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Professor Bill Brewer will give a three hour masterclass on the topic of personal identity on the 14th of June. The class is part of the Guardian newspaper’s ‘masterclass’ series.
Event details can be found here.
20 Wednesday Apr 2016
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Professor Bill Brewer will give a three hour masterclass on the topic of personal identity on the 14th of June. The class is part of the Guardian newspaper’s ‘masterclass’ series.
Event details can be found here.
13 Wednesday Apr 2016
Posted in News
Thomas Byrne, one of the department’s graduate students, has a forthcoming paper in Philosophical Studies. The abstract is below and you can read the paper here.
‘G.E. Moore said that rightness was obviously a matter of maximising plain goodness. Peter Geach and Judith Thomson disagree. They have both argued that ‘good’ is not a predicative adjective, but only ever an attributive adjective: just like ‘big.’ And just as there is no such thing as plain bigness but only ever big for or as a so-and-so, there is also no such thing as plain goodness. They conclude that Moore’s goodness is thus a nonsense. However attention has been drawn to a weakness in their arguments. Mahrad Almotahari and Adam Hosein have sought to plug that weakness. If their plug holds, then there is no goodness. Doing most of their work is the following premise: adjective φ is predicative only if it can be used predicatively in ‘x is a φ K’ otherwise it is attributive. In this paper I argue that this premise is false, that their plug does not hold and that if one is to reject plain goodness it will have to be for other reasons.’
01 Friday Apr 2016
Posted in News
King’s PGR student, Sophie Stammers, has accepted a three year post doctoral research fellowship with the University of Birmingham’s Project Perfect. Congratulations to Sophie on this fantastic achievement!
More information on Sophie and her research can be found on her blog.
31 Thursday Mar 2016
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20 Sunday Mar 2016
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I’m very pleased to announce that Sophie Stammers (one of our current PGR students) won the 2015 teorema Essay Prize for Young Scholars on Free Will and Cognitive Science for her paper, “Situation, Reason and the Extended Agent”. Congratulations to Sophie on this wonderful achievement. Keep an eye out for her paper, which will be published in an issue of teorema very soon.
22 Monday Feb 2016
Posted in News
Charles Cote-Bouchard (KCL postgraduate student working in epistemology and metaethics) just received word that his paper, ‘Can the Aim of Belief Ground Epistemic Normativity?’ has been accepted for publication by Philosophical Studies. Congratulations to Charles on this fantastic achievement. Interested readers can find an early draft of the paper here.
16 Tuesday Feb 2016
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11 Thursday Feb 2016
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According to a tradition that stretches back for literally a few decades there is a traditional analysis of knowledge. On this analysis, knowledge is justified, true belief. This view is sometimes attributed to Plato (because of some remarks in Plato’s Theaetetus) but it was thought to be decisively refuted by Gettier in his famous 1963 paper. Some of us might have doubts about the force of these examples, but let’s set these doubts aside for the time being. There is an interesting historical question that hasn’t received sufficient attention in the literature: was the traditional view part of the philosophical tradition? The view had few defenders, if any, after the reception of Gettier’s article, but what about the philosophical tradition stretching back from June 1963 to Plato?
Julien Dutant argues that philosophers did not accept the (so-called) traditional analysis of knowledge that was Gettier’s target. This is just a legend or myth passed along by epistemologists who don’t take sufficient care to check the historical texts. In place of the bad, old view, Dutant offers a new story of what philosophers traditionally took knowledge to be:
The New Story goes as follows. There is a traditional conception of knowledge but it is not the Justified True Belief analysis Gettier attacked. On the traditional view, knowledge consists in having a belief that bears a discernible mark of truth. A mark of truth is a truth-entailing property: a property that only true beliefs can have. It is discernible if one can always tell that a belief has it, that is, a sufficiently attentive subject believes that a belief has it if and only if it has it. Requiring a mark of truth makes the view infallibilist. Requiring it to be discernible makes the view internalist. I call the view Classical Infallibilism.
Read the whole thing, as they say. You can get an early view here.
08 Monday Feb 2016
Posted in News
Sarah Fine’s collection (co-edited with Lea Ypi), Migration in Political Theory: The Ethics of Movement and Membership, is now available through Oxford University Press. This book brings together twelve original papers on migration from leading international figures (including, of course, our very own Sarah Fine). Interested readers can learn more about the collection and get a look at its introduction here.