Sep
24
Thu
Ursula Coope (Oxford University) “Aristotle on Productive Understanding and Completeness” @ Philosophy Hall Room 716
Sep 24 @ 4:10 pm – 6:00 pm

Fall 2015 Series

Thursday, September 24, 2015
Ursula Coope (Oxford University)
“Aristotle on Productive Understanding and Completeness”
4:10 PM – 6:00 PM, Philosophy Hall 716
Reception to follow

Thursday, October 1, 2015
Rahel Jaeggi (Humboldt University)
Title TBA
4:10 PM – 6:00 PM, Philosophy Hall 716
Reception to follow

Thursday, October 29, 2015
Declan Smithies (Ohio State University)
Title TBA
4:10 PM – 6:00 PM, Philosophy Hall 716
Reception to follow

Thursday, November 19, 2015
Mark Wilson (Pittsburgh University)
Title TBA
4:10 PM – 6:00 PM, Philosophy Hall 716
Reception to follow

 

Feb
1
Fri
Finding the Way to Truth: Sources, History, and Impact of the Meditative Tradition @ Buell Hall, Columbia U
Feb 1 – Feb 2 all-day

How is the ancient exhortation to “know thyself” related to consolation, virtue, and the study of nature? How did the commitment to self-knowledge shift over the centuries in writings by Islamic, Jewish, Christian, and early modern natural philosophers? How did medieval women contribute to modern notions of self, self-knowledge, and knowledge of nature? This conference explores the meditative “reflective methodology” from its ancient roots, through medieval Christian, Muslim, and Jewish traditions to the so-called “new” methodologies of early modern science. Speakers include Souleymane Bachir Diagne, Pierre Force, Clémence Boulouque, Christia Mercer, and Pamela Smith.

Points of focus will be: (1) the relation between the ancient imperative to “know thyself” and medieval concerns to reflect on one’s self as a means to find ultimate truths; (2) the meditative genre as it developed from Augustine’s Confessions through Christian and Islamic spiritual exercises to late medieval Christian meditations and early modern kabbalist writings; (3) the continuity between medieval meditations and the reflective methodology of early modern science; and (4) the meditative genre’s afterlife in Freud, Foucault, Arendt, and contemporary science.

Conference co-sponsored by the Center for New Narratives in Philosophy, the Institute for Social and Economic Research and Policy, the Departments of Philosophy, French, English and Comparative Literature and the Maison Française

To download a PDF about this event click here.