Jun
17
Sat
Night in the Library: The Philosophy of Hip-Hop @ Central Library
Jun 17 @ 7:00 pm – Jun 18 @ 2:00 am

2023 marks the 50th anniversary of the birth of hip-hop, and the beginning of a sonic, cultural and socio-political revolution that changed the U.S. and the world. To commemorate the anniversary, Brooklyn Public Library will present NIGHT IN THE LIBRARY: THE PHILOSOPHY OF HIP-HOP on Saturday, June 17th, from 7 pm – 2 am at Central Library.

Join us for this FREE event that will take over the entire Central Library building to celebrate hip-hop culture past, present and future, with keynote addresses, live DJs, film screenings, discussions, debates and contemplative engagements. BPL invites you to celebrate hip-hop and spend a NIGHT IN THE LIBRARY.

Co-curated by LeBrandon Smith and Kelly Harrison. The Dilemma Series is curated by April R. Silver, founder of AKILA WORKSONGS.

Sep
22
Fri
Perfection and Morality: Kant’s Critique of the Stoics. Stephen Engstrom @ Columbia University tbd
Sep 22 @ 4:30 pm – 6:30 pm

Presented by the New York German Idealism Workshop

Perfection and Morality: Kant’s Critique of the Stoics. Stephen Engstrom. With response from Francey Russell. @Columbia 22 September

Hegel’s Theory of Absolute Spirit. Markus Grante. With response from Amelle Djemel. @New School 6 October

The Argument of Kant’s Groundwork. Pauline Kleingeld. With response by Patricia Kitcher. @Columbia 27 October

Nathan DuFord tbd. With response by Chris O’Kane. @New School 10 November

Oct
5
Thu
The World According to Kant, (Anja Jauernig) Book Symposium @ Wolff Conference Room/D1103
Oct 5 @ 6:00 pm – 8:00 pm
***In response to numerous requests, the event will now be streamed. Link to the stream (via Zoom) and additional details can be found here: https://event.newschool.edu/theworldaccordingtokant.***

Anja Jauernig’s recently published The World According to Kant (Oxford, 2021) defends an interpretation of Kant’s critical idealism as an ontological position, according to which Kant can be considered a genuine idealist about empirical objects, empirical minds, and space time. Yet in contrast to other intentional objects, appearances genuinely exist, which is why Kant can also be considered a genuine realist about empirical objects, empirical minds, and space and time. This book spells out Kant’s case for critical idealism thus understood and clarifies Kant’s conception of appearances and things in themselves in relation to Kant’s Leibniz-Wolffian predecessors.

Anja Jauernig (NYU)

Bio:

Anja Jauernig is Professor of Philosophy at New York University. She obtained her Ph.D. from Princeton University, and held academic positions at the philosophy departments of the University of Notre Dame and the University of Pittsburgh before coming to NYU. Her research interests include Kant, Early Modern Philosophy, 19th and early 20th century German Philosophy, Aesthetics, and Animal Ethics.

Patricia Kitcher  (Columbia)

Bio:

Patricia Kitcher is Roberta and William Campbell Professor Emerita of Humanities and Professor Emerita of Philosophy at Columbia.  She has written two books on Kant’s theory of cognition and the self and is editor of the Oxford Philosophical Concepts volume on The Self.

Andrew Chignell (Princeton)

Bio:

Andrew Chignell is Laurence S. Rockefeller Professor in Religion, Philosophy, and the University Center for Human Values at Princeton.  Prior to that he was a Professor of Philosophy at Penn and Associate and Assistant Professor in the Sage School of Philosophy at Cornell.  His research interests are in early modern philosophy (especially Kant) and in philosophy of religion, moral psychology, epistemology, and food ethics.  From 2020-2023 he served as President of the North American Kant Society.

Desmond Hogan (Princeton)

Bio:

Desmond Hogan is Professor of Philosophy at Princeton University. He received his Ph.D. from Yale University. His research interests include metaphysics, philosophy of science, ethics, and aesthetics, with a focus on the modern period and nineteenth century.

Oct
6
Fri
Hegel’s Theory of Absolute Spirit. Markus Grante @ New School tbd
Oct 6 @ 4:30 pm – 6:30 pm

Presented by the New York German Idealism Workshop

Perfection and Morality: Kant’s Critique of the Stoics. Stephen Engstrom. With response from Francey Russell. @Columbia 22 September

Hegel’s Theory of Absolute Spirit. Markus Grante. With response from Amelle Djemel. @New School 6 October

The Argument of Kant’s Groundwork. Pauline Kleingeld. With response by Patricia Kitcher. @Columbia 27 October

Nathan DuFord tbd. With response by Chris O’Kane. @New School 10 November

Oct
12
Thu
Samantha Matherene (Harvard) @ 716 Philosophy Hall
Oct 12 @ 4:10 pm – 6:00 pm

Samantha Matherne has written the first recent book in English on the philosophy of Cassirer, covering the full range of his thought. Her research also explores the reciprocal relationship between perception and aesthetics. She approaches these issues largely through a historical lens, as they are taken up by Kant and developed in Post-Kantian traditions in the 19th and 20th centuries, especially Phenomenology and Neo-Kantianism.

Oct
27
Fri
The Argument of Kant’s Groundwork. Pauline Kleingeld @ Columbia University tbd
Oct 27 @ 4:30 pm – 6:30 pm

Presented by the New York German Idealism Workshop

Perfection and Morality: Kant’s Critique of the Stoics. Stephen Engstrom. With response from Francey Russell. @Columbia 22 September

Hegel’s Theory of Absolute Spirit. Markus Grante. With response from Amelle Djemel. @New School 6 October

The Argument of Kant’s Groundwork. Pauline Kleingeld. With response by Patricia Kitcher. @Columbia 27 October

Nathan DuFord tbd. With response by Chris O’Kane. @New School 10 November

Nov
10
Fri
Nathan DuFord @ New School tbd
Nov 10 @ 4:30 pm – 6:30 pm

Presented by the New York German Idealism Workshop

Perfection and Morality: Kant’s Critique of the Stoics. Stephen Engstrom. With response from Francey Russell. @Columbia 22 September

Hegel’s Theory of Absolute Spirit. Markus Grante. With response from Amelle Djemel. @New School 6 October

The Argument of Kant’s Groundwork. Pauline Kleingeld. With response by Patricia Kitcher. @Columbia 27 October

Nathan DuFord tbd. With response by Chris O’Kane. @New School 10 November

Nov
16
Thu
The Intimacies of Perception and Aesthetic Trespassing. Mariana Ortega (PSU) @ Wolff Conference Room/D1103
Nov 16 @ 6:00 pm – 8:00 pm

María Lugones theorizes the notion of resistance in terms of the notion of “trespassing,” through which “active subjectivity” has the possibility of problematizing normative practices and redrawing maps of power. In this presentation, I highlight the importance of the aesthesic or the perceptual in Lugones’s view of resistance as developed before her turn to decolonial feminism. In doing so, I point to the manner in which this account of resistance is dependent on a sense of ambiguity inspired by the work of Gloria Anzaldúa. Moreover, I introduce a notion of aesthetic trespassing in connection to the perception of artworks that discloses the intimacy between the perceiver and the perceived.

Mar
29
Fri
Television with Cavell in Mind: the Ethics and Politics of Popular Series. Sandra Laugier @ Room 1101
Mar 29 @ 4:00 pm – 6:00 pm

Presented by the NYC Wittgenstein Workshop

If you will be visiting from outside the New School, email the workshop to inform the security desk.

Room 1101, 6 E 16th St, New York, NY 10003

Apr
4
Thu
The Concept of World-Alienation in Twentieth Century German Thought – presented by Stéphane Symons @ Wolff Conference Room/D1103
Apr 4 @ 6:00 pm – 8:00 pm

In the final part of The Human Condition (1958) Hannah Arendt turns to the danger of ‘world- alienation’. Based on a variety of discoveries and evolutions that are constitutive of modernity (globalization, Protestantism, the invention of the telescope), modern man has adopted an Archimedean, external position vis-à-vis the world. According to Arendt, this ‘view from without’ has gradually jeopardized the experience of a shared world, endangering the foundation of all meaning-giving activities.

My talk can be considered as a reply to Arendt’s pessimistic account of modern ‘world-alienation’. It builds on the idea that some of the most influential thinkers of the twentieth century (Ernst Jünger, Georg Lukács, Ernst Bloch, Theodor Adorno, Walter Benjamin, Aby Warburg, Sigmund Freud) did not equate the loss of a shared world with the loss of meaning. Rather, the conceptual framework of a substantial part of early twentieth century German philosophy centers on the exploration of a productive opposition, negation or fragmentation of the world. From the perspective of these thinkers, the world’s ‘durability’ (Arendt) is not simply a source of shared meaning since it can be experienced as the mark of its indifference to change and renewal.

Bio:

Stéphane Symons is Full Professor of Philosophy at the Institute of Philosophy of the University of Leuven, Belgium. His research is focused on interwar German thought (Frankfurt School) and postwar French philosophy (structuralism and post-structuralism).