Dear all,
we cordially invite you to the upcoming talk of the APSE - lecture
series, delivered by Stephanie Ifill (University of Westminster)
Title: Knowledge as a turn towards the possibility of existence
When/Where: 12.10., 15-17pm, HS 3A
If you are interested in joining us for dinner/drinks afterwards, write
an email to Manu Sharma (manu.sharma(a)univie.ac.at)! everyone welcome!
Abstract:
"I came to realise that to produce knowledge, I must enter into a
framework where I am non-existent....I refused...There must be another
possibility, another way of knowing." This talk brings forward the
question: what is the possibility of epistemic non-existence? One of the
possibilities I raise is that of the turn. The turn is not a seek of
inclusion in; it's a turn, a break from. I turn in relation to Sylvia
Wynter (to rupture) and Henri Bergson (to indetermination) to help
articulate what I mean by epistemic turn. Upon awareness, there is the
possibility to turn from, indeed with a cost, but a possibility none the
less. This talk represents the culmination of deep thought brought out
through relational conversations and a direct lived confrontation with
epistemic non-existence; it's part of an ongoing experiment in the
possibility of appearing in Europe as a *Black woman (outside of the
cage).
Kind regards,
Sophie Veigl on behalf of the APSE-Unit
--
Dr. Sophie Juliane Veigl, BSc., BA., MSc., MA.
Institut für Philosophie, Universität Wien
E-Mail: sophie.juliane.veigl(a)univie.ac.at
my pronouns are she/her
Dear Colleagues,
This is an email to remind you that the next presentations in the
Work-In-Progress series will be given by Bogdan Mićić and Philipp Quell
this coming Monday. Please see their titles and abstracts below.
"The ontological foundation of Pletho’s virtue ethics" by Bogdan Mićić
The short but dense treatise /Perì aretôn/ 'On Virtues' is not the only
work in which Pletho deals with moral-philosophical topics and
questions, but it is indeed the work in which Pletho presents and
develops his moral philosophy in the most systematic way. There is
surprising amount of literature which has been written and published
since the 1840s about Pletho's life and work. However, only a small part
of the otherwise relatively rich secondary literature is dedicated to
Plethonic ethics and an even smaller part wo the work /Perì aretôn/,
while the largest part is dealing with Pletho’s theology and
metaphysics. One reason (though, probably not the only one) for this is
that Pletho's (moral) philosophy, especially at first glance, hardly has
any originality. Further, it seems to be affected by a profound
eclecticism, which makes Plethon's ethics seem more like a disjointed
piecemeal: Different, sometimes even seemingly incompatible, thoughts of
various thinkers appear. A universal principle which could unify the
scattered thoughts seems to be lacking. In short, Pletho’s ethics, at
first glance, does not seem like a coherent theory. The eclectic
features of Pletho’s moral philosophy has led some researchers to accuse
Pletho of arbitrariness or a lack of critical reflection in advance.
This is wrong. I venture out to show that Pletho’s moral philosophy is
not a more or less arbitrary 'catalogue' of virtues collected without
adhering to an overarching principle and to show that this view is
short-sighted and excessive. To prove this, I will first show that the
Plethonic doctrine of virtue is thoroughly determined by a unifying
principle that underpins the theory. I will then identify this principle
as the ontological-metaphysical requirement for every being to adhere to
the specific ontological hierarchy. From this it will follow that it is
possible to draw conclusions about Pletho's ontology starting from his
doctrine of virtues (since the latter follows from the former). This
will prove that the relative neglect of treatise /Perì aretôn/ by
previous researchers is inappropriate not only in a historical respect
(/Perì aretôn/ was the most distributed and cited work out of Pletho’s
texts in his time), but also in a systematic respect: Because /Perì
aretôn/ provides remarkable insights in Pletho's ontology, Plethon's
doctrine of virtues should also be read and worked on also and
especially by people who are only interested in his theoretical philosophy.
In my talk, I will illustrate this by giving a detailed interpretation
of the first 14 lines of the text (/Peri aret/. A 1, 1.1–16).
"Aristotle’s Systematic Essentialism" by Philipp Quell:
Although many of Aristotle’s scientific findings are revised, for
example the geocentric thesis, his understanding of scientific
structures and the criteria for them to be able to discover truth is
still very similar to our scientific world. My thesis and argumentation
will focus on the Aristotelian system of sciences, mainly elaborated in
his logical writings. Within this argumentation one fundamental
difference will be found, too and I am excited to hear your opinon about
the fundamentality of this difference.
The presentation will take place in Hörsaal 3A (NIG, Universitätsstraße
7, 3.Stock) at 13:30and will last up to sixty minutes. All are invited
to join afterwards for refreshments and snacks before the Writing
Evening begins.
Please let us know (wip.philosophie(a)univie.ac.at
<mailto:wip.philosophie@univie.ac.at>) if you have any questions or if
you would like to present for the Work-in-Progress series yourself. You
can findcalendar and event information
at:https://vd-philosophy.univie.ac.at/phd-program/doctoral-training/wip-series/
<https://vd-philosophy.univie.ac.at/phd-program/doctoral-training/wip-series/>.
Best wishes and we hope to see all of you there!
The organizing team
Dear Colleagues,
The "Decolonizing" the Library lunchtime event has been rescheduled and
will take place on 18.1.2024 from 1 to 3 pm.
Birgit Athumani Hango from the African and Middle Eastern Studies
Library will shortly provide input (ca. 20 mins) about the Colonial
Contexts Working Group at the University Library followed by a moderated
discussion and reflections about how to apply the ideas and principles
to our own work.
Bring your lunch and join the discussion!
Sincerely,
Your Colleagues from the Antiracism Working Group
P.S. In case you missed it:
1. The Anti-Racism Working Group has created a Zotero reading list on
(Anti-)Racism, (De)colonization, and Philosophy. Most of these resources
are available via u:search.
To browse the list, as well as request to join the Zotero group, visit:
https://www.zotero.org/groups/5231402/anti-racism_working_group_at_uni_vien…
If you have a suggestion for the Zotero list, you can contact us with a
DOI/link to the item at: antiracism.philosophy(a)univie.ac.at
2. The Library of Philosophy and Psychology has designated a shelf in
the library that will house physical books related to these subjects.
The shelf features a QR-code that links to the Zotero list. So far, we
have requested 14 books to add to the Library's collection that were not
already available via u:search.
The library will be accepting purchasing requests from library users for
this shelf on an ongoing basis.
If you would like to suggest an item that is not already available via
u:search, you can do so via this link:
https://bibliothek.univie.ac.at/fb-philosophie-psychologie/ankaufsvorschlae…
--
Meghan Bohardt, M.A.
Academic and Library Information Specialist
Secretariat of the European Open Science Cloud Service Office Austria
University Library
University of Vienna
Mon, Weds-Fri 9:30-12:30
Tues 9:30-17:30
Administrative Assistant to Univ.-Prof. Tarja Knuuttila
Department of Philosophy
University of Vienna
Mon, Weds-Fri 13:30-17:30
+431427764611
_______________________________________________
Hermes mailing list --hermes(a)lists.philo.at
To unsubscribe send an email tohermes-leave(a)lists.philo.at
The Institute Vienna Circle and the Vienna Circle Society cordially
invite you to
6th Arthur Pap Lecture
What role do definitions play in axiomatics?
Paola Cantù (Université Aix-Marseille)
December 7, 2023
4 - 6 pm
Alte Kapelle am Campus, Yard 2, Entrance 2.8
Abstract
Right from its name, axiomatics focuses on the role of axioms as
starting points for deriving theorems. Definitions are introduced as
useful conventions, but not strictly necessary for a rigorous
presentation of theories. And yet the preeminent interest in definitions
in authors such as Peano and Pap suggests that the issue of definitions
cannot be eliminated as soon as one reflects on the epistemological role
of axiomatics. What role can axiomatics still play today and, within it,
what place should be reserved for definitions?
Please find further information on vcs.univie.ac.at or
https://wienerkreis.univie.ac.at/news-events/ . We are looking forward!
Yours sincerely
Zarah Weiss
----
6. Arthur Pap Vorlesung
What role do definitions play in axiomatics?
Paola Cantù (Université Aix-Marseille)
7. Dezember 2023
16:00 - 18:00 Uhr
Alte Kapelle am Campus, Hof 2, Eingang 2.8
Abstract
Right from its name, axiomatics focuses on the role of axioms as
starting points for deriving theorems. Definitions are introduced as
useful conventions, but not strictly necessary for a rigorous
presentation of theories. And yet the preeminent interest in definitions
in authors such as Peano and Pap suggests that the issue of definitions
cannot be eliminated as soon as one reflects on the epistemological role
of axiomatics. What role can axiomatics still play today and, within it,
what place should be reserved for definitions?
Weitere Infos finden Sie unter vcs.univie.ac.at oder
https://wienerkreis.univie.ac.at/news-events/. Wir freuen uns sehr auf
Ihr Kommen!
Mit herzlichen Grüßen
Zarah Weiss
Dear all,
tomorrow, we will have the final event of the Anti-Racism Week at the
Department of Philosophy.
We will show the film "Edelweiss - A Critical Love Letter" at 16:45 at
HS 3C, NIG.
EDELWEISS is a documentary about the harrowing realities of People of
Color living in Austria. It depicts the perspectives of many People of
Color with varying connections to Austria— some who call it home, some
who have made it their home, and others who would never call it home.
Snacks and drinks will be provided :)
Looking forward to seeing you there!
All the best,
Flora in the name of the Anti Racism AG.
--
Flora Löffelmann, MA MA
University assistant & doctoral candidate
Department of Philosophy at University of Vienna
Pronouns: they/them (for more info see:
https://www.mypronouns.org/what-and-why/)
Happy about a gender neutral "hello"!
Call for Papers (Deadline November 30, 2023)
Paul Feyerabend and Austrian Philosophy - His Formative Years in Postwar Vienna
International Conference - July 5-6, 2024 - University of Vienna, Campus, Court 1
https://www.pkfcentennial.org/
Paul K. Feyerabend (1924-1994), one of the most stimulating and controversial figures of Twentieth-Century philosophy, spent most of his formative years in postwar Vienna (1946-1955). Born in Red Vienna, Feyerabend came of age at the time of the Nazi Anschluss and completed his philosophical apprenticeship at the University of Vienna during the Allied occupation. At the time of his university studies in philosophy and physics, Feyerabend animated the so-called “Third Vienna Circle” (1949-1953) around Viktor Kraft in the context of the Austrian College Society, and actively participated in the European Forum Alpbach and in the Institut für Wissenschaft und Kunst. In addition, he served as a research assistant to Arthur Pap, who spent 1953/54 as a Fulbright visiting professor at the University of Vienna.
The international conference “Paul Feyerabend and Austrian Philosophy” aims at exploring the milieu which shaped Feyerabend’s intellectual development with a focus on his interaction with university teachers and intellectual figures such as members of the former Vienna Circle like Viktor Kraft, Philipp Frank, Herbert Feigl, and Rudolf Carnap, physicists like Felix Ehrenhaft and Walter Thirring, as well as with Walter Hollitscher and Ludwig Wittgenstein. Contacts continued throughout the 1950s and 1960s at the London School of Economics with Karl Popper and, later, with Imre Lakatos, and in Minneapolis, at Feigl’s Minnesota Center for Philosophy of Science, where Feyerabend published his pathbreaking “Against Method” for the first time in 1970.
A special symposium on the publication of Feyerabend’s Formative Years, edited by Matteo Collodel and Eric Oberheim (Springer Nature, two volumes) will be held as part of this conference.
The conference is organized by the Institute Vienna Circle (University of Vienna) and by the Vienna Circle Society. It is partnered with the subsequent HOPOS 2024, the Fifteenth International Congress of the International Society for the History of Philosophy of Science, University of Vienna, July 8-12, 2024, and it contributes to the Feyerabend 2024 Centennial celebrations.
Invited Speakers
Vasso Kindi (University of Athens)
Martin Kusch (University of Vienna)
Call for Abstracts
We invite abstracts of up to 400 words, excluding footnotes and bibliography.
Please format your abstract as a pdf file for anonymous review, excluding any personal and institutional information and submit it through EasyChair <https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=pkf2024vienna> .
If your abstract is selected for the conference, you will not be required to submit a full paper.
Submission deadline: November 30, 2023
Notification of acceptance: January 31, 2024
There will be no registration fee.
Organizing Committee
Friedrich Stadler (University of Vienna)
Matteo Collodel (Ca’ Foscari University of Venice)
Daniel Kuby (University of Konstanz)
Queries and Questions
matteo.collodel[at]unive.it <http://unive.it>
friedrich.stadler[at]univie.ac.at <http://univie.ac.at>
Sehr geehrte Kolleg:innen,
ich möchte Sie im Namen von Khôra herzlich zum nächsten Colloquium einladen.
Termin: 23.11.2023, 18:30 - 20:00, HS 3F, Neues Institutsgebäude
Thema: Philosophie des Films mit einem Input von Daniel Prem
24 Gedanken pro Sekunde: Das philosophische Potenzial des Kinos
Geschichten können seit je her philosophische Ideen beinhalten. Doch was ist mit der Form der Geschichte selbst? Erlauben uns diverse Medienformen neue philosophische Betrachtungen und Überlegungen, oder gar eine andere Art zu denken? Was ist das philosophische Potenzial, das sich zwischen den Schnitten eines Filmes versteckt?
Weitere Informationen sowie eine Mailingliste finden Sie auf unserer Homepage.
https://www.khora.philo.at/
Danach ist im Café Gagarin reserviert.
Wir freuen uns auf euch!
Liebe Grüße
Sebastian Krach
Dear All,
The Institute Vienna Circle and the APSE group are jointly organizing a
talk by ...
Prof. Anjan Chakravartty (University of Miami)
on
"Humanism and the Aim of Science: Past, Present, Future"
Time and Location:
Thursday, July 6th, 3-5pm, NIG HS 2G
Abstract: Humanism, conceived as a worldview, and science, conceived as
a form (or family of forms) of inquiry into the world, have been
entangled with one another across a long sweep of intellectual history.
I consider their co-evolution as a prelude to the present, briefly
reviewing formative aspects of Renaissance humanism and deepening
associations of values central to the Enlightenment with precursors to
modern science, en route to an arguably peculiar situation today. Where
past conceptions of the aim of science (natural philosophy, etc.) seem
intimately connected to the idea of fashioning a better world,
contemporary philosophy seems largely devoid of normative discussions of
what science itself is for, exactly. I conclude with some reflections on
a possible return to a humanist conception of the role and promise of
science.
Everyone welcome!
Best, Martin Kusch
Dear all,
unfortunately, due to a family emergency, Paul Giladi will not be able
to give the APSE talk that was planned for today at 15:00.
We will re-schedule for an online talk at some other point, and will
keep you posted.
All the best,
Flora on behalf of APSE
--
Flora Löffelmann, MA MA
University assistant & doctoral candidate
Department of Philosophy at University of Vienna
Pronouns: they/them (for more info see:
https://www.mypronouns.org/what-and-why/)
Happy about a gender neutral "hello"!