The Logic and Metaphysics Workshop will be meeting on Mondays from 4:15 to 6:15 unless otherwise indicated. Talks will be in-person only at the CUNY Graduate Center (Room 4419). The provisional schedule is as follows:
Sep 2. NO MEETING
Sep 9. Hartry Field (NYU)
Sep 16. Mel Fitting (CUNY)
Sep 23. Rohit Parikh (CUNY)
Sep 30. Roundtable Discussion and Dinner celebrating the 10th Anniversary of the Workshop (details TBA)
Oct 7. Cian Dorr (NYU)
Oct 14. NO MEETING
Oct 21. Thomas M. Ferguson (Rensselaer)
Oct 28. Sam Burns (Columbia)
Nov 4. Elena Ficara (Paderborn)
Nov 11. Friederike Moltmann (CNRS)
Nov 18. Damiano Costa (Lugano)
Nov 25. Damian Szmuc (Buenos Aires)
Dec 2. ?
Dec 9. ?
The Logic and Metaphysics Workshop will be meeting on Mondays from 4:15 to 6:15 unless otherwise indicated. Talks will be in-person only at the CUNY Graduate Center (Room 4419). The provisional schedule is as follows:
Sep 2. NO MEETING
Sep 9. Hartry Field (NYU)
Sep 16. Mel Fitting (CUNY)
Sep 23. Rohit Parikh (CUNY)
Sep 30. Roundtable Discussion and Dinner celebrating the 10th Anniversary of the Workshop (details TBA)
Oct 7. Cian Dorr (NYU)
Oct 14. NO MEETING
Oct 21. Thomas M. Ferguson (Rensselaer)
Oct 28. Sam Burns (Columbia)
Nov 4. Elena Ficara (Paderborn)
Nov 11. Friederike Moltmann (CNRS)
Nov 18. Damiano Costa (Lugano)
Nov 25. Damian Szmuc (Buenos Aires)
Dec 2. ?
Dec 9. ?
Contact the Center for Ethics Education if interested in attending
The Logic and Metaphysics Workshop will be meeting on Mondays from 4:15 to 6:15 unless otherwise indicated. Talks will be in-person only at the CUNY Graduate Center (Room 4419). The provisional schedule is as follows:
Sep 2. NO MEETING
Sep 9. Hartry Field (NYU)
Sep 16. Mel Fitting (CUNY)
Sep 23. Rohit Parikh (CUNY)
Sep 30. Roundtable Discussion and Dinner celebrating the 10th Anniversary of the Workshop (details TBA)
Oct 7. Cian Dorr (NYU)
Oct 14. NO MEETING
Oct 21. Thomas M. Ferguson (Rensselaer)
Oct 28. Sam Burns (Columbia)
Nov 4. Elena Ficara (Paderborn)
Nov 11. Friederike Moltmann (CNRS)
Nov 18. Damiano Costa (Lugano)
Nov 25. Damian Szmuc (Buenos Aires)
Dec 2. ?
Dec 9. ?
The Logic and Metaphysics Workshop will be meeting on Mondays from 4:15 to 6:15 unless otherwise indicated. Talks will be in-person only at the CUNY Graduate Center (Room 4419). The provisional schedule is as follows:
Sep 2. NO MEETING
Sep 9. Hartry Field (NYU)
Sep 16. Mel Fitting (CUNY)
Sep 23. Rohit Parikh (CUNY)
Sep 30. Roundtable Discussion and Dinner celebrating the 10th Anniversary of the Workshop (details TBA)
Oct 7. Cian Dorr (NYU)
Oct 14. NO MEETING
Oct 21. Thomas M. Ferguson (Rensselaer)
Oct 28. Sam Burns (Columbia)
Nov 4. Elena Ficara (Paderborn)
Nov 11. Friederike Moltmann (CNRS)
Nov 18. Damiano Costa (Lugano)
Nov 25. Damian Szmuc (Buenos Aires)
Dec 2. ?
Dec 9. ?
The Saul Kripke Center is pleased to announce that Kit Fine (Silver Professor and University Professor of Philosophy and Mathematics at NYU) will deliver the 6th Saul Kripke Lecture on October 31st, 2024, from 4:00 to 6:30 pm. The talk is free and open to all, and will be held in-person only at the CUNY Graduate Center (Room C198).
Title: The Myth of the Ungiven
Abstract: The notion of a borderline case has been thought to be central to our understanding of vagueness. I shall argue that there is no intelligible notion that can play this role and that an alternative framework for understanding vagueness needs to be found.
The Logic and Metaphysics Workshop will be meeting on Mondays from 4:15 to 6:15 unless otherwise indicated. Talks will be in-person only at the CUNY Graduate Center (Room 4419). The provisional schedule is as follows:
Sep 2. NO MEETING
Sep 9. Hartry Field (NYU)
Sep 16. Mel Fitting (CUNY)
Sep 23. Rohit Parikh (CUNY)
Sep 30. Roundtable Discussion and Dinner celebrating the 10th Anniversary of the Workshop (details TBA)
Oct 7. Cian Dorr (NYU)
Oct 14. NO MEETING
Oct 21. Thomas M. Ferguson (Rensselaer)
Oct 28. Sam Burns (Columbia)
Nov 4. Elena Ficara (Paderborn)
Nov 11. Friederike Moltmann (CNRS)
Nov 18. Damiano Costa (Lugano)
Nov 25. Damian Szmuc (Buenos Aires)
Dec 2. ?
Dec 9. ?
The Logic and Metaphysics Workshop will be meeting on Mondays from 4:15 to 6:15 unless otherwise indicated. Talks will be in-person only at the CUNY Graduate Center (Room 4419). The provisional schedule is as follows:
Sep 2. NO MEETING
Sep 9. Hartry Field (NYU)
Sep 16. Mel Fitting (CUNY)
Sep 23. Rohit Parikh (CUNY)
Sep 30. Roundtable Discussion and Dinner celebrating the 10th Anniversary of the Workshop (details TBA)
Oct 7. Cian Dorr (NYU)
Oct 14. NO MEETING
Oct 21. Thomas M. Ferguson (Rensselaer)
Oct 28. Sam Burns (Columbia)
Nov 4. Elena Ficara (Paderborn)
Nov 11. Friederike Moltmann (CNRS)
Nov 18. Damiano Costa (Lugano)
Nov 25. Damian Szmuc (Buenos Aires)
Dec 2. ?
Dec 9. ?
The Logic and Metaphysics Workshop will be meeting on Mondays from 4:15 to 6:15 unless otherwise indicated. Talks will be in-person only at the CUNY Graduate Center (Room 4419). The provisional schedule is as follows:
Sep 2. NO MEETING
Sep 9. Hartry Field (NYU)
Sep 16. Mel Fitting (CUNY)
Sep 23. Rohit Parikh (CUNY)
Sep 30. Roundtable Discussion and Dinner celebrating the 10th Anniversary of the Workshop (details TBA)
Oct 7. Cian Dorr (NYU)
Oct 14. NO MEETING
Oct 21. Thomas M. Ferguson (Rensselaer)
Oct 28. Sam Burns (Columbia)
Nov 4. Elena Ficara (Paderborn)
Nov 11. Friederike Moltmann (CNRS)
Nov 18. Damiano Costa (Lugano)
Nov 25. Damian Szmuc (Buenos Aires)
Dec 2. ?
Dec 9. ?
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.