Philosophy Colloquium – Attentional Injustice
George Sher, Rice University, 3:30 – 5:30 PM
George Sher, Rice University, 3:30 – 5:30 PM
Renewing Our Civic Culture is an initiative designed to demonstrate how respectful dialogue across differing perspectives can help to bridge divides, reduce affective polarization, and foster empathy. “The Virtues of Civil Discourse” Lecture and Dinner Friday, October 17, 4:00pm–7:30pm, 51 …
Agnes Callard, University of Chicago, 3:30 - 5:30 PM
Philosophy Colloquium - TBA November 14 @ 4:00 PM- 5:30 PM Curtin Hall 175 Blake Roeber, University of Notre Dame
Marilie Coetsee, Hope College, 4:00 – 6:00 PM
John Proios, University of Chicago Date: March 6th 2026 Location: MIT 361 Talk starts at 4:00 PM What preserves the character of a society? Conversely, what makes one kind of society change into another kind? Plato addresses both of these …
Philosophy As a Way of Life March 12 7:00 PM Merrill Hall 131 We will have a conversation with JoAnne Potter on philosophy as a way of life and how philosophy can help us to live and age with purpose. …
Match 13, Alix Cohen, Notre Dame Title of the talk: Kant’s ethical pluralism Location: CRT 175 Talk starts at 3:30 PM
Nonfiction Is Not (Just) to Be Believed Philosophers of fiction routinely rely on an unexamined contrast class: nonfiction. The dominant assumption is that nonfiction is discourse meant to be believed (while fiction is discourse meant to be imagined or make-believed). …
May 8 Time and place: TBD Antonia Lolordo, University of Virginia