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

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Monthly Archives: February 2018

GTA applications call for 2018-19

28 Wednesday Feb 2018

Posted by Vlad Cadar in Announcements

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Graduate Teaching Assistant

Applications are now open for 2018-19 Graduate Teaching Assistant (GTA) positions across the Faculty of Arts & Humanities. If you are a graduate student in philosophy at a UK higher education institution (whether it is King’s or not), you can apply to contribute to the teaching at King’s. Instructions and forms below. The deadline is March 5th, 2018.

FOR EXTERNAL APPLICANTS WHO ARE CURRENTLY ENROLLED AS POSTGRADUATE RESEARCH STUDENTS IN OTHER UNIVERSITIES, NOT KING’S COLLEGE LONDON

  • Please complete the attached GTA application form (remember to quote both module codes and titles in your application form; these can be found in the attached list of modules available)
  • Please send the completed documents listed below to your primary supervisor via email (if you are a GTA not enrolled in King’s College London, you can ask a module convenor for to complete the academic reference form, as long as the module convenor has observed your class).
    • GTA application form
    • academic CV
    • academic reference form (see attachment)
  • Please ask your primary supervisor (or a module convenor) to complete the academic reference form and send it via email to joseph.o’connor@kcl.ac.uk and chelo.rodriguez@kcl.ac.uk by 9am on Monday 5 March 2018 (please note that due to the high volume of applications, we are unable to chase your academic referee on your behalf, so you’ll need to ask them to send you confirmation that they have sent your reference on time).
  • Please send the completed documents listed below (all together in the same email) to joseph.o’connor@kcl.ac.uk and chelo.rodriguez@kcl.ac.uk by 9am on Monday 5 March 2018:
    • StaffREg form (attached)
    • EqualityDiversity form (attached)
    • the GTA application form (attached)
    • academic CV (all forms together in the same email)
  • You will also need to provide proof of eligibility to work in the UK. The list of suitable documents is in the GTA application form (If you have a visa, please note that we cannot accept visas in expired passports. You will need to apply for a Biometric Residence Permit. Non EEA nationals must also provide a confirmation of studies letter).
  • Joe O’Connor (joseph.o’connor@kcl.ac.uk) will get in touch with applicants about providing the proof of eligibility to work in the UK AFTER the closing date of 9am on Monday 5 March 2018

ATTACHMENTS:

Academic-Reference
EqualityDiversityForm-2018
GTA-app-form-2018-9
Modules-available-2018-19-all-depts
StaffRegForm-2018
What is a GTA _Rates for 2018-2019

Masterclass on Probabilistic Knowledge with Sarah Moss

22 Thursday Feb 2018

Posted by Julien Dutant in Events, Formal Methods, Research, Seminars

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conditionals, credence, epistemic modals, epistemic norms, epistemology, evidence, formal epistemology, knowledge, legal proof, peer disagreement, pragmatic encroachment, probabilistic semantics, probability, racial profiling, statistical evidence, transformative experience, women's speech

Prof. Sarah Moss (Michigan) will give a masterclass on Probabilistic Knowledge at King’s College London on March 6th-7th, 2018. The masterclass will include guest talks by Siliva Milano (LSE), Jason Konek (Bristol), Matt Mandelkern (Oxford) & Daniel Rothschild (UCL), Bernhard Salow (Cambridge) and Richard Holton (Cambridge). The keynote lecture of the masterclass is a joint session with LSE’s Choice Group.

The event is open to graduate students and researchers from any institution. Attendance is free but registration is required. To register fill in the form below.

Here is a pdf version of the programme. Final location confirmed: though the strike is taking place and many of us would have preferred not to cross picket lines, the event will have to take place in KCL (venues below).

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Daniel Hausman (Wisconsin-Madison) talk at KCL

19 Monday Feb 2018

Posted by Vlad Cadar in Events, Public talks

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Daniel Hausman, philosophy of economics

Prof. Daniel Hausman, a prominent US philosopher on topics at the intersection of philosophy and economics, will give a talk at KCL for the PPE programme:

“The Link Between Positive and Normative Economics”

Monday Feb 26th
17:30-19:00
Bush House, North-East wing, Room 9.03

The talk is open to all students (undergraduates very welcome) and staff. Attendance is free, no registration required. For more information contact Roberto Fumagalli. Continue reading →

Philosophy Bites: Sarah Fine on the Right to Exclude

15 Thursday Feb 2018

Posted by Vlad Cadar in Events, Public talks

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political philosophy, Sarah Fine

The February 14 episode of Philosophy Bites features Sarah Fine in conversation with Nigel Warburton on the Right to Exclude. You can see more details and listen to the full podcast here.

Tom Pink on Hobbes and Suarez on Powers and Agency

13 Tuesday Feb 2018

Posted by jjcallanan in Announcements, History of Philosophy, Research, Uncategorized

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Hobbes, KCL, KHOP

Tom Pink has a new paper out in a special issue of Philosophical Explorations on agency: ‘

Agents, objects, and their powers in Suarez and Hobbes’ – subscription access here:

http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/13869795.2017.1421688?journalCode=rpex20

 

Yitzhak Melamed at KHOPS This Friday

13 Tuesday Feb 2018

Posted by jjcallanan in Uncategorized

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February 16th 2018 (Small Committee Room, King’s Building)– Yitzhak Melamed (Johns Hopkins), Spinoza on Transcendence

King’s History of Philosophy Seminar will meet regularly through the academic year at King’s College London.  The Seminar aims to promote discussion of methods and approaches to the History of Philosophy as well as of thinkers and topics within the tradition.  We wish to encourage contextual and interdisciplinary perspectives, and welcome researchers in disciplines such as History, Theology, and Political Theory as well as Philosophy.  Meetings take place on Fridays from 11am to 1pm.  All welcome. For inquiries contact John Callanan (john.callanan@kcl.ac.uk or Clare Carlisle (clare.carlisle@kcl.ac.uk).

 

Active Maps – Dance Workshops

08 Thursday Feb 2018

Posted by Vlad Cadar in Announcements

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performance art, Sarah Fine

Sarah Fine invites everyone to the Active Maps dance workshops:

Thu 22 February 2018
15:00 – 17:00 GMT
Tutu’s, Level 4 Macadam Building. Strand Campus

Dr Fine collaborated on this performance workshop which allows the participants to create their own personal map. Lead by choreographer Sivan Rubinstein and live music composer Liran Donin the journey starts with a visual installation designed by Hamish McPherson where we look at the world as one home, and then through movement, sound and migration we create our very own global map which looks at the constantly changing nature of the world.

Register is free: https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/active-maps-dance-workshops-tickets-42502885274

Formal Methods Seminar: The Logic of Justification

05 Monday Feb 2018

Posted by Vlad Cadar in Events, History of Philosophy, Research, Seminars

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Formal Methods, Sven Rosenkranz

Thu Feb 8th, 14:00-16:00
Philosophy building, room 508
King’s College London

Sven Rosenkranz (LOGOS, ICREA, U Barcelona), will give a talk titled “The Logic of Justification – Reloaded” at the Formal Methods research seminar, King’s College London, this Thursday 2-4pm. Open to all graduates and scholars interested. Please sign in as a visitor at the entrance, follow the signs to the Philosophy building, follow the signs to the philosophy office, room 508 is just right of the office.

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