Oct
3
Fri
Fichte’s Foundations of Natural Right Symposium @ New School For Social Research, Hirshon Suite room l205
Oct 3 – Oct 4 all-day

The New York German Idealism Workshop is happy to announce our fall conference: A Symposium on Fichte’s Foundations of Natural Right.

In conjunction with Cambridge University Press, we have invited several speakers to work through this sometimes overlooked masterpiece of German Idealism.

Our speakers include: Angelica Nuzzo (City University of New York), Frederick Neuhouser (Barnard College and Columbia University), James A. Clarke  (The University of York), Paul Franks (Yale University), Gabriel Gottlieb (Xavier University), Michelle Kosch (Cornell University), Wayne Martin (University of Essex), Dean Moyar (Johns Hopkins University), Michael Nance (University of Maryland Baltimore County), John Russon (University of Guelph), Jean-Christophe Merle (Universität Vechta).

We invite you to join us from October 2nd to the 4th for what looks to be a provocative event.  If you plan to attend the workshop, and would like to receive the papers prior to the conference, then feel free to email NYGIW.

Mar
7
Sat
5th Annual Early Modern Philosophy Workshop @ Fordham Lincoln Center
Mar 7 – Mar 8 all-day

5th Annual New York City Workshop in Early Modern Philosophy
Fordham University, Lincoln Center Campus
March 7-8, 2015

Saturday 3/7

8:45 – 9:15: Continental Breakfast and Welcome

Session 1
Chair: Daniel Garber (Princeton)

9:15 – 10:30: Alan Gabbey (Columbia/Barnard)
“Impenetrability, the Virgin Birth, and Miracles: Descartes and Others”

10:45 ­– 11:30: Elliot Paul (Columbia/Barnard)
“Clear and Distinct Perception”

11:45 – 12:30: Fabrizio Baldassarri (Parma)
“Between Dead and Living Bodies: Rethinking Descartes’ Sciences of Life”

12:30 – 2:00: Lunch Break

Session 2
Chair: Dominic Balestra (Fordham)

2:00 – 2:45: Abel Franco (California State University, Northridge)
“Descartes’ Dog: A Clock with Passions?”

3:00 – 3:45: Kristin Primus (NYU)
“Spinoza and the Second Meditation”

Session 3
Chair: TBD

4:15 – 5:00: Justin Steinberg (CUNY, Brooklyn College)
“Spinoza and the Political Absolute”

5:15 – 6:30: Jonathan Israel (Institute for Advanced Study)
“Spinoza’s View of Revolution”

6:30 Reception

Sunday 3/8

Session 1
Chair: TBD

8:45 – 9:30: Daniel Cook (CUNY, Brooklyn College)
“Leibniz, China, and the Problem of Pagan Wisdom”

9:45 – 10:15: Eric Stencil (Utah Valley University) and Julie Walsh (Université du Québec à Montréal)
“The Protestant and the Pelagian: Arnauld and Malebranche on Grace”

Session 2
Chair: TBD

10:45 – 11:30:  Jessica Gordon-Roth (CUNY, Lehman College)
“Anne Finch Conway on Species”

11:45 – 12:30: Wilson Underkuffler (University of South Florida)
“Inferences, Objects and the Principle of Non-Contradiction: Understanding Hume’s Adequacy Principle in its Contemporary Scottish Philosophical Context”

12:30 – 2:00 Lunch Break

Session 3
Chair: Andrew Chignell (Cornell)

2:00 – 2:45 Dai Heide (Simon Fraser)
“Kant on Cosmological Unity and the Unity of Space”

3:00 – 4:15 Béatrice Longuenesse (NYU)
“Kant on ‘I’ and Persons”

Please note that the schedule may be subject to change

Mar
19
Thu
Nicola Marcucci (NSSR; École des Hautes Études en Sciences Sociales, Paris) “History of a Sign with No Memory: Wonder, Reason, and Revelation in Spinoza” @ Wolff Conference Room, Albert and Vera List Academic Center, D1103
Mar 19 @ 6:00 pm – 8:00 pm

Nicola Marcucci (Marie Curie Post-Doc Fellow, NSSR; École des Hautes Études en Sciences Sociales, Paris), will give a lecture entitled “History of a Sign with No Memory: Wonder, Reason, and Revelation in Spinoza”

From the abstract:
“My contribution aims to discuss an apparent paradox of Theological-Political Treatise concerning the real nature of Moses’ Revelation. Moses heard the real voice of God, or he just imagined it. Apparently, Spinoza supports both hypotheses. In this essay, I try to explain this apparent paradoxical issue of Spinoza’s conception of religion, according a central role to the notion of wonder. To do this, I try to show how Ethics’ conception of wonder allows us to distinguish two different uses of this notion in TTP: one directly connected with Moses’ revelation—and more generally with religious obedience and transmission—the other with superstition. This way, I intend to escape both a pure secularist interpretation and the theological-political critique of Spinoza’s thought, revisiting its place in the history of Enlightenment.”

Apr
2
Thu
Ross Poole (NSSR) “Recovering the Human in Human Rights” @ Wolff Conference Room, Albert and Vera List Academic Center, D1103
Apr 2 @ 6:00 pm – 8:00 pm

Ross Poole (Adjunct Professor of Political Science and Philosophy, NSSR), will give a lecture entitled “Recovering the Human in Human Rights”

From the abstract:
“In this paper, I defend the old-fashioned idea that humans have rights in virtue of being human. I suggest that this claim requires, not a metaphysical and certainly not a religious conception of human nature, but rather an ethical understanding of what it is to be human amongst other humans. However, this ethical understanding is inadequate on its own. It requires a legal and political form: that of a right attributed to each and every human.”

Sep
23
Wed
Spirituality After Darwin by Bron Taylor @ Orozco Room, A712, Alvin Johnson/J.M. Kaplan Hall
Sep 23 @ 5:00 pm – 7:00 pm

Spirituality After Darwin: ‘Dark Green’ Nature Religion and the Future of Religion and Nature

New Religions come and go but some persist and become major global forces. In this presentation, Professor Taylor presents evidence that, especially since Charles Darwin published On the Origin of Species in 1859, a new, global, earth religion has been rapidly spreading around the world. Whether it involves conventional religious beliefs in non-material divine beings, or is entirely naturalistic and involves no such beliefs, it considers nature to be sacred, imbued with intrinsic value, and worthy of reverent care. Those having affinity with such spirituality generally have strong feelings of belonging to nature, express kinship with non-human organisms, and understand the world to be deeply interconnected.

In a recent book, Taylor labeled such phenomena ‘dark green religion’, noting that its central ethical priority is to defend the earth’s biocultural diversity. Taylor provides a wide variety of examples of new forms of religious (and religion-resembling) cultural innovation among those promoting such nature spirituality, from individuals (including artists, scientists, filmmakers, photographers, surfers, and environmental activists), to institutions (including museums, schools, and the United Nations). By tracking these, Taylor provides an opportunity to consider what such spirituality may portend for the religious and planetary future.

Bron Taylor is Professor of Religion, Nature, and Environmental Ethics at the University of Florida. His research involves both ethnographic and historical methods, and much of it focuses on grassroots environmental movements, their emotional, spiritual, and moral spiritual dimensions, and their environmental, cultural, and political impacts.

This event is sponsored by the India China Institute at The New School.

Refreshments will be provided. Seating is limited – please RSVP here

Mar
30
Thu
The Value of Privacy Beyond Autonomy – Tobias Matzner @ Wolff Conference Room, D1103, Albert and Vera List Academic Center
Mar 30 @ 6:00 pm – 8:00 pm

Abstract || Traditionally privacy is valued for protecting individual freedom and autonomy. Such concepts of privacy and the underlying idea of autonomy have drawn criticism from various quarters. Feminist thinkers and critical theorists have advanced such criticism on normative grounds. In the recent years, they have been joined by arguments on a pragmatic level, which show that such concepts of privacy no longer can orient life in a world permeated with new threats to privacy, in particular due to the development of information technology. In consequence, many theories have reconstructed concepts privacy in light of this criticism, often by invoking more relational concepts of autonomy.  The talk proposes a different approach. Using a more socially situated concept of the subject, which is derived from Hannah Arendt’s thought, it shows that privacy plays a more fundamental value for the constitution of subjectivity, beyond autonomy.

Presented by The New School for Social Research

Tobias Matzner works in political philosophy and philosophy of technology. He is a visiting scholar at the Department of Philosophy at The New School for Social Research, and a member of the International Centre for Ethics in the Sciences and Humanities in Tübingen, Germany.

May
13
Sat
7th Annual NYC Workshop in Early Modern Philosophy @ Fordham Philosophy Dept.
May 13 – May 14 all-day

CALL FOR PAPERS

7th Annual New York City Workshop
in Early Modern Philosophy
Fordham University
Lincoln Center Campus
12th Floor Lounge
May 13-14, 2017

Keynote Speakers:

François Duchesneau (Université de Montréal)
Christia Mercer (Columbia)
Anja Jauernig (NYU)

The workshop aims to foster exchange and collaboration among scholars, students, and anyone with an interest in Early Modern Philosophy. We welcome presentations of papers on any topic in early modern philosophy (roughly covering the period 1600-1800).

Please submit abstracts of 250-300 words to newyorkcityearlymodern@gmail.com no later than January 15, 2017.

Fordham’s Lincoln Center campus is located on the western side of Manhattan at 60th Street and Columbus Avenue, about two blocks from Columbus Circle at the southwest corner of Central Park. More details about the program, accommodation options, and other practical matters will be made available On This Website.

Conference Organizers:
Ohad Nachtomy, Bar-Ilan (ohadnachtomy@mac.com)
Reed Winegar, Fordham (bwinegar@fordham.edu)