Sep
15
Thu
Ursula Renz: The Value of Thinking for Oneself: Epistemic Autonomy in Spinoza and Kant @ Wolff Conference Room, Albert and Vera List Academic Center, rm D1103
Sep 15 @ 6:00 pm – 8:00 pm

Ursula Renz, Professor of Philosophy at the University of Klagenfurt, Austria, gives a lecture entitled “The Value of Thinking for Oneself: Epistemic Autonomy in Spinoza and Kant”

In her talk, Renz discusses the views of Spinoza and Kant on epistemic autonomy. Departing from a brief sketch of Descartes’ epistemic individualism, she will argue that while both Spinoza and Kant dismissed Descartes’ views on concept formation, they remain loyal to his reasons for epistemic individualism. She will conclude by showing how these reasons may help us to understand why enlightenment, understood as a philosophical and not just historical concept, essentially relies on the exercise of individual judgments, requiring epistemic autonomy rather than only freedom of speech and thought.

About the speaker:

Ursula Renz is Professor of Philosophy at the University of Klagenfurt, Austria, where she teaches classes in Theoretical Philosophy (epistemology, metaphysics and philosophy) and Early Modern Philosophy.

She is author of Die Rationalität der Kultur: Kulturphilosophie und ihre transzendentale Begründung bei Cohen, Natorp und Cassirer (2002), Die Erklärbarkeit der Erfahrung: Realismus und Subjektivität in Spinozas Theorie des menschlichen Geistes (2010), editor of Self-Knowledge. A History (forthcoming 2017) and coeditor of the Handbuch Klassische Emotionstheorien (2008, second edition 2012) and Baruch de Spinoza: Ethica more geometrico demonstrata. A Collective Commentary. She has written numerous articles on Early Modern Philosophy (Descartes, Hobbes, Spinoza, Shaftesbury), Kant, the Marburg School of Neo-Kantianism (Cohen, Natorp, Cassirer), on meta-philosophy and the history of philosophy, and more recently, also on self-knowledge, testimony and the problem of epistemic trust.

Her book Die Erklärbarkeit der Erfahrung has been awarded the Journal of the History of Philosophy Book Prize 2011, and from 2014-2015, she received an Humboldt Fellowship for Advanced Researchers to spend three terms at the University of Konstanz. She recently received a grant from the Austrian Research Foundation (FWF) for her project on Spinoza and the Concept of the Human Life Form.

For more information see her academia page: https://uni-klu.academia.edu/UrsulaRenz

This Thursday Workshop is in cooperation with the international workshop: Spinoza and Kant. Metaphysics, Ethics, Politics

Sponsored by the Department of Philosophy at the New School for Social Research.

Nov
17
Thu
Seyla Benhabib: Legalism: A Reconstruction and Critique of Shklar’s Theory @ Wolff Conference Room, Albert and Vera List Academic Center, rm D1103
Nov 17 @ 6:00 pm – 8:00 pm

Thursday Night Workshop @ New School

Omri Boehm Descartes on Impossible Thinking | 9.8.16
Ursula Renz The Value of Thinking for Oneself: Spinoza and Kant on Epistemic
Autonomy | 9.15.16 In Cooperation with international workshop: Spinoza and Kant.
Metaphysics, Ethics, Politics
Paul Kottman Love as Human Freedom | 9.22.16
Jessica Moss No Beliefs about Forms: Doxa in Plato and Aristotle | 9.29.16
Lydia Goehr Moses and the Monochrome. Thought Experiments in the Theology
of Modernism | 10.6.16
Angelica Nuzzo Hegelian Reflections on a Time of Crisis | 10.13.16
Moshe Halbertal : ‘As a’| 10.20.16
Jason Stanley Non-Ideal Philosophy of Language | 10.27.16
Monique David-Menard Body of the drives, bodies in politics: anonymous or
impersonal? | 11.10.16 In cooperation with SIPP’s 9 th Annual conference | Anybody:
The Matter of the Unconcious
Seyla Benhabib Legalism: A Reconstruction and Critique of Shklar’s Theory | 11.17.16
Michael Della Rocca The Elusivness of the One and the Many in Spinoza | 12.1.16
Markus Gabriel How to Concieve the Mind After Naturalism’s Faliure(s) | 12.15.16

Nov
18
Fri
Pragmatic Themes in the Philosophy of Hilary Putnam @ NSSR Philosophy Dept, Room 510
Nov 18 all-day

A Memorial conference for Hilary Putnam

Pragmatic Themes in the Philosophy of Hilary Putnam

Sponsored by Department of Philosophy, New Social for Social Research

10  A. M.       Richard J. Bernstein   Pragmatist Enlightenment

11  A. M.        Alice Crary  Putnam and Propaganda

12-2 P. M.       Lunch

2   P.M.           Naoko Saito  Pragmatism, Analysis, and Inspiration

3  P.M.            Brendan Hogan and Lawrence Marcelle: Putnam,

Pragmatism and the Problem of Economic Rationality

4  P. M.           Philip Kitcher  Putnam’s Happy Ending? Pragmatism

and the Realism Debates

Feb
2
Thu
Nabina Liebow – But Where Are You Really From? Responding to Racial Microaggressions @ Wolff Conference Room, D1103, Albert and Vera List Academic Center
Feb 2 @ 6:00 pm – 8:00 pm

Nabina Liebow, PhD Georgetown University, gives a lecture entitled:

 “But Where Are You Really From?” Responding to Racial Microaggressions

Liebow will argue that the particular structure of racial microaggressions makes the potential social cost of confronting microaggressors high for microagressees; this is part of what makes patterns of racial microaggressions difficult to disrupt. This difficulty helps make racial microaggressions effective tools for sustaining racial oppression.

Feb
9
Thu
Camisha Russell – I Just Want Children Like Me: Race as a Proxy in American Kinship. @ Wolff Conference Room, D1103, Albert and Vera List Academic Center
Feb 9 @ 6:00 pm – 8:00 pm

In this talk, Professor Russell describes how notions of race have organized the American concept of kinship. She argues that this history of the association of race and kinship in the American imaginary allows race to serve as a proxy for kinship in the contemporary fertility clinic.

Camisha Russell received her PhD in Philosophy from Penn State University in 2013. Her first book, The Assisted Reproduction of Race: Thinking Through Race as a Reproductive Technology, forthcoming with Indiana University Press, explores the role of race and racial identity in the ideas and practices surrounding assisted reproductive technologies. Her primary research and teaching interests are in Critical Philosophy of Race, Feminist Philosophy, and Bioethics. Her publications include “Black American Sexuality and the Repressive Hypothesis: Reading Patricia Hill Collins with Michel Foucault” in Convergences: Black Women & Continental Philosophy, “Questions of Race in Bioethics: Deceit, Disregard, Disparity, and the Work of Decentering” in Philosophy Compass, and “The Race Idea in Reproductive Technologies: Beyond Epistemic Scientism and Technological Mastery” in the Journal of Bioethical Inquiry. She has held both a Charlotte W. Newcombe Doctoral Dissertation Fellowship (2012-13) and a University of California President’s Postdoctoral Fellowship (2013-15). Before attending graduate school, she served as a Peace Corps Volunteer for the Girls’ Education and Empowerment program in Togo, West Africa. She is currently a Riley Scholar-in-Residence in the Philosophy Department at Colorado College.

Sep
28
Thu
The Affability of the Normative, Todd May @ Wolff Conference Room, D1103
Sep 28 @ 6:00 pm – 8:00 pm

Todd May is Class of 1941 Memorial Professor of the Humanities at Clemson University.  He is the author of fourteen books of philosophy, most recently A Fragile Life and A Significant Life, both from University of Chicago Press.

Abstract:

Ineffability is in the air these days, and has been for some time. In many areas of Continental philosophy, it is the very ethos in which thought is conducted. I argue that the realm of the normative, at least, is deeply linguistic. In contrast to the attempt of some thinkers to remove the normative from the conceptual or the linguistic, I try to show that it is central to normativity to have a linguistic reference, a reference rooted precisely in the sense of conceptual categories that so concern thinkers of the ineffable.

Presented by The New School for Social Research (NSSR) Philosophy Department.

Feb
26
Mon
Making Our Thoughts Clear: The Role of Language in the Pursuit of Self-Knowledge – Eli Alshanetsky (Stanford) @ Orozco Room, A712
Feb 26 @ 6:00 pm – 8:00 pm

We often make our thoughts clear to ourselves in the process of putting them into words. In this lecture I introduce a new puzzle about this process—one that’s reminiscent of the famous paradox about inquiry in Plato’s Meno. The puzzle is that, on the one hand, coming to know what we’re thinking seems to require finding words that would express our thought; yet, on the other hand, finding such words seems to require already knowing what we’re thinking.

I consider and reject two possible solutions to this puzzle. The first solution denies that language contributes to our knowledge of our thoughts. The second solution denies that we have a fully formed thought that we try to articulate in the first place. The failure of these solutions points to a positive account of the role of language in the pursuit of self-knowledge, on which language mediates between two different “formats” or modes of thought. Among the broader implications of this account is a richer conception of the aims and methods of philosophy.

Sep
20
Thu
Serene J. Khader on “Towards a Decolonial Feminist Universalism” @ Wolff Conference Room, D1103
Sep 20 @ 6:00 pm – 8:00 pm

I argue we can make progress in three contemporary debates about transnational feminisms by a) clarifying the normative commitments central to feminism and b) rethinking the role of normative ideals in transnational political practices. These debates concern the purported tension between taking seriously critiques of Western imperialism and retaining feminism’s status as a normative doctrine. Understanding feminism as opposition to sexist oppression unthethers feminism from commitments to controversial forms of individualism and antitraditionalism. Understanding transnational feminist praxis as a practice of nonideal justice-enhancement permits a universalist feminist position that is not monist about the endpoint of gender justice or the strategies that should be taken to achieve it.

Oct
11
Thu
Aaron James Wendland on “’Authenticity, Truth, and Cultural Transformation: A Critical Reading of John Haugeland’s Heidegger” @ Wolff Conference Room, D1103
Oct 11 @ 6:00 pm – 8:00 pm

Abstract: On the standard reading, Heidegger’s account of authenticity in Being and Time amounts to an existentialist theory of human freedom. Against this interpretation, John Haugeland reads Heidegger’s account of authenticity as a crucial feature of Heidegger’s fundamental ontology: i.e., Heidegger’s attempt to determine the meaning of being via an analysis of human beings. Haugeland’s argument is based on the notion that taking responsibility for our existence entails getting the being of entities right. Specifically, Haugeland says that our ability to choose allows us to question and test the disclosure of being through which entities are intelligible to us against the entities themselves, and he adds that taking responsibility for our existence involves transforming our disclosure of being when it fails to meet the truth test. Although I agree that Heidegger’s existentialism is a crucial feature of his fundamental ontology, I argue that the details of Haugeland’s interpretation are inconsistent. My objection is that if, as Haugeland claims, entities are only intelligible via disclosures of being, then it is incoherent for Haugeland to say that entities themselves can serve as intelligible standard against which disclosures can be truth-tested or transformed. Finally, I offer an alternative to Haugeland’s truth-based take on authenticity and cultural transformation via an ends-based onto-methodological interpretation of Heidegger and Kuhn. Here I argue that the ends pursed by a specific community determine both the meaning of being and the movement of human history.

Bio: Aaron James Wendland completed his PhD at Somerville College, Oxford and he is currently Assistant Professor of Philosophy at the HSE’s Center for Advanced Studies in Moscow. Aaron is the co-editor of Wittgenstein and Heidegger (Routledge, 2013) and Heidegger on Technology (Routledge, 2018), and he has written scholarly articles on Kant, Hegel, Husserl, Heidegger, Levinas, Derrida, and Kuhn. Aaron has also published several pieces of popular philosophy in The New York TimesPublic Seminar, and The Los Angeles Review of Books. He currents serves as an art critic for The Moscow Times and Dialogue of Arts. And as of January 2019, Aaron will be the Director of the Center for Philosophy and Visual Arts at the Moscow Museum of Modern Art.

Feb
4
Mon
Feminism for the 99% and the New Feminist Wave @ Wolff Conference Room, D1103
Feb 4 @ 4:00 pm – 8:00 pm

In preparation for the next transnational feminist strike on March 8th, we will have a discussion about the new feminist wave with some of its protagonists and organizers from around the world and a conversation around Arruzza, Bhattacharya, Fraser, “Feminism for the 99%. A Manifesto” (Verso 2019).

Program:

4:00 p.m.:  Welcome and Opening Remarks: William Milberg (Director of the Heilbroner Center for Capitalist Studies) and Cinzia Arruzza (NSSR)

4:15–6:00 p.m.: The New Feminist Wave

Speakers:

  • Ximena Bustamante (IWS)
  • Julia Cámara (National Coordination 8M, Spain)
  • Luci Cavallero (Ni Una Menos, Argentina)
  • Mayra Cotta De Souza (NSSR)
  • Chair: Meg Beyer (IWS and NSSR)

6:00–6:15 p.m.: Break

6:15–8:00 p.m.: Feminism for the 99%. A Manifesto

Speakers:

  • Cinzia Arruzza
  • Tithi Bhattacharya
  • Nancy Fraser
  • Barbara Smith (founder of the Combahee River Collective)
  • Chair: Michelle O’Brien (IWS)

Cosponsored by Robert L. Heilbroner Center for Capitalism Studies (New School for Social Research) and International Women’s Strike