18 de março de 2012

2 de março de 2012

Coordination and Disagreement across Perspectives























Coordination and Disagreement across Perspectives

Workshop

Lisbon, 10-12 September 2012


The problem of coordination (and lack thereof) across perspectives manifests itself in many guises: in communication, lying and misleading, in agreements and disagreements, in shared worlds and group actions, and in competition.

This networking event brings together researchers from three collaborative research projects (CCCOM, DRUST and NormCon) within the EUROCORES EuroUnderstanding Programme.

The workshop will be organized by the LanCog Group of the Philosophy Centre of the University of Lisbon.

It will be integrated with a graduate workshop (OFA8), locally organized by early career researchers. There will be 6 slots for graduate students, or researchers who have obtained their PhDs within the last 2 years, to present their work. A call for abstracts is now underway.


http://coordinationdisagreement.weebly.com/index.html

Oficina de Filosofia Analítica 8























Graduate Workshop - Oficina de Filosofia Analítica 8


The Oficina de Filosofia Analítica -- OFA is a graduate workshop that has been co-organized by the Portuguese Philosophy Society (SPF) and the Portuguese Society for Analytic Philosophy (SPFA) until now. This is the first time that the workshop is organized by the LanCog group, although still with the support of both societies.


It is also the first time that an international call for abstracts will be made.
This edition of OFA, its eight, is particularly special, as it is integrated in the workshop Coordination and Disagreement across Perspectives -- a networking activity of the EUROCORES EuroUnderstanding Programme. We believe that this will provide a good opportunity for graduate students and recent post-docs to participate in the EuroUnderstanding workshop, and for the senior researchers to attend the graduate workshop.

There will be 6 slots for graduate students, or researchers who have obtained their PhDs within the last 2 years, to present their work.
Call for abstracts!!!


This call for abstracts is directed at graduate students and researchers who have obtained their PhDs within the last 2 years. All submitted abstracts must be in English or Portuguese, and must be on philosophy with no further restrictions as regards topics or areas. Final papers will be presented at the workshop (30 minutes) followed by a commentary (10 minutes) and an open discussion (35 minutes). There are two ways of participating in the workshop, as a speaker or as a commentator.



Contributed papers

Authors should send an abstract of 1500 words (where the thesis defended and the arguments backing them up should be clearly stated) to < ofa8workshop AT gmail.com >. Abstracts should be arranged for blind refereeing. Information about authors should be indicated on a separate title page including title of the paper, author’s full name, e-mail address and affiliation. The selection will be carried out by the members of our scientific committee. Authors may also express their interest to participate as commentators.



Commentators

Those interested in participating as commentators should send their data (name, e- mail address, affiliation and a short CV) to < ofa8workshop AT gmail.com >. A description of the main areas of philosophy they are interested in will also be required.



Deadlines

Submitted abstracts will be accepted until the 30th of April 2012. The result of the selection process will be communicated to the authors by the end of June 2012. Speakers must send the final version of their papers before the 30th of July 2012.



Funding

Meals (lunch, coffee breaks and one social dinner) are covered for speakers at OFA8. We have a small budget to help cover accommodation costs. Speakers must pay for their travel expenses themselves.



Scientific Committee

João Branquinho (University of Lisbon)

Daniel Cohnitz (University of Tartu)

Esa Diaz-Leon (University of Manitoba)

Sören Häggqvist (University of Stockholm)

Jussi Haukijoa (Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Trondheim)

Dan López de Sa (ICREA and University of Barcelona)

Teresa Marques (University of Lisbon)

Peter Pagin (University of Stockholm)

Stefano Predelli (University of Nottingham)

Sonia Roca (University of Stirling)

Sven Rosenkranz (ICREA and University of Barcelona)

Adriana Silva Graça (University of Lisbon)

Pedro Santos (University of Algarve)

Ricardo Santos (University of Évora)

Andreas Stokke (CSMN, University of Oslo)

Isidora Stojanovic (Institut Jean Nicod, Paris)

Célia Teixeira (University of Lisbon)

Josefa Toribio (ICREA and Autonomous University of Barcelona)

Åsa Wikforss (University of Stockholm)


Sponsors

LANCOG (http://www.lancog.com/)

Faculty of Letters, University of Lisbon (http://www.fl.ul.pt/)

Portuguese Philosophy Society (http://www.spfil.pt/)

OFA takes place under the auspices of the Portuguese Society for Analytic Philosophy.

European Science Foundation, EUROCORES Programme EuroUnderstanding, (funds from FWF, FWO, DCIR, ETF, CNR, NWO, RCN, MNiSW, FCT, VR).

http://coordinationdisagreement.weebly.com/ofa8.html

29 de fevereiro de 2012

Disvalue in the Natural World: Should We Intervene to Reduce Animal Suffering in Nature?


Oscar Horta
Universidade de Santiago de Compostela

Faculdade de Letras da Universidade de Lisboa
2 de Março – 14:30
Sala Mattos Romão
Entrada Livre – Lotação Limitada

ABSTRACT:
Many people think nonhuman animals live great lives in the wild.
However, this view is wrong. Population dynamics teach us that the
overwhelming majority of the animals that come to existence in nature
die shortly after. Those deaths are often painful. Furthermore, those
who survive often suffer and die from malnutrition, disease,
accidents, harsh weather conditions, fear, etc., or are killed by
predators or parasites. This gives us a strong reason to intervene in
nature to reduce the harms animals suffer. We may reject this if we
think (i) that only human interests count; (ii) that alleged
impersonal values such as environmental ideals count for more than the
interests of sentient beings; or (iii) that intervention in nature
cannot succeed. However, there are powerful arguments to reject all
these claims. If they are right, there is a strong case for
intervention in nature for the sake of nonhuman animals. This also
entails that if the interests of individuals count significantly
beyond what speciesist anthropocentric views assume, we must defend
the interests of nonhuman animals over environmentalist concerns.

Organização
Centro de Filosofia da Universidade de Lisboa
Ética, Política e Ambiente

Filosofia da Acção e dos Valores

26 de fevereiro de 2012

L'Imagination selon Husserl



Seminário Permanente de Fenomenologia

Oitava Sessão

Conferência de Rudolf Bernet
L´Imagination selon Husserl

Faculdade de Letras da Universidade de Lisboa
Departamento de Filosofia  - Sala Mattos Romão

Dia 2 de Março – 11 horas