INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE: NATURE AS RESOURCE, AESTHETIC EXPERIENCE, AND
SOURCE OF DANGER
APRIL 18–20, 2024
AUSTRIAN ACADEMY OF SCIENCES
THEATERSAAL
SONNENFELSGASSE 19
1010 VIENNA
The International Office has published the following calls for
research-related mobility grant applications:
*Mobility Fellowships*for 3 to 8-week research stays at the Strategic
Partners (PhD, Post-Doc, Ass. Prof., Assoc. Prof., Univ. Prof.). Funding
for travel expenses and accommodation.
Further information.
<https://international.univie.ac.at/en/faculty-staff-mobility/researchers/ou…>
Application deadline: 23 April 2024.
*Stanford Post-Doc Fellowship*for 3 to 8-week research stays at Stanford
University (Post-Doc). Funding for travel expenses and accommodation.
Further information.
<https://international.univie.ac.at/en/faculty-staff-mobility/researchers/ou…>
Application deadline: 23 April 2024.
*Erasmus+ Short-Term PhD Mobility*for 5 to 14-day research stays at
universities and research institutions in Europe (PhD students without
an employment relationship at UNIVIE). Funding by means of a per diem.
Further information.
<https://international.univie.ac.at/en/faculty-staff-mobility/researchers/ou…>
Submission deadline: 16 April 2024.
-------- Weitergeleitete Nachricht --------
Betreff: [Khoraplattform] Cinesophie 20.03.
Datum: Wed, 20 Mar 2024 16:40:26 +0100
Von: Julian via Khoraplattform <khoraplattform(a)lists.philo.at>
Antwort an: Julian <j.hoeckner(a)inext.at>
An: Adrian Fleisch via Khoraplattform <khoraplattform(a)lists.philo.at>
Liebe Kolleg:innen,
morgen (Donnerstag, 21.03.) wird es wieder 'cinesophisch'!
Nachdem wir uns letzte Woche anlässlich seines 100. Todesjahres schon
mit Franz Kafka befasst haben, widmen wir uns dieses Mal seiner
Rezeption im Film.
Zu Kafkas Lebzeiten steckte das Kino als ästhetisches Medium noch in den
Kinderschuhen. Umso spannender is es zu beobachten, wie seine
literarischen Experimente Eingang in die Geschichte des Films gefunden
haben. 'Kafkaesk' sind nicht nur die ikonischen Verfilmungen von Orson
Welles ("Der Prozess"), Michael Haneke ("Das Schloss") oder die strengen
Adaptionen von Straub/Huillet (u.a. "Klassenverhältnisse", "Schakale und
Araber"). Von den schwindelerregenden Bürokratieungetümern bei Terry
Gilliam ("Brazil") bis zu den gruseligen Metamorphosen bei D. Lynch
("Eraserhead) oder D. Cronenberg ("The Fly", "Videodrome") zieht sich
eine Spur des Kafkaesken durch das filmische Imaginäre des 20.
Jahrhunderts.
In gewohnter Manier stellen wir eine kleine Liste zur Auswahl und
entscheiden uns gemeinsam für einen Film:
Orson Welles - Der Prozess (1962)
David Lynch - Eraserhead (1977)
Jim Jarmusch - Dead Man (1995)
Darren Aronofsky - Pi (1998)
Wir freuen uns auf Euch!
Beste Grüße
Julian Höckner
Summer School
Call for Applications
(Deadline: April 1, 2024 extended: April 30, 2024)
22nd univie: summer school Scientific World Conceptions (USS-SWC)
EuropEAN SUMMER SCHOOL on the philosophy of mathematics
in cooperation with
EUROPEAN SOCIETY FOR THE PHILOSOPHY OF MATHEMATICS (ESPM)
<https://philmath.eu/> https://philmath.eu/
Vienna, September 9-13, 2024
The second European Summer School on the Philosophy of Mathematics will
focus on different topics in the philosophy of mathematics, its foundations,
as well as on the philosophy of mathematical practice. We are happy to
invite abstract submissions by graduate students (MA and PhD). The School
will be hosted in person at the University of Vienna and will include three
tutorials by distinguished scholars as well as a training unit on
"Quantitative and qualitative empirical methods for philosophers of
mathematics" by Matthew Inglis and Deborah Kant (provided by the CIPSH Chair
DMRCP ("Diversity of Mathematical Research Cultures and Practices").
The school aims to bring together Master and PhD students interested in the
connection between philosophy and mathematics, giving them the opportunity
to discuss related topics with leading scholars in the field.
Topics will be selected reflecting participants interests and may include:
* Mathematical knowledge and mathematical understanding
* Justification and representation in mathematics
* Informal proofs and mathematical rigor
* The role of intuition and diagrams in mathematical reasoning
* Experimental mathematics and mathematical practice
* Mathematical ontology
Lecturers:
Jessica Carter (Aarhus University)
<https://pure.au.dk/portal/en/persons/jessica-maria-helena-grund-carter(5177
bcfe-0a52-4da9-aa71-e06fa0a3d5a6).html>
https://pure.au.dk/portal/en/persons/jessica-maria-helena-grund-carter(5177b
cfe-0a52-4da9-aa71-e06fa0a3d5a6).html
Yacin Hamami (ETH Zurich)
<https://www.yacinhamami.com> https://www.yacinhamami.com
Leon Horsten (University of Konstanz)
<https://www.philosophie.uni-konstanz.de/en/ag-leon-horsten/leon-horsten/>
https://www.philosophie.uni-konstanz.de/en/ag-leon-horsten/leon-horsten/
The program is primarily directed at graduate students and junior
researchers in relevant fields, but the organizers also encourage
applications from people in all stages of their career.
Application form and further information:
<https://summerschool-ivc.univie.ac.at/application/>
https://summerschool-ivc.univie.ac.at/application/
USS-SWC operates under the academic supervision of an International Program
Committee of distinguished philosophers, historians, and scientists. Its
members represent the scientific fields in the scope of USS-SWC, make
contact to their home universities and will also support acknowledgement of
courses taken by the students. The annual summer school is organised by the
Institute Vienna Circle of the University of Vienna.
<https://wienerkreis.univie.ac.at/en/> https://wienerkreis.univie.ac.at/en/
Find information about our exchange programme with Duke University (North
Carolina) here:
<https://international.univie.ac.at/en/international-cooperation/university-
wide-partnership-agreements/north-america/>
https://international.univie.ac.at/en/international-cooperation/university-w
ide-partnership-agreements/north-america/
Inquiries:
Administrator:
Zarah Weiss
Institute Vienna Circle
Alserstraße 23/32
1080 Wien
<mailto:summerschool.ivc@univie.ac.at> summerschool.ivc(a)univie.ac.at
Scientific director:
Georg Schiemer
Institute Vienna Circle
Alserstraße 23/32
1080 Wien
<mailto:georg.schiemer@univie.ac.at> georg.schiemer(a)univie.ac.at
Dear all,
next week, there will be a little Easter break. Please note that our next speaker in the Philosophy of Science Colloquium organized by the Institute Vienna Circle is Adrien Champougny (IVC Fellow), who will give a talk on April 4, 4.45-6.15 pm.
All are welcome!
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Philosophy of Science Colloquium TALK: Adrien Champougny
Reverse Mathematics: Why Should the Philosopher Care About It?
Philosophy of Science Colloquium
The Institute Vienna Circle holds a Philosophy of Science Colloquium with talks by our present fellows.
Date: 04/04/2024
Time: 16h45
Venue: New Institute Building (NIG), Universitätsstraße 7, 1010 Wien, HS 3F
Abstract:
Reverse mathematics is a sub-field of mathematical logic. It is used to, a certain theorem t being given, be able to identify exactly what is needed to prove t. The goal of this talk is to provide a brief introduction to reverse mathematics and to give a few insights on why it is an interesting subject from a philosophical point of view.
I will show how the founding fathers of reverse mathematics (that is Harvey Friedeman and Steven Simpson) offered a first philosophical reading of their work that was mainly ontological in character: according to their view, the goal of reverse mathematics is to identify “[…] which set existence axioms are needed to prove the known theorems of mathematics” [Simpson,2009].
I will then present another way to see the philosophical interest of reverse mathematics that is more focused on the epistemological side. This reading rests on a simple idea: all other things being equal, one has a deeper epistemological control over a constructive proof than over an unconstructive one (I will try to make this concept precise in the course of the presentation). According to this reading, reverse mathematics can be seen as a way to evaluate what kind of knowledge we can hope to acquire concerning a particular mathematical theorem.
Finally, assuming that time permits, I will close my presentation by mentioning a new field of research started by Benedict Eastaugh and Walter Dean: reverse philosophy. The idea in this field is to find an argument in philosophy that somehow rests on a mathematical theorem and to show that this mathematical theorem necessitates some non-trivial mathematical resources to be proven.
CALL FOR ABSTRACTS
Workshop on Truth, Definability and Quantification into Sentence
Position
27 and 28 September 2024, University of Vienna
Jointly organised by Max Kölbel, Julio de Rizzo and Benjamin Schnieder
--------
Can truth be defined? Frege argued that it couldn't. Ramsey argued that
defining it would be easy if only we had an analysis of judgement. Today
Horwich claims that truth cannot be defined explicitly because doing so
would require quantification into sentence position and such
quantification is not coherent. Instead he proposes a "minimal theory"
of truth, which comprises all the unproblematic instances of the
equivalence schema. Künne, by contrast, argues that quantification into
sentence position is coherent and may actually be part of some natural
languages. Künne uses such quantification to define truth explicitly:
∀x (x is true iff ∃p ((x is the proposition that p) & p)). Or in
English: a representation (belief, assertion etc) is true just if things
are as it represents them as being. Künne claims also to find this
definition in Frank Ramsey's posthumous work, which, as an exegetical
claim, is not uncontroversial.
Is truth definable? Is propositional quantification coherent? Do natural
languages involve propositional quantification, and in what sense? What
do the answers to these questions mean for philosophical attempts to
define or explain truth? Is truth redundant if explicitly definable? Not
redundant if not explicitly definable? We are interested in these and
related questions (broadly conceived).
--------
Confirmed speakers are:
Peter Fritz (Australian Catholic University)
Paul Horwich (New York University)
Wolfgang Künne (University of Hamburg)
Poppy Mankowitz (University of Bristol)
Cheryl Misak (University of Toronto)
--------
We invite submissions of extended abstracts (1000 words max.) for up to
3 further talks. Please send your anonymized abstracts by 22 March 2024
to truthwien(a)gmail.com. Selected speakers will be notified by mid April.
We will cover accommodation of selected speakers (and on application
offer them a travel subsidy of up to 400 Euros).
This workshop is supported by the FWF Cluster of Excellence project
"Knowledge in Crisis", the FWF project "Truth is Grounded in Facts" and
the University of Vienna.
Dear colleagues,
The History of Philosophy Forum at the University of Notre Dame (USA) is
hosting its annual Spring Colloquium on April 4-5, 2024. Registration is
open to attend the colloquium online or in person on Notre Dame's campus
(registration link: https://forms.gle/Pz9PQG8sjxfYRn276).
This year's theme is *"The Life of the Mind in the History of
Philosophy."* Colloquium participants consider the following issues as
they have appeared across the history of philosophy:
Could we understand thinking as an activity of life, rather than as
an abstract logical operation? How could we make sense of the
(human) mind as something living, or as fundamentally instantiated
by living beings? How can we model the characteristic dynamics of
mental development, self-formation, and personal growth? Is the life
of the mind as real as or even more real than the life of organisms?
This colloquium draws together various models of the ‘life of the
mind’ from across the history of philosophy.
The following scholars are scheduled to present:
* Anne Clausen, University of Göttingen
* Alix Cohen, University of Notre Dame
* Gerad Gentry, Johannes-Gutenberg University Mainz
* Peter John Hartman, Loyola University Chicago
* Julia Jorati, University of Massachusetts Amherst
* Jari Kaukua, University of Jyväskylä
* Katharina Kraus, Johns Hopkins University
* Hannah Laurens, University of Oxford
* Scott MacDonald, Cornell University
* Wiebke Marie Stock, University of Notre Dame
* Mark Textor, King’s College London
More details about the colloquium, including the schedule of
presentations, can be found on the poster and program attached below, as
well as on the colloquium webpage
(https://historyofphilosophy.nd.edu/colloquium/2024-the-life-of-the-mind-in-…
<https://historyofphilosophy.nd.edu/colloquium/2024-the-life-of-the-mind-in-…>).
Registrants who opt to attend online will receive a zoom link via email
in advance of the colloquium. Registrants attending in person are
invited to join for breakfast and lunch during the colloquium
proceedings. Should any questions arise, please reach out to
historyofphilosophy(a)nd.edu.
With warm regards,
Katharina Kraus, Johns Hopkins University
Stephen Ogden, University of Notre Dame
Therese Cory, University of Notre Dame
---------------------------------------------------------------------
History of Philosophy Forum
University of Notre Dame
https://historyofphilosophy.nd.edu
historyofphilosophy(a)nd.edu
(574) 631-3610 (direct line)
(574) 631-0588 (fax)
430 Geddes Hall
Notre Dame, IN 46556
Dear all,
this is a reminder to come to the next talk organized by APSE – Applied
Philosophy of Science and Epistemology. Mirjam Faissner (Charité -
Universitätsmedizin Berlin) will give a talk titled "Epistemic
Oppression and Trans Healthcare". We are very excited about her talk!
Where and When: 21.3.2024, 15:00, HS 3A (NIG).
Abstract:
To understand and communicate our social experiences, we rely on
epistemic resources, such as words, concepts, metaphors, or social
meanings. Yet, which epistemic resources are socially available depends
on power structures. The concept of epistemic oppression, as developed
by Kristie Dotson, is helpful in understanding how power structures
enable and constrain epistemic agency, i. e. our ability to use, develop
and adapt our shared epistemic resources.
In this talk, I argue that institutional epistemologies in healthcare
sustain the epistemic oppression of trans people. More specifically, I
suggest that dominant narratives on transition and detransition
available in healthcare result in hermeneutical injustice and
smothering, two types of epistemic injustice that uphold epistemic
oppression. I discuss consequences of the epistemic oppression of trans
people for trans healthcare.
Bio:
Mirjam Faissner is a medical ethicist working at the Institute of the
History of Medicine and Ethics in Medicine at Charité -
Universitätsmedizin Berlin. Trained as a medical doctor and a
philosopher, she works on questions of structural and epistemic
injustice in healthcare, combining philosophical and empirical research.
Looking forward to seeing you at the talk! Please also let me know if
you would like to join for dinner afterwards :)
All the best,
Flora Löffelmann 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"!
*WIP Series 21.03.2024 - Thursday, HS 3A, NiG - "Katharsis: On the
Platonic Adaptation of an Orphic Idea" by Hermann Crüwell*
Dear all,
This is an email to inform you that the next presentation in the
Work-In-Progress series will be given by Hermann Crüwell (Ernst-Mach
Postdoc, University of Vienna; Ph.D., University of Oxford)) this coming
Thursday. The presentation is entitled "Katharsis: On the Platonic
Adaptation of an Orphic Idea"
Abstract:
At the time when Plato wrote his dialogues, many people sought meaning
and salvation in Orphic mystery cults. In short, Orphism taught that the
soul was once in a state of primordial blessedness in the company of the
gods. Because of an original sin, it fell away from this state and is
now trapped in circles of reincarnation in human bodies. Only initiation
into the Orphic mysteries and purification from its current impure
condition can help the practitioner to be released from this circle,
restore itself in its original condition and attain eternal bliss in the
company of the gods once again.
Plato was critical of these cults, which often demanded fees in exchange
for salvation by purifying rituals and initiation into the mysteries
(cf. Republic 364b–c). At the same time, he took on central concepts and
narratives from the Orphics to give expression to his own philosophical
outlook on the soul, its fate, and its quest for self-perfection.
Focusing on the Phaedo and its concept of katharsis (purification), I
explore how Plato transforms an Orphic idea to conceptualize the soul's
cognitive progress towards wisdom and virtue of character by means of
philosophy.
The meeting will take place in lecture hall 3A (NIG, Universitätsstraße
7, 3rd floor) at 17:15 and will last up to 18:45. All are invited to
join us for dinner or drinks afterward. If possible, please let us know
in advance by email.
You can write towip.philosophie(a)univie.ac.atif you have any questions or
would like to present for the Work-in-Progress series in the SoSe24.
Calendar and event information can be found
at:https://vd-philosophy.univie.ac.at/phd-program/doctoral-training/wip-series/
Best wishes and we hope to see many of you there!
The Organizing Team (Chiara Dankl, Martin Niederl, Yi-Jie Xia, Adrian
Fleisch, Mark Basafa, Sophie Veigl, Nianzu Tu, Raphael Aybar)
Esteemed Colleagues,
We would like to invite you to participate in our conference focusing on
the relationship between identity and virtue in the context of human-AI
interaction which will take place on the 30^th and 31^st of May this
year in Ljubljana, Slovenia. The conference theme encompasses three main
areas of inquiry:
1.
The interplay between identity and virtue(s) in human behavior.
2.
The significance of virtues in shaping human-AI interactions, online
environments and their consequences for identity.
3.
Exploring the plausibility of attributing virtue and identity to
AI-based systems or AI-powered robots.
Our aim will be to elucidate how epistemic identity, encompassing
fundamental beliefs, cognitive processes, and epistemic standards,
intertwines with virtuousness, religious belief(s) and associated
virtues such as humility, largely in connection with newly developed AI
tools. In this we will be examining the connections between virtue
epistemology, AI ethics, and religious studies. Papers are also invited
to explore topics such as the evolution of human epistemic identities in
the context of AI interactions, the possibility of communication and
evolution of religious beliefs within human-AI interactions, the
discernibility of epistemic identity in AI systems and its implications,
and the attribution of virtues or vices to AI entities and their
potential impact on epistemic harm or injustice.
We welcome submissions from diverse fields, including philosophy,
bioethics, theology, computer science, law, and educational sciences.
The conference aims to facilitate interdisciplinary discussions and
welcomes contributions that cut across disciplinary boundaries.
We will be accepting submissions at this email address
(info(a)identity.ethics-ai.eu) until the 29^th of March. Please find
attached more detailed information regarding submission guidelines and
deadlines.
We invite you to participate in this exploration of identity, virtue,
and the evolving dynamics of human-AI interaction. Your contributions
are integral to advancing our understanding of these complex themes.
Best regards,
Matej Kapus
Epistemic Identity and Epistemic Virtue Research Project
in collaboration with Faculty of Theology Ljubljana