Sep
20
Fri
Kant, Schiller, Beethoven: Enlightenment Connections between Aesthetics, Revolution, and Religion. Karl Ameriks (Notre Dame) @ New School
Sep 20 @ 5:00 pm – 7:00 pm

With response by John Hare (Yale)

Presented by the NY German Idealism Workshop.

nygermanidealism@gmail.com

Oct
17
Thu
“Can Democracy Survive AI?” (Laura Specker Sullivan, Mathias Risse, Mekela Panditharatne) @ Fordham Rose Hill
Oct 17 @ 4:30 pm – 6:00 pm

Contact the Center for Ethics Education if interested in attending

Nov
1
Fri
Thoughts on Kant’s First Book, Which is Presumed to Have Been a Failure. Peter Fenves (Northwestern) @ New School
Nov 1 @ 4:30 pm – 6:30 pm

With response by Susan Shell (Boston)

Presented by the NY German Idealism Workshop.

nygermanidealism@gmail.com

Nov
14
Thu
Roy Ben-Shai, “Critique of Critical Reason” @ Wolff Conference Rm D1103
Nov 14 @ 6:00 pm – 8:00 pm

What is critique? According to the Kantian tradition, it is an investigation of the transcendental conditions for the possibility of thinking and experience. While later critics shifted the focus to material conditions, core metaphysical commitments and procedures of critique remained unchanged. Critique of Critique (Stanford UP, 2023), the subject of this talk, probes critique as an orientation of thought through its historical manifestations from Plato to the Frankfurt school and present-day critical theory. In the process, it asks us to consider what critical thinking is and whether it can assume orientations other than critique.

Bio: Roy Ben-Shai is an Associate Professor of Philosophy at Sarah Lawrence College. His recently published book, Critique of Critique (Stanford University Press, 2023), is the first volume in a trilogy on the concept of “orientation” in critical thought. He is currently working on the second volume, Emancipatory Thinking, or the Art of Thinking Otherwise. He is an NSSR alum (MA Philosophy 2005, PhD Philosophy 2012).

Nov
21
Thu
Kris Sealey, “A Caribbean Poetics of Forgetting” @ Wolff Conference Rm D1103
Nov 21 @ 6:00 pm – 8:00 pm

I use the conceptual umbrella – A Caribbean Poetics of Forgetting – to think through the temporal and spatial aspects of world-making as it arises out of the Caribbean diaspora. The ‘forgetting’ in this ethics of forgetting is not a disavowal of multiple axes of violence that found this diaspora. Rather, I attempt to use an ethics of forgetting to name Caribbean practices of clearing that condition something like a Kierkegaardian leap of faith – into a future; toward the miracle work of making roots in blood-soil; and for the work of making a way out of fragmented history/ruptured time. In the main, this exploration is grounded in Dionne Brand’s poetic cartography (in Map to the Door of No Return), and Edouard Glissant’s twinned account of the oral and the opaque (in Poetics of Relation and Caribbean Discourse).

Bio: Kris F Sealey is Professor of Philosophy at Penn State University. She graduated from Spelman College in 2001 with a B.Sc. in Mathematics, and received both her M.A. and Ph.D. in Philosophy from The University of Memphis. Dr. Sealey served as the book review editor of the Journal of French and Francophone Philosophy from 2011 – 2022. From 2018 – 2021, she also directed PIKSI-Rock (Philosophy in an Inclusive Key Summer Institute), a summer immersion experience at Penn State for under-represented undergraduate students with an interest in pursuing a doctorate in philosophy. Dr. Sealey’s areas of research include Continental Philosophy, Critical Philosophy of Race, Caribbean Philosophy, and decolonial theory. Her first book, Moments of Disruption: Levinas, Sartre and the Question of Transcendence, was published in December 2013 with SUNY Press. Her second book, Creolizing the Nation, published in September 2020 with Northwestern University Press, was awarded the Guillén Batista book award by the Caribbean Philosophical Association in 2022.

May
10
Sat
NYU-Princeton Workshop on Kant, Animals, and the Environment @ NYU Philosophy Dept.
May 10 – May 11 all-day