Sun | Mon | Tue | Wed | Thu | Fri | Sat |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Interdisciplinary Conference on “#MeToo and Epistemic Injustice”
Interdisciplinary Conference on “#MeToo and Epistemic Injustice”
@ Roosevelt House
Oct 5 all-day
The CUNY Graduate Center Advanced Research Collaborative (ARC), the Center for the Humanities, and the Philosophy Program present an interdisciplinary conference on: “#MeToo and Epistemic Injustice” Over the past year, the #MeToo movement has forced into national consciousness what has long been an underground truth known by women: the horrifying pervasiveness of sexual harassment and assault as routine everyday occurrences, largely unpunished. How can one explain the resistance there has traditionally been, as recently brought[...]
|
Interdisciplinary Conference on “#MeToo and Epistemic Injustice”
Interdisciplinary Conference on “#MeToo and Epistemic Injustice”
@ Skylight Room (9100), CUNY Graduate Center
Oct 6 all-day
The CUNY Graduate Center Advanced Research Collaborative (ARC), the Center for the Humanities, and the Philosophy Program present an interdisciplinary conference on: “#MeToo and Epistemic Injustice” Over the past year, the #MeToo movement has forced into national consciousness what has long been an underground truth known by women: the horrifying pervasiveness of sexual harassment and assault as routine everyday occurrences, largely unpunished. How can one explain the resistance there has traditionally been, as recently brought[...]
|
|||||
Jill North, The Direction of Time
3:00 pm
Jill North, The Direction of Time
@ Rutgers Philosophy Dept
Oct 11 @ 3:00 pm – 5:00 pm
Direction of Time Location Rutgers Philosophy Department, 106 Somerset St, New Brunswick, NJ 08901, USA
|
||||||
Alison Fernandes: Three Accounts of Laws and Time
4:00 pm
Alison Fernandes: Three Accounts of Laws and Time
@ NYU Professional Studies, room 125
Oct 24 @ 4:00 pm – 6:00 pm
Loewer distinguishes two approaches to laws and time: Humean accounts, which deny primitive modality and explain temporal asymmetries in scientific terms, and non-Humean accounts that take temporal asymmetry and modality to be metaphysically fundamental. I’ll argue that Loewer neglects an important third approach: deny metaphysical claims about fundamentality, and explain temporal asymmetries as well as the function of modal entities in scientific terms. This pragmatist approach provides a clear ontology to science, and, and unlike[...]
|
||||||
Subscribe to filtered calendar