Apr
26
Fri
Social Metaphysics Workshop @ Rutgers Philosophy
Apr 26 – Apr 28 all-day

Social Metaphysics Workshop – location tbd

Apr
27
Sat
Kant, Smith, & The Scottish Enlightenment @ Fordham Lincoln Center Campus
Apr 27 – Apr 28 all-day
 The NYC Workshop in Early Modern Philosophy is an annual conference hosted by Fordham University. Our aim is to foster exchange and collaboration among scholars, students, and anyone with an interest in Early Modern Philosophy. 

We are seeking submissions for our 14th annual conference hosted in Spring, 2024.​

Send abstracts to newyorkcityearlymodern [at] gmail.com by December 8, 2023.

https://philevents.org/event/show/114750

Speakers:

College of Charleston
Princeton University
Marquette University

Organisers:

Fordham University
Technion, Israel Institute of Technology
Fordham University
May
3
Fri
Adapting Environmental Ethics for the Anthropocene @ Lang Hall, 424 Hunter North
May 3 @ 3:00 pm – 5:00 pm

Facts about the increasing collective human influence on biological systems, from local ecosystems to planetary-level Earth systems, support the proposal that we now live in the Anthropocene. What do such facts imply, if anything, about norms and values guiding land management and conservation practices going forward? Do facts about anthropogenic drivers that can result in undesirable and irreversible changes to ecological and Earth systems license further intentional interventions and underwrite calls for “planetary management”? What would appropriate respect for wildness look like on a human-dominated planet? If human influence on environmental systems pushes them over thresholds into radically new states, are received Western or Indigenous ideologies sufficient to guide an appropriate response? How should we think about responding to such radical environmental change? How, if at all, should environmental ethics adapt to the Anthropocene?

Hunter College, CUNY is hosting a panel discussion next week: “Adapting Environmental Ethics for the Anthropocene.”  
It will feature Emma Marris (Acclaimed Environmental Writer and Journalist), Arthur Obst (Princeton University), and Allen Thompson (Oregon State University).  Abstract below.
 
The event will take place 3–5 p.m. on Fri., May 3 in Ida K. Lang Recital Hall (424 Hunter North).  
The Departments of Philosophy, Geography & Environmental Sciences, Urban Policy & Planning, and Film & Media Studies are co-sponsoring the event with support from the Office of the Dean of the School of Arts & Sciences and the Office of the Provost.
We hope you can attend.  Please share this with your NYC area–based colleagues (e.g., GPS, BPP, PPN, and NYCAPhiCal) and anyone else you think will find this event interesting.
You can RSVP here or using the QR code on the attached flyers.
An Ethics of Attention. Daniel Stephens (U Buffalo) @ Philosophy Hall 716
May 3 @ 5:30 pm – 7:30 pm

ABSTRACT: Spurred partly by recent attempts to ethically assess various negative effects of the attention economy, philosophers have begun to pay more attention to the role that attention plays in our ethical lives. This has included some more general discussion of the ethics of attention. In this talk, I add to this recent discussion by outlining a proposal for a comprehensive ethics of attention. On my proposal, an ethics of attention includes norms that stem from the role that attention plays in the formation of our character, in constituting our relationships and social roles, and in our other ethical decision making and behavior. Because of attention’s nature as a finite resource, and because our various roles and relationships involve interpersonal expectations for how others allocate their attention, an ethics of attention should provide norms that govern how we collectively allocate our attention among these morally important purposes. Because these morally important purposes are all competing for our attention, one goal of an ethics of attention should be to find practices that help to synergize how people meet these demands. I call such a set of practices a “social-attentional scheme”, and propose that the ultimate goal of an ethics of attention is to find an optimal social-attentional scheme. I conclude by discussing the various ways in which we can understand early Confucian ethics as providing us with one such social-attentional scheme, and propose some lessons we can take from this Confucian example as we try to continue developing a contemporary ethics of attention.

With responses from Elizabeth Edenberg (CUNY Baruch)

Presented by THE COLUMBIA SOCIETY FOR COMPARATIVE PHILOSOPHY

NOTE ON ENTRY FOR NON-COLUMBIA GUESTS: The door to Philosophy Hall will only open with a Columbia University ID card. If you do not have this card please arrive early where someone will be standing outside until the meeting begins. If you arrive late, you can ask someone walking nearby to let you in or contact Cole at cf2798@columbia.edu. Please only contact Cole as a final resource so as not to interrupt the talk. 

RSVP IS REQUIRED FOR DINNER:. Dinner will take place at a nearby restaurant. Please contact Cole at cf2798@columbia.edu for further information. RSVPs are limited.