Join us for this upcoming seminar next week:
22 November: 4-6 pm
Room 508 Philosophy Building
Convenor: Scott Sturgeon, University of Birmingham
Comments by: Ran Wu
15 Tuesday Nov 2016
Posted in Seminars, Uncategorized
Join us for this upcoming seminar next week:
22 November: 4-6 pm
Room 508 Philosophy Building
Convenor: Scott Sturgeon, University of Birmingham
Comments by: Ran Wu
11 Friday Nov 2016
Posted in Events, History of Philosophy, Public talks
This coming Monday, 14 November, our Professor Maria Rosa Antognazza will be giving the lecture at the official commemoration of the 300th anniversary of Leibniz’s death in Leipzig.
09 Wednesday Nov 2016
Posted in History of Philosophy, Research
The Department of Philosophy is one of the leading departments for the study of Kant’s philosophy. John Callanan, Sacha Golob, Jessica Leech and Andrea Sangiovanni are all currently working on various issues in Kant’s theoretical and practical philosophy.
Today in the spotlight, the recent work of Jessica Leech:
08 Tuesday Nov 2016
Posted in Essays, Mind, Metaphysics, Psychology, Research
The Jacobsen Committee (University of London) has announced that the winner of this year’s Jacobsen Essay competition is our very own Jorgen Dyrstad with his essay ‘Seeing and Differentiating‘.
07 Monday Nov 2016
Posted in Rationality, Research
Today in the spotlight, a selection of some recent work in epistemology by Clayton Littlejohn.
04 Friday Nov 2016
Posted in History of Philosophy, Research
The Department of Philosophy is one of the leading departments for the study of Kant’s philosophy. John Callanan, Sacha Golob, Jessica Leech and Andrea Sangiovanni are all currently working on various issues in Kant’s theoretical and practical philosophy.
Today in the spotlight, the recent work of Sacha Golob:
01 Tuesday Nov 2016
Posted in Mind, Metaphysics, Psychology, Research, Seminars
Join us for this upcoming seminar next week:
8 November: 4-6 pm
Room 508 Philosophy Building
Convenor: Naomi Eilan, University of Warwick
Comments by: Eleonore Von Haller
31 Monday Oct 2016
Posted in History of Philosophy, Research, Seminars
“Authenticity, Truth, and Cultural Transformation: A Critical Reading of John Haugeland’s Heidegger.”
Speaker: Aaron Wendland (Tartu)
Join us next Monday in Room 405, Philosophy Building.
Afterwards Sacha Golob will be taking Aaron to dinner at Masala Zone Covent Garden – if you would like to join them please let Sacha know by Tue 1st. The department can cover the costs of up to two grads on a first come first served basis.
Abstract: According to the standard reading, Heidegger’s account of authenticity in Being and Time amounts to an existentialist theory of human freedom. Against this existentialist interpretation, John Haugeland reads Heidegger’s account of authenticity as a key feature of Heidegger’s fundamental ontology: i.e., Heidegger’s attempt to determine the meaning of being through an analysis of human beings. Haugeland’s argument is based on the idea that taking responsibility for our existence entails getting the being of entities right. Specifically, Haugeland says that our ability to choose allows us to question and test the disclosure of being through which entities are intelligible to us against the entities themselves, and he adds that taking responsibility for our existence involves transforming our current disclosure of being when it fails to meet the truth test. Although I agree that Heidegger’s existentialism is a crucial feature of his fundamental ontology, I argue that the details of Haugeland’s interpretation are inconsistent. My objection is that if, as Haugeland claims, entities are only intelligible via disclosures of being, then it is incoherent for Haugeland to say that entities themselves can serve as intelligible standard against which disclosures can be truth-tested or transformed. Finally, I offer an alternative to Haugeland’s truth-based take on authenticity and cultural transformation via an ends-based onto-methodological interpretation of Heidegger and Kuhn. Here I argue that the ends pursed by a specific community determine both the meaning of being and the movement of human history.
28 Friday Oct 2016
Posted in History of Philosophy, Research
The Department of Philosophy is one of the leading departments for the study of Kant’s philosophy. John Callanan, Sacha Golob, Jessica Leech and Andrea Sangiovanni are all currently working on various issues in Kant’s theoretical and practical philosophy.
Today in the spotlight, the recent work of John Callanan: