From arts.cave at mq.edu.au Mon Jul 25 17:36:32 2016 From: arts.cave at mq.edu.au (Centre for Agency, Values, and Ethics) Date: Mon, 25 Jul 2016 07:36:32 +0000 Subject: [SydPhil] CAVE/CCD Workshop: Social Cognition and Cultural Evolution - 2 August, Macquarie University Message-ID: Hi all, The next CAVE/CCD workshop is on Tuesday 2 August. All are welcome and it is free, but please register with Richard for catering purposes: richard.menary at mq.edu.au As always, you can find information on our events page or on our Facebook page. Social Cognition and Cultural Evolution On the second of August, the Macquarie University Research Centre for Agency, Values and Ethics (CAVE) and the Centre for Cognition and its Disorders at Macquarie University (CCD) are holding a one day workshop on Social Cognition and Cultural Evolution with Professor Cecilia Heyes (Oxford) to deliver the keynote address: "The Cultural Evolution of Mindreading". The workshop will include an interdisciplinary line up of speakers from Philosophy and Psychology. Date: Tuesday 2 August 2016 Time: 09.30 - 18.00 Venue: MGSM room 267 (F23 on the map) Program: 09.30 - 10.00: Coffee and arrival 10.00 - 11.30: Cecilia Heyes (Oxford) "The Cultural Evolution of Mindreading" 11.30 - 12.30: Richard Menary (Macquarie) "Is the Enculturation of Social Cognition More Like Mathematics or Reading?" 12.30 - 13.30: Lunch 13.30 - 14.30: Penny Van Bergen (Macquarie) "Perspective Taking in Children and Families: Links to Reminiscing" 14.30 - 15.30: Rachael Brown (ANU) "Going One Step Further: Extending Heyes' Account of Mindreading" 15.30 - 16:00: Coffee 16.00 - 17.00: Ron Planer (ANU) "Opacity of Mind Theory, Communication, and Coordination: The Case of the Yolngu" 17.00 - 18.00: Max Coltheart (Macquarie) "Confabulation and Conversation" About CAVE Visitor Cecilia Heyes (Oxford): Cecilia Heyes' work concerns the evolution of cognition. It explores the ways in which natural selection, learning, developmental, and cultural processes combine to produce the mature cognitive abilities found in adult humans. She is especially interested in social cognition. Most of her current projects examine the possibility that the neurocognitive mechanisms enabling cultural inheritance - social learning, imitation, mirror neurons, mind reading, etc - are themselves produces of cultural evolution. Macquarie University Research Centre for Agency, Values and Ethics (CAVE) Department of Philosophy Macquarie University Sydney, NSW 2109, Australia CAVE website: mq.edu.au/cave www.facebook.com/MQCAVE -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From arts.cave at mq.edu.au Tue Jul 26 11:09:06 2016 From: arts.cave at mq.edu.au (Centre for Agency, Values, and Ethics) Date: Tue, 26 Jul 2016 01:09:06 +0000 Subject: [SydPhil] Invitation to film screening with panel discussion featuring Wendy Rogers Message-ID: Hi all, You are invited to a film screening of the Australian premier for the award-winning documentary, Hard to Believe, which is about organ harvesting in China. It's being shown on two nights (NEXT WEEK), and will be followed by a panel discussion which will include CAVE member Wendy Rogers. There will also be a Q&A. IT'S HAPPENED BEFORE: Governments killing their own citizens for their political or spiritual beliefs. But it's never happened like this. Hard To Believe examines the issue of forced live organ harvesting from Chinese prisoners of conscience, and the response - or lack of it - around the world. This documentary is extremely important for those involved in organ donation and transplantation, human rights, healthcare, ethics and the law. The credentials of the interviewed experts are impeccable. - Journal of Bioethical Inquiry Screening 1: Date: Wed 3rd August Time: 18:45 Venue: Event Cinemas, 525 George Street, Sydney Cost: $15 Registration link: www.hardtobelievesydney.eventbrite.com.au Screening 2: Date: Thurs 4th August Time: 17:30 Venue: NSW Parliament House, Theatrette, 6 Macquarie Street, Sydney Cost: $15 Registration link: www.hardtobelievesydney2.eventbrite.com.au Ticket enquiries: rsvp at unseen.is More information in the attached PDF or on the Hard To Believe website. About Wendy Rogers (FRACGP, PhD): Prof. Rogers is a Professor of Clinical Ethics and Deputy Director of the Macquarie University Research Centre for Agency, Values, and Ethics. She has a long-standing interest in the ethics of organ donation and transplantation. While a member of the Australian Health Ethics Committee (2003-2006), she served as deputy chair of the working party responsible for developing the National Health and Medical Research Council's guidelines for organ and tissue donation. She also served on working parties developing national guidance on donation after circulatory death. Her current research interests include organ donation, research ethics, ethics of surgical practice, and overdiagnosis. Wendy's work is widely published in international journals and she is the co-editor of a recent collection on Vulnerability (published by Oxford University Press). Professor Rogers recently spoke at the Scottish Parliament on a panel addressing the issue of forced organ harvesting in China. Macquarie University Research Centre for Agency, Values and Ethics (CAVE) Department of Philosophy Macquarie University Sydney, NSW 2109, Australia CAVE website: mq.edu.au/cave www.facebook.com/MQCAVE -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: Invitation_HardToBelieve_PremiereSydney_2016_emailV10.pdf Type: application/force-download Size: 287714 bytes Desc: Invitation_HardToBelieve_PremiereSydney_2016_emailV10.pdf URL: From calendar-notification at google.com Tue Jul 26 12:59:59 2016 From: calendar-notification at google.com (Google Calendar) Date: Tue, 26 Jul 2016 02:59:59 +0000 Subject: [SydPhil] Notification: Jacob Ross @ Wed 27 Jul 2016 13:00 - 15:30 (Seminars) Message-ID: <001a1137428aac6491053881183d@google.com> This is a notification for: Title: Jacob Ross Fuck Knowledge A number of philosophers have argued that knowledge plays a fundamental role in rational justification, and, in particular, that good practical reasoning involves making choices on the basis of what we know. I argue against this Knowledge First approach to the justification of action, and in favor of a Credence First alternative When: Wed 27 Jul 2016 13:00 ? 15:30 Eastern Time - Melbourne, Sydney Where: Muniment Room Calendar: Seminars Who: * Sam Shpall- creator Event details: https://www.google.com/calendar/event?action=VIEW&eid=OTM3Y3ExcDhlcXNkMmlxcnB1OXB0am84ZGcgMm1lN2M3ZnIzb21wbDRyaHZrcG1sYTUzNjhAZw Invitation from Google Calendar: https://www.google.com/calendar/ You are receiving this email at the account sydphil at arts.usyd.edu.au because you are subscribed for notifications on calendar Seminars. To stop receiving these emails, please log in to https://www.google.com/calendar/ and change your notification settings for this calendar. Forwarding this invitation could allow any recipient to modify your RSVP response. Learn more at https://support.google.com/calendar/answer/37135#forwarding -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From calendar-notification at google.com Wed Jul 27 15:00:15 2016 From: calendar-notification at google.com (Google Calendar) Date: Wed, 27 Jul 2016 05:00:15 +0000 Subject: [SydPhil] Notification: Sean Power @ Thu 28 Jul 2016 15:00 - 16:30 (Current Projects) Message-ID: <001a11332bd89e8311053896e4f5@google.com> This is a notification for: Title: Sean Power Doing Things With Time ---------------------------------- Can our philosophical positions on time affect the way we approach other philosophical problems? It might seem as if they can't. Such positions may be conceived as being purely metaphysical and, being metaphysical, independent of our thinking about other issues. Or, at least (as such independence is not obvious), one would need to argue that the metaphysics of time has relevance to other philosophical positions. In this talk, I try to do just that (although with an important qualification). I argue that, on questions about the epistemology, phenomenology and ontology of perception, a difference in our concepts of time (between presentism and eternalism, in particular) can make a difference to the kind of answers that we can have or would desire. As examples of this, I bring in the perception of external things and change. In doing this, I also question the idea that these positions on time (and the debate between them) are best conceived as only falling under metaphysics. When: Thu 28 Jul 2016 15:00 ? 16:30 Eastern Time - Melbourne, Sydney Calendar: Current Projects Who: * Kristie Miller- creator Event details: https://www.google.com/calendar/event?action=VIEW&eid=XzZvcDM2ZDlqNnNvamliYTU4ZDIzNmI5azZzczMwYmEyNm9zM2liYTY3NHE0OGRxMjhsMGo2Y2E2NjAgZmV2MWxkcjRsa2h2MDM2b2U0aW4yanR0ZGdAZw Invitation from Google Calendar: https://www.google.com/calendar/ You are receiving this email at the account sydphil at arts.usyd.edu.au because you are subscribed for notifications on calendar Current Projects. To stop receiving these emails, please log in to https://www.google.com/calendar/ and change your notification settings for this calendar. Forwarding this invitation could allow any recipient to modify your RSVP response. Learn more at https://support.google.com/calendar/answer/37135#forwarding -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From kevin.walton at sydney.edu.au Thu Jul 28 08:23:40 2016 From: kevin.walton at sydney.edu.au (Kevin Walton) Date: Wed, 27 Jul 2016 22:23:40 +0000 Subject: [SydPhil] Reminder: JSI Seminar (28 July): Melanie White Message-ID: <6C5AF2D0C081B74C993E6C0D31E8636A0104EC30F7@ex-mbx-pro-06> Dear all I hope that you will come along at 6pm today to the Faculty Common Room on the fourth floor of Sydney Law School to hear Dr Melanie White from the University of New South Wales speak on "Following Derrida: After the Animal Question and Before Society". You can find out more and register here. If you would like to join us for dinner after the seminar, please let me know. Best wishes, Kev DR KEVIN WALTON Senior Lecturer, Sydney Law School Director, Julius Stone Institute of Jurisprudence THE UNIVERSITY OF SYDNEY T +61 2 9351 0286 E kevin.walton at sydney.edu.au W www.sydney.edu.au/law -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From calendar-notification at google.com Thu Jul 28 13:00:09 2016 From: calendar-notification at google.com (Google Calendar) Date: Thu, 28 Jul 2016 03:00:09 +0000 Subject: [SydPhil] Notification: Elizabeth Anderson @ Wed 3 Aug 2016 13:00 - 14:30 (Seminars) Message-ID: <047d7b6d8c2af435220538a954fc@google.com> This is a notification for: Title: Elizabeth Anderson Egalitarianism: The Long View of HIstory When: Wed 3 Aug 2016 13:00 ? 14:30 Eastern Time - Melbourne, Sydney Where: Sydney Uni, Muniment Room Calendar: Seminars Who: * Sam Shpall- creator Event details: https://www.google.com/calendar/event?action=VIEW&eid=aXQwOTRydGpsaG43OXRvMmFiNjdxNGJhNm8gMm1lN2M3ZnIzb21wbDRyaHZrcG1sYTUzNjhAZw Invitation from Google Calendar: https://www.google.com/calendar/ You are receiving this email at the account sydphil at arts.usyd.edu.au because you are subscribed for notifications on calendar Seminars. To stop receiving these emails, please log in to https://www.google.com/calendar/ and change your notification settings for this calendar. Forwarding this invitation could allow any recipient to modify your RSVP response. Learn more at https://support.google.com/calendar/answer/37135#forwarding -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From m.valaris at unsw.edu.au Fri Jul 29 11:00:57 2016 From: m.valaris at unsw.edu.au (Markos Valaris) Date: Fri, 29 Jul 2016 01:00:57 +0000 Subject: [SydPhil] REMINDER: UNSW Workshop on skill and skilled action, 1 August Message-ID: Hi All, This is a reminder that UNSW will be hosting a 1-day workshop on skill and skilled action on Monday 1 August. Everyone welcome; no registration necessary. The program is below: UNSW Workshop on Skill and Skilled Action 1 August 2016 Morven Brown 310 Speaker Time Title ELLEN FRIDLAND (KING'S COLLEGE LONDON) 9:30 Longer, Shorter, Faster, Stronger: on skill, mindedness, and automaticity BREAK 10:00-10:20 RICHARD MENARY (MACQUARIE UNIVERSITY) 10:20 Mathematical Skill as Enculturated Know-How MARKOS VALARIS (UNSW) 10:50 Acting Skilfully and Acting for Reasons SIMON LUMSDEN (UNSW) 11:20 Second Nature and Normative Change LUNCH BREAK 11:50-13:00 STEPHEN HETHERINGTON (UNSW) 13:00 The Constitutive Skill Within Knowldedge KARYN LAI (UNSW) 13:30 Mastery in the Zhuangzi: What do the skill masters know? BREAK 14:00-14:20 DANIEL HUTTO (UNIVERSITY OF WOLLONGONG) 14:20 Skilled Performance and Intentional Anchors WAYNE CHRISTENSEN (MACQUARIE UNIVERSITY) 14:50 Meshed Control in Skilled Action MICHAELIS MICHAEL (UNSW) 15:20 Skill, Habit, and Action Open discussion 15:50 Markos Valaris Senior Lecturer in Philosophy Associate Editor, Australasian Journal of Philosophy University of New South Wales Phone: +(61) 2 9385 2760 (office) Personal webpage: markosvalaris.net -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From arts.cave at mq.edu.au Mon Jul 25 17:36:32 2016 From: arts.cave at mq.edu.au (Centre for Agency, Values, and Ethics) Date: Mon, 25 Jul 2016 07:36:32 +0000 Subject: [SydPhil] CAVE/CCD Workshop: Social Cognition and Cultural Evolution - 2 August, Macquarie University Message-ID: Hi all, The next CAVE/CCD workshop is on Tuesday 2 August. All are welcome and it is free, but please register with Richard for catering purposes: richard.menary at mq.edu.au As always, you can find information on our events page or on our Facebook page. Social Cognition and Cultural Evolution On the second of August, the Macquarie University Research Centre for Agency, Values and Ethics (CAVE) and the Centre for Cognition and its Disorders at Macquarie University (CCD) are holding a one day workshop on Social Cognition and Cultural Evolution with Professor Cecilia Heyes (Oxford) to deliver the keynote address: "The Cultural Evolution of Mindreading". The workshop will include an interdisciplinary line up of speakers from Philosophy and Psychology. Date: Tuesday 2 August 2016 Time: 09.30 - 18.00 Venue: MGSM room 267 (F23 on the map) Program: 09.30 - 10.00: Coffee and arrival 10.00 - 11.30: Cecilia Heyes (Oxford) "The Cultural Evolution of Mindreading" 11.30 - 12.30: Richard Menary (Macquarie) "Is the Enculturation of Social Cognition More Like Mathematics or Reading?" 12.30 - 13.30: Lunch 13.30 - 14.30: Penny Van Bergen (Macquarie) "Perspective Taking in Children and Families: Links to Reminiscing" 14.30 - 15.30: Rachael Brown (ANU) "Going One Step Further: Extending Heyes' Account of Mindreading" 15.30 - 16:00: Coffee 16.00 - 17.00: Ron Planer (ANU) "Opacity of Mind Theory, Communication, and Coordination: The Case of the Yolngu" 17.00 - 18.00: Max Coltheart (Macquarie) "Confabulation and Conversation" About CAVE Visitor Cecilia Heyes (Oxford): Cecilia Heyes' work concerns the evolution of cognition. It explores the ways in which natural selection, learning, developmental, and cultural processes combine to produce the mature cognitive abilities found in adult humans. She is especially interested in social cognition. Most of her current projects examine the possibility that the neurocognitive mechanisms enabling cultural inheritance - social learning, imitation, mirror neurons, mind reading, etc - are themselves produces of cultural evolution. Macquarie University Research Centre for Agency, Values and Ethics (CAVE) Department of Philosophy Macquarie University Sydney, NSW 2109, Australia CAVE website: mq.edu.au/cave www.facebook.com/MQCAVE -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From arts.cave at mq.edu.au Tue Jul 26 11:09:06 2016 From: arts.cave at mq.edu.au (Centre for Agency, Values, and Ethics) Date: Tue, 26 Jul 2016 01:09:06 +0000 Subject: [SydPhil] Invitation to film screening with panel discussion featuring Wendy Rogers Message-ID: Hi all, You are invited to a film screening of the Australian premier for the award-winning documentary, Hard to Believe, which is about organ harvesting in China. It's being shown on two nights (NEXT WEEK), and will be followed by a panel discussion which will include CAVE member Wendy Rogers. There will also be a Q&A. IT'S HAPPENED BEFORE: Governments killing their own citizens for their political or spiritual beliefs. But it's never happened like this. Hard To Believe examines the issue of forced live organ harvesting from Chinese prisoners of conscience, and the response - or lack of it - around the world. This documentary is extremely important for those involved in organ donation and transplantation, human rights, healthcare, ethics and the law. The credentials of the interviewed experts are impeccable. - Journal of Bioethical Inquiry Screening 1: Date: Wed 3rd August Time: 18:45 Venue: Event Cinemas, 525 George Street, Sydney Cost: $15 Registration link: www.hardtobelievesydney.eventbrite.com.au Screening 2: Date: Thurs 4th August Time: 17:30 Venue: NSW Parliament House, Theatrette, 6 Macquarie Street, Sydney Cost: $15 Registration link: www.hardtobelievesydney2.eventbrite.com.au Ticket enquiries: rsvp at unseen.is More information in the attached PDF or on the Hard To Believe website. About Wendy Rogers (FRACGP, PhD): Prof. Rogers is a Professor of Clinical Ethics and Deputy Director of the Macquarie University Research Centre for Agency, Values, and Ethics. She has a long-standing interest in the ethics of organ donation and transplantation. While a member of the Australian Health Ethics Committee (2003-2006), she served as deputy chair of the working party responsible for developing the National Health and Medical Research Council's guidelines for organ and tissue donation. She also served on working parties developing national guidance on donation after circulatory death. Her current research interests include organ donation, research ethics, ethics of surgical practice, and overdiagnosis. Wendy's work is widely published in international journals and she is the co-editor of a recent collection on Vulnerability (published by Oxford University Press). Professor Rogers recently spoke at the Scottish Parliament on a panel addressing the issue of forced organ harvesting in China. Macquarie University Research Centre for Agency, Values and Ethics (CAVE) Department of Philosophy Macquarie University Sydney, NSW 2109, Australia CAVE website: mq.edu.au/cave www.facebook.com/MQCAVE -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: Invitation_HardToBelieve_PremiereSydney_2016_emailV10.pdf Type: application/force-download Size: 287714 bytes Desc: Invitation_HardToBelieve_PremiereSydney_2016_emailV10.pdf URL: From calendar-notification at google.com Tue Jul 26 12:59:59 2016 From: calendar-notification at google.com (Google Calendar) Date: Tue, 26 Jul 2016 02:59:59 +0000 Subject: [SydPhil] Notification: Jacob Ross @ Wed 27 Jul 2016 13:00 - 15:30 (Seminars) Message-ID: <001a1137428aac6491053881183d@google.com> This is a notification for: Title: Jacob Ross Fuck Knowledge A number of philosophers have argued that knowledge plays a fundamental role in rational justification, and, in particular, that good practical reasoning involves making choices on the basis of what we know. I argue against this Knowledge First approach to the justification of action, and in favor of a Credence First alternative When: Wed 27 Jul 2016 13:00 ? 15:30 Eastern Time - Melbourne, Sydney Where: Muniment Room Calendar: Seminars Who: * Sam Shpall- creator Event details: https://www.google.com/calendar/event?action=VIEW&eid=OTM3Y3ExcDhlcXNkMmlxcnB1OXB0am84ZGcgMm1lN2M3ZnIzb21wbDRyaHZrcG1sYTUzNjhAZw Invitation from Google Calendar: https://www.google.com/calendar/ You are receiving this email at the account sydphil at arts.usyd.edu.au because you are subscribed for notifications on calendar Seminars. To stop receiving these emails, please log in to https://www.google.com/calendar/ and change your notification settings for this calendar. Forwarding this invitation could allow any recipient to modify your RSVP response. Learn more at https://support.google.com/calendar/answer/37135#forwarding -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From calendar-notification at google.com Wed Jul 27 15:00:15 2016 From: calendar-notification at google.com (Google Calendar) Date: Wed, 27 Jul 2016 05:00:15 +0000 Subject: [SydPhil] Notification: Sean Power @ Thu 28 Jul 2016 15:00 - 16:30 (Current Projects) Message-ID: <001a11332bd89e8311053896e4f5@google.com> This is a notification for: Title: Sean Power Doing Things With Time ---------------------------------- Can our philosophical positions on time affect the way we approach other philosophical problems? It might seem as if they can't. Such positions may be conceived as being purely metaphysical and, being metaphysical, independent of our thinking about other issues. Or, at least (as such independence is not obvious), one would need to argue that the metaphysics of time has relevance to other philosophical positions. In this talk, I try to do just that (although with an important qualification). I argue that, on questions about the epistemology, phenomenology and ontology of perception, a difference in our concepts of time (between presentism and eternalism, in particular) can make a difference to the kind of answers that we can have or would desire. As examples of this, I bring in the perception of external things and change. In doing this, I also question the idea that these positions on time (and the debate between them) are best conceived as only falling under metaphysics. When: Thu 28 Jul 2016 15:00 ? 16:30 Eastern Time - Melbourne, Sydney Calendar: Current Projects Who: * Kristie Miller- creator Event details: https://www.google.com/calendar/event?action=VIEW&eid=XzZvcDM2ZDlqNnNvamliYTU4ZDIzNmI5azZzczMwYmEyNm9zM2liYTY3NHE0OGRxMjhsMGo2Y2E2NjAgZmV2MWxkcjRsa2h2MDM2b2U0aW4yanR0ZGdAZw Invitation from Google Calendar: https://www.google.com/calendar/ You are receiving this email at the account sydphil at arts.usyd.edu.au because you are subscribed for notifications on calendar Current Projects. To stop receiving these emails, please log in to https://www.google.com/calendar/ and change your notification settings for this calendar. Forwarding this invitation could allow any recipient to modify your RSVP response. Learn more at https://support.google.com/calendar/answer/37135#forwarding -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From kevin.walton at sydney.edu.au Thu Jul 28 08:23:40 2016 From: kevin.walton at sydney.edu.au (Kevin Walton) Date: Wed, 27 Jul 2016 22:23:40 +0000 Subject: [SydPhil] Reminder: JSI Seminar (28 July): Melanie White Message-ID: <6C5AF2D0C081B74C993E6C0D31E8636A0104EC30F7@ex-mbx-pro-06> Dear all I hope that you will come along at 6pm today to the Faculty Common Room on the fourth floor of Sydney Law School to hear Dr Melanie White from the University of New South Wales speak on "Following Derrida: After the Animal Question and Before Society". You can find out more and register here. If you would like to join us for dinner after the seminar, please let me know. Best wishes, Kev DR KEVIN WALTON Senior Lecturer, Sydney Law School Director, Julius Stone Institute of Jurisprudence THE UNIVERSITY OF SYDNEY T +61 2 9351 0286 E kevin.walton at sydney.edu.au W www.sydney.edu.au/law -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From calendar-notification at google.com Thu Jul 28 13:00:09 2016 From: calendar-notification at google.com (Google Calendar) Date: Thu, 28 Jul 2016 03:00:09 +0000 Subject: [SydPhil] Notification: Elizabeth Anderson @ Wed 3 Aug 2016 13:00 - 14:30 (Seminars) Message-ID: <047d7b6d8c2af435220538a954fc@google.com> This is a notification for: Title: Elizabeth Anderson Egalitarianism: The Long View of HIstory When: Wed 3 Aug 2016 13:00 ? 14:30 Eastern Time - Melbourne, Sydney Where: Sydney Uni, Muniment Room Calendar: Seminars Who: * Sam Shpall- creator Event details: https://www.google.com/calendar/event?action=VIEW&eid=aXQwOTRydGpsaG43OXRvMmFiNjdxNGJhNm8gMm1lN2M3ZnIzb21wbDRyaHZrcG1sYTUzNjhAZw Invitation from Google Calendar: https://www.google.com/calendar/ You are receiving this email at the account sydphil at arts.usyd.edu.au because you are subscribed for notifications on calendar Seminars. To stop receiving these emails, please log in to https://www.google.com/calendar/ and change your notification settings for this calendar. Forwarding this invitation could allow any recipient to modify your RSVP response. Learn more at https://support.google.com/calendar/answer/37135#forwarding -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From m.valaris at unsw.edu.au Fri Jul 29 11:00:57 2016 From: m.valaris at unsw.edu.au (Markos Valaris) Date: Fri, 29 Jul 2016 01:00:57 +0000 Subject: [SydPhil] REMINDER: UNSW Workshop on skill and skilled action, 1 August Message-ID: Hi All, This is a reminder that UNSW will be hosting a 1-day workshop on skill and skilled action on Monday 1 August. Everyone welcome; no registration necessary. The program is below: UNSW Workshop on Skill and Skilled Action 1 August 2016 Morven Brown 310 Speaker Time Title ELLEN FRIDLAND (KING'S COLLEGE LONDON) 9:30 Longer, Shorter, Faster, Stronger: on skill, mindedness, and automaticity BREAK 10:00-10:20 RICHARD MENARY (MACQUARIE UNIVERSITY) 10:20 Mathematical Skill as Enculturated Know-How MARKOS VALARIS (UNSW) 10:50 Acting Skilfully and Acting for Reasons SIMON LUMSDEN (UNSW) 11:20 Second Nature and Normative Change LUNCH BREAK 11:50-13:00 STEPHEN HETHERINGTON (UNSW) 13:00 The Constitutive Skill Within Knowldedge KARYN LAI (UNSW) 13:30 Mastery in the Zhuangzi: What do the skill masters know? BREAK 14:00-14:20 DANIEL HUTTO (UNIVERSITY OF WOLLONGONG) 14:20 Skilled Performance and Intentional Anchors WAYNE CHRISTENSEN (MACQUARIE UNIVERSITY) 14:50 Meshed Control in Skilled Action MICHAELIS MICHAEL (UNSW) 15:20 Skill, Habit, and Action Open discussion 15:50 Markos Valaris Senior Lecturer in Philosophy Associate Editor, Australasian Journal of Philosophy University of New South Wales Phone: +(61) 2 9385 2760 (office) Personal webpage: markosvalaris.net -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: