Sep
8
Mon
SWIP-Analytic: Jessica Moss & Fall Kickoff Mixer @ CUNY Graduate Center, room 5414
Sep 8 @ 5:00 pm – 8:00 pm

Talk: 5-7 PM, Room 5414
Mixer: 7-8 PM, Room 7113

Professor Jessica Moss (NYU) will present at SWIP-Analytic Monday, September 8th from 5:00-7:00 PM at the Graduate Center, CUNY, Room 5414. Her talk title is “Dual Systems in 400 BC: Plato and the Origins of Contemporary Psychology“.

Abstract: Proponents of contemporary Dual Systems psychology – the view that we have in some sense two minds, one responsible for automatic, associative, intuitive processing, and the other for controlled, inferential, deliberative processing – have sometimes recognized that there are ancient roots to their view.  I will argue that we should in fact credit Plato with anticipating this contemporary view in striking, almost comprehensive detail, and also that the contemporary view both illuminates and vindicates Plato’s much-misunderstood notions of parts of the soul and of rationality.

Listen to Jessica Moss interview “Plato and Aristotle on Weakness of Will” on Philosophy Bites

Mixer: Our first presentation of the fall by Jessica Moss will be followed by a SWIP-Analytic Fall Kickoff Mixer featuring philosophy songs written and performed by Vivian Feldblyum. Vivian will be visiting us from McGill University in Montreal, Quebec, where she is a philosophy student. We will also have a special prize to give away at the mixer generously provided by Oxford University Press.

Everyone (men & women, philosophers & non-philosophers) is welcome at our public events.

Oct
24
Fri
32nd Annual Meeting of the Society for Ancient Greek Philosophy (SAGP) with the Society for the Study of Islamic Philosophy and Science (SSIPS) @ Fordham Lincoln Center, Lowenstein Building
Oct 24 – Oct 26 all-day

24-26 October (Friday-Sunday)

32nd Annual Meeting of the Society for Ancient Greek Philosophy (SAGP) with the Society for the Study of Islamic Philosophy and Science (SSIPS)
Lowenstein Building
Lincoln Center Campus
Contact: Daryl Tress

 

http://www.societyancientgreekphilosophy.com/

Mar
18
Fri
Workshop on Plato’s Phaedrus @ North Academic Center Room 5/225, CCNY
Mar 18 – Mar 19 all-day

The Simon H. Rifkind Center for the Humanities and Arts

Presents:
Cinzia Arruzza
New School for Social Research

Sara Brill
Fairfield University

Andrea Capra
State University of Milan

Burt Hopkins
Seattle University

Elizabeth Jelinek
Christopher Newport University

Michael Naas
DePaul University

Noburu Notomi
Yokohama National University

Nicholas Rynearson
Brooklyn College, CUNY

Marylou Sena
Seattle University

Thomas Thorp
Saint Xavier University

Organisers:

Nickolas Pappas
CUNY Graduate Center

Poster: https://drive.google.com/file/d/0BzqJK3SK3JjZbTBQY0d3ZnIxWUU/view?usp=sharing

Mar
31
Fri
Crafting Ancient Identities: Mythological and Philosophical Approaches to the Self and Society in Antiquity @ Skylight Rm CUNY
Mar 31 all-day

Crafting Ancient Identities: Mythological and Philosophical Approaches to the Self and Society in Antiquity

Tenth Annual Graduate Conference in Classics
Friday, March 31, 2017
The Graduate Center, City University of New York
Keynote Speaker: Professor Kathryn Morgan, UCLA

In Greek and Roman antiquity, mythology and philosophy helped individuals understand their world and define their place in society. From the supernatural exploits in Homer to the etiological accounts of Ovid, mythology humanized natural phenomena and preserved cultural history. Philosophy, meanwhile, reflects an effort to systematize knowledge and answer questions about our place in the world. Both mythological narratives and philosophic thought participated in the crafting of ancient identities, whether as individuals, communities, or nations. The Romans, for example, turned to mythology to identify themselves as the descendants of Aeneas, just as the Athenian philosophers attempted to define what it meant to be a citizen.

The PhD/MA Program in Classics at the Graduate Center of the City University of New York invites graduate students in Classics or related fields to submit abstracts of papers that explore how mythology and philosophy contribute to the development of identity in the Greco-Roman world.

Possible paper topics may include, but are not limited to:

  • Etiological myths
  • Autochthony and migration stories
  • Philosophic schools and communities
  • Philosophical poetry and the Presocratics
  • Reception and transformation of myth in antiquity
  • Hero cults and religious communities
  • The role of myth in philosophical discourse

Please send an anonymous abstract of approximately 300 words as an email attachment to cunyclassicsconference@gmail.com by January 16, 2017. Please include, in the body of the email, your name, university affiliation, and the title of the presentation. Speakers will have 15 minutes to present. Selected applicants will be notified in early February. Submissions and questions will be received by conference co-organizers Federico Di Pasqua and Thomas Moody.

https://philevents.org/event/show/28678

Oct
21
Sat
Society for Ancient Greek Philosophy (SAGP) – 35th annual meeting @ Dept of Philosophy, Fordham University
Oct 21 – Oct 22 all-day

The 35th annual meeting of

The Society for Ancient Greek Philosophy (SAGP)

October 21 – 22, 2017

Fordham University, Lincoln Center, New York

113 West 60th Street, New York, NY 10023

Corner of Columbus (9th) Avenue and West 60th Street

Sponsored by Fordham University

The Society for Ancient Greek Philosophy (SAGP)

Conference Organizers

Tony Preus (apreus@binghamton.edu), Binghamton University

Daryl Tress (tress@fordham.edu), Fordham University

Registration for the Conference

There are some aspects of this conference that have changed from the way it has been done in the past:

· No Friday Plenary Session.

· No Food. Those who have been attending will remember that food is available in the snack bar just off the Atrium where we have held the Friday Evening sessions several times. In addition, there are several restaurants and a Starbucks close by.

· No Registration Fee as such. In order to cover the minimum expenses of putting on the program – badges, printed programs, paying some students to help with registration – we require that everyone who participates or attends be a member of SAGP for 2017/18. We’ll try to cover everything out of SAGP dues, and that will work only if we’re serious about all attendees being current dues-paying members of the Society. Membership forms and information about current membership status available from apreus@binghamton.edu.

· Fordham University security requires all visitors to the Lincoln Center Campus to register for the conference and receive a guest badge. Members of the Society for Ancient Greek Philosophy who are on the program will have a badge waiting for them when they arrive (we hope). Other current members who expect to attend, but are not on the program, should alert Preus (apreus@binghamton.edu) of their intention, in order to assure that a badge will be prepared for them. Current members who plan to attend are encouraged to volunteer to chair a session: a DRAFT program is included below to assist in planning for that!

· We hope to make it possible for persons who are not current members to join the Society for 2017/18 at the registration desk and get a badge, at least on Saturday morning.

Conference Location

All conference events take place at Fordham University, Lincoln Center campus, 60th St. & Columbus Ave, New York. This is on the western side of Manhattan, about two blocks from Columbus Circle and the southwestern border of Central Park. The closest subway stop for Fordham is the 59 Street/Columbus Circle stop, which is serviced by the blue lines (the A and C trains), the red line (the #1 train) and the orange line (the B and D trains).

Accommodations

The hotel closest to Fordham’s Lincoln Center campus is the Hudson Hotel (www.hudsonhotel.com), which provides a business rate (pending availability) if you identify yourself as affiliated with Fordham University.

Lodging can be found on a number of search vehicles like www.expedia.com, www.nyc.com/hotels/, hotels.com, or, www.nycgo.com/hotels (which is the site to which the Mayor’s office links). A number of sites allow you to search by regions within Manhattan. The three regions closest to Fordham are Central Park West (north of the campus), Clinton (“Hell’s Kitchen,” west and south of the campus), and Midtown West (south of the campus). Some sites allow you to search by landmarks: the closest one to Fordham is the Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts (across the street from Fordham). The Lincoln Center area is one of the more expensive places to stay in the city, but around Bryant Park and the Empire State building (three stops from Columbus Circle on the red line), lodging is more reasonably priced.

Other useful links:

· Fordham University, Lincoln Center Information Page (http://www.fordham.edu/info/21454/lincoln_center_campus)

· Subway map (http://www.mta.info/nyct/maps/submap.htm)

· Bus map (www.mta.info/nyct/maps/busman.pdf)