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King's Philosophy

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

King's Philosophy

Monthly Archives: January 2020

Peter Adamson: From Known to Knower

31 Friday Jan 2020

Posted by fmallory in Announcements, Events, History of Philosophy, Ideas, News, Uncategorized

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Peter Adamson (KCL, LMU Munich) will be speaking to the department about on Friday 28th February, 3-5pm in Room 508 of the Philosophy Building.

The title of his talk is “From Known to Knower: Affinity Arguments for the Mind’s Incorporeality in the Islamic World”

Prof. Adamson’s latest book Classical Indian Philosophy will be released by Oxford University Press in March.

Philosophy in Medical Education Conference

28 Tuesday Jan 2020

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The organisers of the conference Philosophy in Medical Education are pleased to invite abstract submissions. The conference is due to take place at King’s College London on the 6th – 8th of April 2020. 

The conference will look at the role and the details of teaching philosophy as part of the curriculum of medical schools. We invite abstracts of papers on all aspects of this topic, from, for example, papers on the value of philosophy in medical education to papers on specific teaching topics to reports of experiences of teachers and students, and so on. We welcome interdisciplinary submissions. 

Abstracts of up to 300 words should be sent to PhilAndMed@kcl.ac.uk  by 14 February 2020.  We will select papers for inclusion in the conference as soon as possible after that date. 

We will have some funding for bursaries to support the participation of graduate students and early career researchers. General inquiries can be directed to harriet.fagerberg@kcl.ac.uk. 

MAP Reading Group – 29/01/20

27 Monday Jan 2020

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This week, MAP reading group will be looking at ‘Responsibility Without Blame: Empathy and the Effective Treatment of Personality Disorder’ by Hanna Pickard. In the paper, Pickard examines the relation between personality disorder and concepts such as responsibility and blame. 

Reading: Responsibility Without BlameDownload


Location: Activity Room E, 8th Floor, South East Wing, Bush House

Time: 13:00-14:00, Wednesday 29th January

Women Intellectuals in Antiquity

23 Thursday Jan 2020

Posted by fmallory in Announcements, Events, News, Uncategorized

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Image result for Sappho statue kings

Dr Katharine O’Reilly will be co-organising a conference on Women Intellectuals in Antiquity at the University of Oxford next month (14th-15th Feb). The symposium aims to bring together scholars from across the humanities disciplines to discuss women intellectuals in Antiquity and will feature keynote lectures from Dr. Danielle Layne and Dr. Sophia Connell, and a panel discussions led by Armand D’Angour.

Katharine notes: “The event is really a first, and many of the women philosophers we’re discussing are mostly unknown outside a very small circle, so we’re very excited to be running this”.

To see the event announcement on PhilEvents, click here.

The programme for the event is here and to register, click here.

Registration, including lunch and coffees, is free for students.

King’s is one of the few philosophy departments to offer a course dedicated to Women Thinkers in Antiquity and the Middle Ages. Hopefully this symposium will call greater attention to this research in this field.

For any questions, please email WomenIntellectualsInAntiquity@gmail.com

This event is jointly organised by Jenny Rallens, Peter Adamson, Katharine O’Reilly, and Ursula Coope with the support of Keble College Oxford, the British Society for the History of Philosophy (BSHP), The Oxford Research Centre in the Humanities (TORCH), Oxford University, the Department of Classics at King’s College London, and LMU Munich.  

Reading Groups this Term

22 Wednesday Jan 2020

Posted by fmallory in Announcements, Ideas, News, Reading Groups, Research, Uncategorized

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The zoom and download functions are not active for this image.

This term will see a host of reading groups, some familiar, some new, all open to everyone. So why not drop by? 

Philosophy of Action

Monday 1pm, Room 508, Philosophy Building

Focus: Go beyond the ‘Standard Story’?

Email:  daniel.elbro@kcl.ac.uk, william.meredew@kcl.ac.uk or chengying.guan@kcl.ac.uk

Philosophy of Medicine

Thursday, 4pm, Room 508, Philosophy Building

Email: harriet.fagerberg@kcl.ac.uk

Philosophy of Race

Thursday, 10am, Room 508, Philosophy Building

Email: mirjam.faissner@kcl.ac.uk

(Mostly) Metaphysics  Reading Group

Wednesday, 12:30-2pm, Room 508, Philosophy Building

Email: roope-kristian.ryymin@kcl.ac.uk

Philosophy of Mind

Wednesday, 11am, Room 508, Philosophy Building  

Email: patrick.butlin@kcl.ac.uk

Phenomenology in Analytic Philosophy

Wednesday 3pm, Room 508, Philosophy Building

Email: gregor.boes@kcl.ac.uk

Minorities and Philosophy

Venue varies

Email: alice.c.wright@kcl.ac.uk 

A Spirit of Trust

Time and place to be determined [starting after the reading week]

Email: fintan.mallory@kcl.ac.uk

King’s History of Philosophy Workshop: Self, Soul and World in the History of Philosophy

21 Tuesday Jan 2020

Posted by fmallory in Announcements, Events, Kant, News, Uncategorized

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Image result for rene magritte self portrait

The department will be hosting a workshop on the theme ‘Self, Soul and World in the History of Philosophy’ on Friday the 13th of March.All are welcome, but please sign up here: 
https://www.eventbrite.com/e/kings-history-of-philosophy-workshop-on-the-self-tickets-90376676071

The programme is as follows:

10.00-11.15 John Callanan: Kant’s Metaphysics of the Self

Abstract: Kant is traditionally viewed as a critic of the metaphysics of the soul and a proponent of a non-metaphysical conception of selfhood. In recent decades however, many commentators have interpreted Kant as being committed to a metaphysics of the self. I review some of these recent interpreters and consider how their views might be reconciled with the Critical project’s approach to metaphysical explanation. 

11.30 -12.45 Mark Textor: Lotze’s Master Argument: From the Unity of Consciousness to the Soul

Abstract: Influential 19th century German philosophers of mind promoted the idea of ‘a psychology without a soul’. Hermann Lotze is their main opponent. He argued that this project is doomed. In my talk I will assess his main argument.

Lunch break (own arrangements)

14.15-15.30 Rory Madden:  Frege on Idealism and the Self

Abstract: It is not widely known that Frege’s ‘Thought’ contains an argument which, in the tradition of Kant’s Refutation of Idealism, aims to refute a sceptical or idealist hypothesis on the basis of premises about self-consciousness.  In this talk I reconstruct and assess Frege’s argument.

15.45 – 17.00 Nilanjan Das: Can we Coherently Deny the Existence of the Self?

Abstract: Indian Buddhist philosophers defended the thesis that there is no substantially or ultimately real thing such as a self. The non-Buddhist Brahmanical philosophers resisted this claim. In this essay, I focus on one such philosopher: the 6th century Nyāya philosopher, Uddyotakara. He argued that the Buddhists cannot coherently deny the existence of the self, i.e., that the statement “The self doesn’t exist” involves a contradiction. Here, I unpack Uddyotakara’s arguments for this surprising thesis. I show that the thesis follows from three distinct components of his philosophy of language: (i) his semantics of negative existentials, (ii) his theory of how the first-person pronoun works, and (iii) his view that simple expressions of language must have referents.

Philosophy and Medicine Colloquium

20 Monday Jan 2020

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Image result for medicine philosophy

There are two Philosophy and Medicine Colloquia coming up. 

Induction and Necessary Connections in Medical Research

Marius Backmann, London School of Economics

21 January 2020 – 17:30-19:00

Bush House (S) 2.02, Strand Campus

Abstract:

Some necessitarians have claimed that they could justify induction by introducing necessary connections. By analysing the reasoning in randomised clinical trials (RCTs), I argue that this view does not accurately represent scientific practice.

The basic model of necessitarian solutions to the problem of induction is as follows: First we infer from the fact that all Fs have so far been Gs via an inference to the best explanation (IBE) that there is a necessary connection between F-ness and G-ness. We then deductively infer from this necessary connection that all Fs are Gs.

Nancy Cartwright and Eileen Munro offer an idealised reconstruction of randomized clinical trials broadly along these lines. First, we infer from evidence that a treatment has a ‘stable capacity’, i.e. a modal dispositional property, to produce an outcome. Second, we deductively infer the efficacy ofthe treatment outside the test environment from the existence of this stable capacity. Cartwright and Munro argue that RCTs alone are no basis to support these sorts of inferences, and hence do not deserve the status of a gold standard for medical research.

Against this, I argue we should not try to give a deductive reconstruction of RCTs. We ampliatively infer the causal relevance of the treatment in the sample from the fact that the desired outcome is more prevalent in the test group than in the control group. The further inference that the treatment will be causally relevant in the population will also always be ampliative, because we cannot possibly have the necessary information to make it deductive. Moreover, the necessitarian analysis of inductive practice is inapplicable where there are no modal properties that could be inferred to, as is, e.g., the case in meta-studies.

Mental Health Without Wellbeing

Anna Alexandrova, University of Cambridge

28 January 2020 – 17:00-18:30

Greenwood Classroom, Greenwood Theatre Building, Guy’s Campus

If you do not have a KCL ID, please register (free) at this Link. 

Abstract:

What is it to be mentally healthy? In the ongoing movement to promote mental health, to reduce stigma and to establish parity between mental and physical health, there is a clear enthusiasm about this concept and a recognition of its value in human life. However, it is often unclear what mental health means in all these efforts and whether there is a single concept underlying them. Sometimes the initiatives for the sake of mental health are aimed just at reducing mental illness, thus implicitly identifying mental health with the absence of diagnosable psychiatric disease. More ambitiously, there are high-profile proposals to adopt a positive definition, identifying mental health with psychic or even overall wellbeing. We argue against both: a definition of mental health as mere absence of mental illness is too thin, too undemanding, and too closely linked to psychiatric value judgments, while the definition in terms of wellbeing is too demanding and potentially oppressive. As a compromise we sketch out a middle position. On this view mental health is a primary good, that is the psychological preconditions of pursuing any conception of the good life, including wellbeing, without being identical to wellbeing.

!EDIT: this post previously stated mistakenly that both colloquia would happen in February. Please note the new dates!

Emma Worley MBE

15 Wednesday Jan 2020

Posted by fmallory in Announcements, News, Uncategorized

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Screen Shot 2018-01-26 at 13.56.58

At the end of last year, Emma Worley was recognised with an MBE for services of innovation in philosophy and education.

Emma is a Visiting Research Associate in the department and in 2007 co-founded The Philosophy Foundation, the world’s only charity that focusses on training philosophy graduates to do philosophy at schools. As well as training a specialist team of philosophy teachers, the foundation provides philosophy resources for use in schools. Thanks to The Philosophy Foundation, the King’s Philosophers in Schools program has been able to train 10-12 undergraduate and graduate students per year to offer philosophy seminars to students in our partner schools. These seminars currently reach 250 students annually. 

As a Visiting Research Associate, Emma works with co-founder of The Philosophy Foundation, Peter Worley, and philosopher of mind at KCL, Ellen Fridland, to research the effectiveness of pedagogical techniques focussed on the development of critical thinking skills.

The foundation’s work is not only confined to schools. In 2016, the Foundation worked with the Philosophy Department at King’s to develop the Philosophy in Prisons project which provides discussion-based philosophy classes at HMP Belmarsh using the Philosophy Foundations methods.  

Aide from all of this, Emma is also the president of SOPHIA: The European Foundation for the Advancement of Philosophy with Children and in 2017 was named as one of the top 100 Women in Social Enterprise. 

To learn more about what The Philosophy Foundation does, click here.

New Issue of Philosophy

13 Monday Jan 2020

Posted by fmallory in Announcements, Ideas, News, Public engagements, Uncategorized

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The most recent issue the journal Philosophy has arrived. This is the first issue of the the journal to be produced under the auspices of its new editors Prof. Maria Alvarez and Prof. Bill Brewer accompanied by their associate editors Sarah Fine, Sacha Golob, James Stazicker, and Raphael Woolf. Along with the introduction of a new blind peer-review process, the editors have also written a thoughtful editorial introduction deserving of attention. 

The founders, who included the philosophers Samuel Alexander, Bertrand Russell and Sydney Hooper (the first editor), were animated by a conviction that the philosophical quest ‘begets a certain spirit of impartiality in judging all things’. That our culture is in sore need of such fair-mindedness hardly needs saying. In almost every quarter, kinds of thinking that seek truth and produce deeper and truer understanding are under threat from greed for power, fanaticism, ruthless pursuit of profit, and sheer carelessness. These beget mistrust, indifference, even hopelessness at the very time when we most need their opposites, faced as we are with some urgent problems and challenges. We need to understand better how to live well in ourselves, with each other, and with the other creatures with whom we share our endangered planet. While philosophy on its own cannot remedy all these ills, it can help. Its methods – its underlying purposes – make it a powerful tool against mendacity, narrow-mindedness and bunk. 

For further information, click here

Philosophy is the journal of The Royal Institute of Philosophy. 

MAP Reading Group – 15/01/2020

10 Friday Jan 2020

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KCL MAP reading group will be meeting again on Wednesday 15th January, 13:00-14:00. We will be meeting in Activity Room F, 8th Floor, South East Wing Bush House. We will be reading the paper ‘Philosophical Racism’ by Katrin Flikschuh, professor at LSE.

Reading File: flikschuh-phil-racismDownload

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