives lecture at Royal Institute of Philosophy, Oxford, May 31st 2017

30 Tuesday May 2017

Posted by Vlad Cadar in Events, Mind, Metaphysics, Psychology, Public talks, Research

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Ellen Fridland, Royal Institute of Philosophy

Ellen Fridland will talk on the topic ‘Do as I say and as I do: imitation, pedagogy, and cumulative culture.‘

7.00 p.m. at Blackwell’s bookshop on Broad Street, Oxford.

Continue reading →

Workshop on ‘Reasons’ — 31 May – 1 June

24 Wednesday May 2017

Posted by Vlad Cadar in Events, Rationality, Research, Seminars

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Programme:

Day 1 (May 31)

  • 11-12:30: Julien Dutant (KCL) – The Non-Factualist’s Shiny Oughts
  • Lunch
  • 1:30-3:00: Clayton Littlejohn (KCL) – You’re so Vain. You Probably think your Reasons Should Guide You
  • 3:00-4:30: Kathryn Lindeman (Saint Louis) – TBA

Day 2 (June 1)

  • 10-11:30: Maria Alvarez (KCL) – False Beliefs and the Reasons we Don’t Have
  • 11:30-1: Errol Lord (UPenn) – The Variety of Epistemic Reasons and the Failures of Evidentialism and Pragmatism

Registration is not required, but it would be appreciated if you send an email to Clayton Littlejohn to let him know how many to expect.

Continue reading →

Workshop on ‘Know How’ — 23 May

24 Wednesday May 2017

Posted by Vlad Cadar in Events, Research, Seminars

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Programme:

  • 11-12:30: Eliot Michaelson (KCL)
  • Lunch
  • 1:30-3:00: Ellen Fridland (KCL)
  • 3:00-4:30: Jennifer Hornsby (Birkbeck) – ‘Against anti-philosophical intellectualism’ *

* Abstract

Jennifer Hornsby: I’ll argue that questions about the nature of knowing how should be answered in philosophy, not linguistics. (a) Gilbert Ryle’s conception of self-knowledge as requiring “higher order acts” prevented him from addressing questions about knowing-how such as arise in philosophy of action. (b) Jason Stanley’s various misinterpretations of Ryle readily lead to his assumption that Ryle’s anti-intellectualism is a thesis about ascriptions of knowledge.

King’s leading position in history of philosophy

21 Sunday May 2017

Posted by Vlad Cadar in History of Philosophy, Research

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King’s has the strongest department in the UK, and one of the strongest in the world, for research and teaching in History of Philosophy.

Prof. Maria Rosa Antognazza has recently been elected Chair of the British Society of the History of Philosophy, which funds and organises regular conferences and other events around the country. King’s is hosting the British Journal for the History of Philosophy, the Society’s journal. The journal is edited by Prof. Michael Beaney, who combines his post at King’s with a Professorship in the History of Analytic Philosophy at the Humboldt University in Berlin, with whom King’s has a joint PhD programme. Another King’s faculty member, Sacha Golob, is Associate Editor with special responsibility for Post-Kantian Philosophy. Both Prof. Antognazza and Prof. M. M. McCabe are also on the Editorial Board of the BJHP, while Prof. Peter Adamson (KCL and LMU) is a member of the advisory board.

The department is also home to one of the most extraordinary editing projects in the history of philosophy: the Ancient Commentators project, which has been running for over 32 years, and has produced over 100 volumes on the works of the ancients, with a further 30 currently under consideration.

Our faculty covers most of the major periods in the history of philosophy: pre-Socratic, Classical Ancient, Hellenistic, Medieval Scholastic, Islamic, Late Scholastic, Early Modern, and nineteenth- and twentieth-century philosophy, both in the continental and in the analytic traditions. In addition, we have faculty members who work in ancient Chinese and ancient Indian philosophy. Indeed, Prof. Adamson runs a hugely successful series of podcasts that span the whole history of philosophy: the History of Philosophy without any gaps.

King’s philosophy department strongly believes in the mutual benefit of philosophy and history of philosophy. For an illustration, we recommend Prof. Antognazza’s recent article in the BHJP, The Benefit to Philosophy of the Study of its History (full text).

Susan Stebbing entry on the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy

16 Tuesday May 2017

Posted by Vlad Cadar in History of Philosophy, News

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Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, Susan Stebbing


Susan Stebbing was a leading figure in British philosophy in the early half of the 20th century, and was the first woman in the UK to be appointed to a full professorship in philosophy in 1933 at Bedford College — which has since been merged with the King’s philosophy department in 1985, where there is now an endowed chair in her honour.

And now, the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy has a full entry on her life and work, produced by King’s philosopher Michael Beaney and Liverpool philosopher Siobhan Chapman. Well worth a read for anyone interested in the history of analytic philosophy.

Early Modern Philosophy at King’s

03 Wednesday May 2017

Posted by Vlad Cadar in History of Philosophy, Research

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early modern philosophy, Research at King's

King’s College London is one of the top 5 research centres for philosophy in the country. One area of particular strength is Early Modern Philosophy, and a large proportion of our faculty members work in the field.

Maria Alvarez, Maria Rosa Antognazza, John Callanan, Sacha Golob, Jessica Leech, Thomas Pink, and Jasper Reid have published substantially in the subject recently. Continue reading →

Clayton Littlejohn and Julien Dutant on Reasonable Doubt

02 Tuesday May 2017

Posted by Julien Dutant in Events, Public talks

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Clayton Littlejohn, doubt, epistemology, Julien Dutant, scepticism

Clayton Littlejohn and Julien Dutant are taking part in the large interdisciplinary conference From Reasonable Doubt to Undue Scepticism organized by Ulrike Hahn and Marion Worms at Birkbeck this week. Both will be defending knowledge-centred views on the topic. See the programme here.

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