• CEPPA Talk (in-person & online) – Daniela Dover (UCLA)

    Edgecliffe 104

    Title: The Democratic Soul in Plato and Whitman Abstract: In Books II-IV of the Republic, Plato famously proposes an analogy between the constitution of the Greek city-state and the constitution of the human soul. The methodological assumption that underlies the architecture of the Republic is that philosophical questions about topics that we might today group under the heading ... Read more

  • CEPPA Talk (in-person & online) – Tom Sinclair (Oxford)

    Edgecliffe 104

    Title: Hypocrisy as Evasion Abstract: Hypocrites attract moral condemnation and are widely thought to lack standing to criticise others. This paper argues against attempts to explain this that appeal to moral conditions on blaming and notions of moral authority, proposing instead an account based on a conception of moral interactions as fundamentally dialogical in character. According to ... Read more

  • CEPPA Talk (in-person & online) – Katherine Snow (Princeton)

    Edgecliffe G03 The Scores, St Salvator's Quad

    Title: Revisiting the Spinoza Controversy in an age of Environmental Crisis Abstract: Modern scientific naturalism arguably tries to ontologically describe or account for the entirety of the natural world using necessity. Scientific naturalism presents logical causal necessity as constituting how nature "makes" things exist, and it presents necessity in the more general or abstract sense ... Read more

  • Moral Philosophy Reading Group

    Moral Philosophy Reading Group

    Edgecliffe G03 The Scores, St Salvator's Quad

    Reading: 'Being Good and Being Good-For-Someone: Why Consequentialism Must Be Wrong' Location: hybrid On this occasion, the paper will be distributed separately. Please email Joel Joseph if you'd like a copy.

  • CEPPA Talk (online) – Christine Korsgaard (Harvard University)

    Edgecliffe 104

    Title: The Incomparable Value of the Individual Abstract: Kant believed that every human being should be treated as an end in itself. In the Groundwork, Kant explains many of our duties by arguing that their violation would involve treating a human being as a mere means. But we cannot explain all of our duties that way. Nor ... Read more