Apr
18
Thu
Law & Philosophy Colloquium @ Fordham Law
Apr 18 @ 4:00 pm – 7:00 pm

Th 1/25/24: Kate Manne

Th 2/1/24: Scott Shapiro

Th 2/8/24: Ekow Yankah

Th 2/15/24: Tommie Shelby

Th 2/22/24 Gideon Rosen

Th 2/29/24: Sabeel Rahman

Th 3/7/24: Amy Sepinwall

Th 3/14/24: Erik Encarnacion

Th 3/21/24: Seyla Benhabib

Th 4/4/24: Amalia Amaya

Th 4/11/24: Debbie Hellman

Th 4/18/24: Mala Chatterjee

Th 4/25/24: Liam Murphy

Contact Aditi Bagchi: https://www.fordham.edu/school-of-law/faculty/directory/full-time/aditi-bagchi/

Apr
25
Thu
Law & Philosophy Colloquium @ Fordham Law
Apr 25 @ 4:00 pm – 7:00 pm

Th 1/25/24: Kate Manne

Th 2/1/24: Scott Shapiro

Th 2/8/24: Ekow Yankah

Th 2/15/24: Tommie Shelby

Th 2/22/24 Gideon Rosen

Th 2/29/24: Sabeel Rahman

Th 3/7/24: Amy Sepinwall

Th 3/14/24: Erik Encarnacion

Th 3/21/24: Seyla Benhabib

Th 4/4/24: Amalia Amaya

Th 4/11/24: Debbie Hellman

Th 4/18/24: Mala Chatterjee

Th 4/25/24: Liam Murphy

Contact Aditi Bagchi: https://www.fordham.edu/school-of-law/faculty/directory/full-time/aditi-bagchi/

Apr
26
Fri
The Vibes Are Off @ Wollman Hall/B500
Apr 26 @ 5:00 pm – 7:00 pm

“There’s no arguing about art” is manifestly false. Art is one of the best things to argue about. The question is why. In this public philosophy debate, Nick Riggle (University of San Diego), Nat Hansen (University of Reading), and Zed Adams (The New School) will face off on the question of why arguing about art matters. At stake are two very different conceptions of public life: a Millian liberal vision which encourages the appreciation of difference and an Emersonian perfectionist vision which aims to converge on a shared conception of the good.