From arts.cave at mq.edu.au Tue Oct 2 10:05:14 2018 From: arts.cave at mq.edu.au (Centre for Agency, Values, and Ethics) Date: Tue, 2 Oct 2018 00:05:14 +0000 Subject: [SydPhil] CAVE Workshop: Culture and Cognition, 8 October, Macquarie Message-ID: Hi all, The Macquarie University Research Centre for Agency, Values, and Ethics (CAVE) will host a one day workshop on culture and cognition next week on October Monday 8th. All are welcome, but as seats are limited, please register for a spot and catering purposes. Please contact alexander.gillett at mq.edu.au to register. Venue and Program details to follow. The workshop brings together various departments at Macquarie University to discuss the relationship of culture and cognition. Building upon the work of the CAVE culture and cognition reading group, our aim is to continue the interdisciplinary dialogue and collaboration on this topic. Speakers include: John Sutton and Karen Pearlman; Greg Downey; Graham Thomas; Karola Stotz; Kate Lynch; Christopher Whyte; Caitrin Donovan; and Richard Menary. And discussions will range across cognitive diversity, evolution, development, collaborative practices in the arts, consciousness, and the philosophy of psychiatry. All Welcome Alex 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 calendar-notification at google.com Tue Oct 2 13:00:02 2018 From: calendar-notification at google.com (Google Calendar) Date: Tue, 02 Oct 2018 03:00:02 +0000 Subject: [SydPhil] Notification: Lisa Shapiro (Simon Fraser University) @ Wed 3 Oct 2018 13:00 - 14:30 (AEST) (Seminars) Message-ID: <0000000000003751540577361e6a@google.com> This is a notification for: Title: Lisa Shapiro (Simon Fraser University) Socializing the Individual: Relating Poulain de la Barre to Descartes It is clear that Fran?ois Poulain de la Barre adopts Cartesian philosophy to defend the equality of the sexes and develop mechanisms to achieve that equality. My aim in this paper is to examine just how Poulain leverages Cartesian philosophy, as well as how he develops it. I will be focused on the first of his three essays On the Equality of the Two Sexes, and argue that even while he accepts an aspect of Cartesian individualism about thinking things, he uses basic premises of Cartesian epistemology skeptical method, and a causal principle ? to resituate those individuals in a social context. I conclude by suggesting that this socialization of Cartesian individuals ultimately has implications for the Cartesian account of a thinking thing, which are developed more clearly in On the Education of Ladies. When: Wed 3 Oct 2018 13:00 ? 14:30 Eastern Australia Time - Sydney Where: Sydney Uni, Muniment Room Calendar: Seminars Who: * Luara Ferracioli- creator Event details: https://protect-au.mimecast.com/s/ux8WCVAGXPt7PLYGSGII9U?domain=google.com Invitation from Google Calendar: https://protect-au.mimecast.com/s/60W8CWLJY7i2ygVJHxAEe1?domain=google.com 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://protect-au.mimecast.com/s/60W8CWLJY7i2ygVJHxAEe1?domain=google.com and change your notification settings for this calendar. Forwarding this invitation could allow any recipient to modify your RSVP response. Learn more at https://protect-au.mimecast.com/s/KZBrCXLKZoi1MyWwCDMkz4?domain=support.google.com -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From h.ikaheimo at unsw.edu.au Tue Oct 2 22:21:17 2018 From: h.ikaheimo at unsw.edu.au (Heikki Ikaheimo) Date: Tue, 2 Oct 2018 12:21:17 +0000 Subject: [SydPhil] CFP: Naturalism and Sociality, Hegel-conference at UNSW Sydney, February 14-15, 2019 In-Reply-To: References: , Message-ID: CALL FOR PAPERS The Australian Hegel Society in collaboration with the Naturalism in Classical German Philosophy Project is hosting a conference at UNSW, Sydney in February 2019. There is space in the program for up to three presentations by advanced graduate students or early career researchers whose research lies broadly within the theme of the conference, described below. To notify your interest in presenting your research at the conference, please send a title and an abstract of your paper (no more than 200 words) to the following address: theaustralianhegelsociety at gmail.com Deadline for receipt of abstracts is October 20. No funding is available to facilitate attendance at the conference. Successful participants will be notified by November 5th. Venue, date and host organisation: UNSW, Sydney, Australia, February 14-15, 2019 Conference theme and description: Recent Anglo-American interpretations of Hegel and related neo-Hegelian approaches in philosophy have given sociality a central role in understanding mindedness, normativity, freedom and related themes. As a consequence, ?Spirit? is no longer seen as referring to something philosophically suspect, but the historically developing space of reasons or norms constituted through recognitive relations of human sociality. Recently however, there is a growing interest in how well this fundamentally social and normative view of spirit can cohere with the naturalistic aspects of Hegel?s philosophy. This conference explores the relation of spirit to nature. This joint conference of the Australian Hegel-Society (https://protect-au.mimecast.com/s/d3WBCwVLQmi7yP31fVeq4t?domain=australianhegelsociety.com) and the EU funded Marie Curie project ?Naturalism in German Classical Philosophy? (https://protect-au.mimecast.com/s/Sp6bCxnMRvtyxBoASvT4Ls?domain=cordis.europa.eu) brings together perspectives on sociality, naturalism, and their intersections. Speakers will include both philosophers in the broad Hegelian tradition, as well as colleagues from other traditions in philosophy working on these themes. Confirmed speakers include: Paul Redding (University of Sydney) Roc?o Zambrana (University of Oregon) Italo Testa (University of Parma) David MacArthur (University of Sydney) Richard Menary (Macquarie University) The local organizing committee: Simon Lumsden (UNSW Sydney) Heikki Ik?heimo (UNSW Sydney) Giovanna Luciano (Western Sydney University & University of Padova) Heikki Ik?heimo Senior lecturer School of Humanities and Languages/Philosophy UNSW Sydney Sydney, NSW 2052 Australia Email: h.ikaheimo at unsw.edu.au https://protect-au.mimecast.com/s/dMrRCyoNVrcgLJ5MtQ3A5K?domain=unsw.academia.edu https://protect-au.mimecast.com/s/gxuOCzvOWKi34no2tK_i1O?domain=amazon.com Editor of Journal of Social Ontology: www.degruyter.com/view/j/jso -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From mrpprofessional at yahoo.com Tue Oct 2 22:50:17 2018 From: mrpprofessional at yahoo.com (Marcia Pinheiro) Date: Tue, 2 Oct 2018 12:50:17 +0000 (UTC) Subject: [SydPhil] workshop References: <961092642.3360738.1538484617869.ref@mail.yahoo.com> Message-ID: <961092642.3360738.1538484617869@mail.yahoo.com> There will be a workshop on Logic at the Macquarie University on the last weekend of October.? Interested peers must send an e-mail to mrpprofessional at yahoo.com with title of the proposed presentation, and abstract.? Voluntary donation of AU$ 50, but submissions will not attract any fees.? Dr. Marcia R Pinheiro -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From richard.menary at mq.edu.au Tue Oct 2 23:40:56 2018 From: richard.menary at mq.edu.au (Richard Menary) Date: Tue, 2 Oct 2018 13:40:56 +0000 Subject: [SydPhil] workshop In-Reply-To: <961092642.3360738.1538484617869@mail.yahoo.com> References: <961092642.3360738.1538484617869.ref@mail.yahoo.com> <961092642.3360738.1538484617869@mail.yahoo.com> Message-ID: Dear All, This is not a workshop run by the Philosophy department at Macquarie. We have heard nothing about it and I don?t know who the purported organiser is. She is not an employee of the University. I would be very careful about handing over ?voluntary contributions?. With Best, Richard Richard Menary Head of the Department of Philosophy Macquarie University Centre for Agency, Values and Ethics academia.edu site Phil Papers Profile On 2 Oct 2018, at 10:50 pm, Marcia Pinheiro > wrote: There will be a workshop on Logic at the Macquarie University on the last weekend of October. Interested peers must send an e-mail to mrpprofessional at yahoo.com with title of the proposed presentation, and abstract. Voluntary donation of AU$ 50, but submissions will not attract any fees. Dr. Marcia R Pinheiro -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From nicholas.smith at sydney.edu.au Wed Oct 3 09:46:04 2018 From: nicholas.smith at sydney.edu.au (N.J.J. Smith) Date: Wed, 3 Oct 2018 09:46:04 +1000 Subject: [SydPhil] =?utf-8?q?Gy=C3=B6rgy_M=C3=A1rkus_Memorial_Symposium?= References: Message-ID: <4F04AB96-9C45-488B-8B70-A095CF463E2B@sydney.edu.au> From: John Grumley Gy?rgy M?rkus Memorial Symposium Gy?rgy M?rkuscame to Sydney in 1978 and from that time was known as ?George?. He had already taught in Hungary for over twenty years and had been a leading member of the so-called Budapest School that had formed around the great Marxist thinker Gy?rgy Luk?csduring the early sixties. The Budapest School sought to develop a ?humanist socialism?: the renaissance of an authentic Marx in both theory and praxis. After participating in an international protest against the Soviet invasion of Czechoslovakia in 1968, this group increasingly came into conflict with the Kadar regime and most were ultimately dismissed from their academic positions. During his time in Hungary,M?rkus had already taught a whole generation of philosophers that were to become the major thinkers of the post-communist period. In Sydney, George very quickly established himself as a towering philosophical figure: a rare combination of conceptual rigor and an unmatched knowledge of the history of philosophy. Rather than concentrate on analytical philosophy, which had previously been his specialty, he taught a wide range of courses, which encompassed German Idealism, Marxism, philosophy of history, 17thcentury rationalism and modern political philosophy. Many of his students went on to successful careers in Australia and overseas. Following George?s retirement in 1998, he continued to live and work in Sydney until his death on the 5thOctober 2016. A symposium will be held to commemorate George M?rkus?life in Sydney and to celebrate his philosophical achievements. All those who share George?s wide interests in the history of philosophy and critical theory are warmly invited to attend. Date: Friday5thOctober 2018 Place:Sydney Teacher?s College Room 436, Manning Road, University of Sydney Campus Time: 9.30am-5.00 pm Provisional Program All papers will be 20 to 30 minutes with 10 minutes for discussion. Opening9.30am Opened by John Grumley with a short address by George?s son Andras M?rkus . Morning session 9.50 am Emeritus Prof. Paul Redding (Philosophy, University of Sydney) Being the Rope in a Tug of War: Markus and Rorty as Readers of Hegel in the 70ies and 80ies 10.30 am Assoc. Prof. Paul Jones (Research School, ANU) Markus and the Retrieval of the Sociological Adorno 11.10 am Morning Tea (coffee, tea and pastries) 11.30 am Visiting Professorial Fellow Arthur Glass (Law, UNSW) Markus on Legal Reasoning 12.10 am Assoc. Prof. John Grumley (Philosophy,University of Sydney) The Road Not Taken: Markus On Habermas Break for Lunch 12.50 to 2.20 pm Afternoon session 2.20 pm Dr Harriet Johnson (Philosophy, University of Sydney) Markus on the End of Art 3.00 pm Assoc. Prof. Robert Sinnerbrink (Philosophy, Macquarie University) A Philosophy of Cultural Modernity: On Markus?s Aesthetics 3.40 pm Prof. Vrasidas, Karalis. (Dept of Greek, University of Sydney) Culture, Language and their Ontological Grounding in the work of Gyorgy Markus 4.20 pm Dr James Dorahy (Philosophy, University of Sydney) What is the Question to which Cultural Pragmatics is the Answer? Western Marxism, Ideology Critique and the Commodity Session closes 5.00 pm Dinner in Newtown at 6 pm <> Please contact John (John.Grumley at sydney.edu.au or mobile 0411214199) if you would like to attend dinner. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From calendar-notification at google.com Wed Oct 3 14:59:51 2018 From: calendar-notification at google.com (Google Calendar) Date: Wed, 03 Oct 2018 04:59:51 +0000 Subject: [SydPhil] Notification: Preston Green @ Thu 4 Oct 2018 15:00 - 16:30 (AEST) (Current Projects) Message-ID: <0000000000008b2abc05774be893@google.com> This is a notification for: Title: Preston Green The Real Problem with Prepunishment Postpunishment legal systems convict people of crimes that they have committed, while prepunishment legal systems convict people of crimes that they will or would commit. This paper debunks two assumptions in the philosophical literature: 1) that prepunishment exists only in science fiction, and 2) that prepunishment is unproblematic for deterrence theorists. First, I show that the differences between the actual world and hypothetical cases of prepunishment ? even those presented in Philip K. Dick?s ?Minority Report? ? are nothing but smoke and mirrors. In fact, there is no morally relevant difference between what happens in ?Minority Report? and what often happens in the real-world punishment of ?attempt? offenses. Therefore, if prepunishment is morally wrong, as non-consequentialist moral philosophers have argued, then vast reforms to current legal theory are required. Second, I reveal severe problems with prepunishment that stem from purely consequentialist considerations. Most importantly for deterrence theorists, prepunishment systems have no deterrent power. These conclusions call for changes in our thinking about both the philosophical importance and moral status of prepunishment. When: Thu 4 Oct 2018 15:00 ? 16:30 Eastern Australia Time - Sydney Calendar: Current Projects Who: * Kristie Miller- creator Event details: https://protect-au.mimecast.com/s/QFTWC4QZ1RFymE4EfOLZA8?domain=google.com Invitation from Google Calendar: https://protect-au.mimecast.com/s/LeqsC5QZ29Fox3k3UOd4BH?domain=google.com 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://protect-au.mimecast.com/s/LeqsC5QZ29Fox3k3UOd4BH?domain=google.com and change your notification settings for this calendar. Forwarding this invitation could allow any recipient to modify your RSVP response. Learn more at https://protect-au.mimecast.com/s/oX8GC6X13RtE17L7Umxkrp?domain=support.google.com -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From calendar-notification at google.com Wed Oct 3 15:01:17 2018 From: calendar-notification at google.com (Google Calendar) Date: Wed, 03 Oct 2018 05:01:17 +0000 Subject: [SydPhil] Notification: Preston Green @ Thu 4 Oct 2018 15:00 - 16:30 (AEST) (Current Projects) Message-ID: <000000000000b2efce05774beddc@google.com> This is a notification for: Title: Preston Green The Real Problem with Prepunishment Postpunishment legal systems convict people of crimes that they have committed, while prepunishment legal systems convict people of crimes that they will or would commit. This paper debunks two assumptions in the philosophical literature: 1) that prepunishment exists only in science fiction, and 2) that prepunishment is unproblematic for deterrence theorists. First, I show that the differences between the actual world and hypothetical cases of prepunishment ? even those presented in Philip K. Dick?s ?Minority Report? ? are nothing but smoke and mirrors. In fact, there is no morally relevant difference between what happens in ?Minority Report? and what often happens in the real-world punishment of ?attempt? offenses. Therefore, if prepunishment is morally wrong, as non-consequentialist moral philosophers have argued, then vast reforms to current legal theory are required. Second, I reveal severe problems with prepunishment that stem from purely consequentialist considerations. Most importantly for deterrence theorists, prepunishment systems have no deterrent power. These conclusions call for changes in our thinking about both the philosophical importance and moral status of prepunishment. When: Thu 4 Oct 2018 15:00 ? 16:30 Eastern Australia Time - Sydney Calendar: Current Projects Who: * Kristie Miller- creator Event details: https://protect-au.mimecast.com/s/mED7CnxyErCzKgwqH9INdo?domain=google.com Invitation from Google Calendar: https://protect-au.mimecast.com/s/_VfBCoVzGQiMB59LuzRe-G?domain=google.com 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://protect-au.mimecast.com/s/_VfBCoVzGQiMB59LuzRe-G?domain=google.com and change your notification settings for this calendar. Forwarding this invitation could allow any recipient to modify your RSVP response. Learn more at https://protect-au.mimecast.com/s/yaQjCp8AJQtGvqkNsYSMGP?domain=support.google.com -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From calendar-notification at google.com Thu Oct 4 11:59:55 2018 From: calendar-notification at google.com (Google Calendar) Date: Thu, 04 Oct 2018 01:59:55 +0000 Subject: [SydPhil] Notification: Shawn Standefer (Melbourne) @ Wed 10 Oct 2018 13:00 - 14:30 (AEDT) (Seminars) Message-ID: <000000000000e7aac905775d8230@google.com> This is a notification for: Title: Shawn Standefer (Melbourne) Title: The Universal Generalization Problem and Informational Screening Abstract: The rule of inference introducing a universal quantifier proceeds from a premiss involving a singular term to a conclusion with a universal quantifier. What entitles one to pass from the apparently particular premise to the general conclusion? One option, defended by Kit Fine, involves the use of arbitrary objects. Another option, defended by Carlo Cellucci, involves the use of substitution. In this talk, I will set out the Problem of Universal Generalization and provide some background on the views of Fine and Cellucci. I will argue that these views leave out some related devices of generalization, such as modal operators. I will present an alternative account that uses the notion of informational screening. I will explain this notion, provide examples of how it works, and argue that it can accommodate Cellucci's proposal while also applying more broadly. Finally, I will close by considering some objections to the proposal. When: Wed 10 Oct 2018 13:00 ? 14:30 Eastern Australia Time - Sydney Where: Sydney Uni, Muniment Room Calendar: Seminars Who: * Luara Ferracioli- creator Event details: https://protect-au.mimecast.com/s/oA5jCwVLQmi7gO8KCVwO7b?domain=google.com Invitation from Google Calendar: https://protect-au.mimecast.com/s/C92dCxnMRvtyPGMkivJnhD?domain=google.com 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://protect-au.mimecast.com/s/C92dCxnMRvtyPGMkivJnhD?domain=google.com and change your notification settings for this calendar. Forwarding this invitation could allow any recipient to modify your RSVP response. Learn more at https://protect-au.mimecast.com/s/aRpACyoNVrcgAjXZtQOAQ4?domain=support.google.com -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From john.sutton at mq.edu.au Thu Oct 4 13:54:03 2018 From: john.sutton at mq.edu.au (John Sutton) Date: Thu, 4 Oct 2018 03:54:03 +0000 Subject: [SydPhil] Fw: Macquarie CogSci Seminar Series Tues 9th October @12pm: Celia Harris on shared remembering In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: This may be relevant for those interested in shared and collaborative remembering. Cheers, John ________________________________ From: Luan Li (HDR) on behalf of CCD Seminars Sent: 04 October 2018 09:55 To: CogSci Everyone; CCD Macquarie Node-Google-Group Subject: CCD/CogSci Seminar Series 9th October @12pm: Dr Celia Harris Dear all, Next Tuesday at the Seminar Series, our very own Dr Celia Harris (Department of Cognitive Science, Macquarie University) will talk to us about What are the active ingredients of successful shared remembering?. Please come along and join us. Time: 12-1 pm, 9 October Location: Marri Meeting Room (3.610), Level 3, Australian Hearing Hub (16 University Avenue, Macquarie Uni) http://www.ccd.edu.au/events/seminars/abstract.php?abstract=729 Best regards, CCD/CogSci Seminar Series Committee -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From arts.cave at mq.edu.au Thu Oct 4 17:18:51 2018 From: arts.cave at mq.edu.au (Centre for Agency, Values, and Ethics) Date: Thu, 4 Oct 2018 07:18:51 +0000 Subject: [SydPhil] CAVE Workshop: Culture and Cognition, Mon 8 Oct, Macquarie - Program details Message-ID: Hi all, The Macquarie University Research Centre for Agency, Values, and Ethics (CAVE) will host a one day workshop on culture and cognition on Monday the 8th October. All are welcome, but as seats are limited, please register for a spot by emailing alexander.gillett at mq.edu.au. Program details below. Culture and Cognition Workshop Date: 8 October, 2018 Venue: Dunmore Lang College Seminar Room (130-134 Herring Road, North Ryde NSW, Sydney [near Macquarie University Train station])** **Note that due to train renovations, you will now need to use the NSW Station Link service to get to this train station. Schedule: 9.15-9.30 Welcome to Country and Hello Session One: [Chair: Alex Gillett] 9.30-10.30 Greg Downey 'Breath hold diving, cultural embodiment, and the emergence of automaticity' 10.30-11.30 John Sutton and Karen Pearlman ?New questions about shared history and distributed creativity? 11.30-12.00 Break Session Two: [Chair: McArthur Mingon] 12.00-1.00 Karola Stotz ?Toward an Extended Evolutionary Psychology? 1.00-1.30 Graham Thomas ?Story as Niche Construction: The Cultural Evolution of Fictional Narratives? 1.30-2.30 Lunch Session Three: [Chair: Yves Aquino] 2.30-3.30 Kate Lynch ?Nature via Nurture: estimating habitat selection and its impact on behavioural evolution? 3.30-4.00 Christopher Whyte ?The Function of the Global Neuronal Workspace as Temporally Thick Active Inference? 4.00-4.30 Break Session Four: [Chair: Graham Thomas] 4.30-5.00 Caitrin Donovan ?How (not) to supersize psychiatry? 5.00-6.00 Richard Menary ?Cultural Variations in Social Cognition: Enculturating Social Minds? Cheers, Alex 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 dominic.murphy at sydney.edu.au Fri Oct 5 09:52:52 2018 From: dominic.murphy at sydney.edu.au (Dominic Murphy) Date: Thu, 4 Oct 2018 23:52:52 +0000 Subject: [SydPhil] Sydney HPS talk, Monday 8th October. Prof. Jennifer Mensch Message-ID: Professor Jenifer Mensch Western Sydney University New Law Annex Seminar Room 446 5.30pm Lines of Descent: Philosophical Anthropology from Kant to Humboldt Abstract: Although it has become increasingly commonplace to trace the connections between Kant?s natural historical writings and his own philosophical system, in this talk I will look at the evidence we have available to us for thinking that Kant?s theories might have had an effect on the shape and direction of early German anthropology. Researchers in this area have traditionally focused on Kant?s relationship to Blumenbach, focusing on not only Kant?s seeming embrace of Blumenbach?s notion of a ?formative drive? at work in all living beings, but on Kant?s own efforts to convince Blumenbach to rely on skin colour when determining racial make-up. After rehearsing some of this line of argumentation, I will move to the contrasting case offered up by Wilhelm von Humboldt in his appropriation of Kant. Humboldt adopted key parts of Kant?s philosophical system, taking up Kant?s epigenetic theory of category formation, and applying it to Herder?s blood-and-soil theory of the origin of language. It was in this fashion that Humboldt was able to direct a new field of anthropological research toward comparative linguistics. In Humboldt?s writings, such as in his text On the Diversity of Human Language Construction and its Influence on the Mental Development of the Human Species, there were traces, moreover, of Kant?s racial theories at work in the linguistic analysis. Comparative linguistics emerged in this way as an analogue to comparative anatomy for analyzing not only racial differences, but lineal descent, and its ultimate importance in shaping both evolution theory and ethnology cannot be overstated. Despite the long course and wide-ranging nature of his career, Humboldt?s work remained, I contend, at heart a Kantian project. The effect of this legacy will be the focus of the second half of my discussion. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From john.sutton at mq.edu.au Fri Oct 5 11:43:52 2018 From: john.sutton at mq.edu.au (John Sutton) Date: Fri, 5 Oct 2018 01:43:52 +0000 Subject: [SydPhil] Fw: 3rd Annual Conference, Macquarie Uni Centre for Elite Performance, Expertise and Training, Nov 12-13 In-Reply-To: <3D920535-916F-454C-B671-940E087A6ADC@mq.edu.au> References: <3D920535-916F-454C-B671-940E087A6ADC@mq.edu.au> Message-ID: This may be of interest to some working on expertise. Enquiries to Kirk Olsen, kirk.olsen at mq.edu.au Cheers, John ________________________________ From: Kirk Olsen Sent: 03 October 2018 06:53 Subject: Invitation to Attend the 3rd Annual Conference of the Centre for Elite Performance, Expertise and Training Invitation to Attend the 3rd Annual Conference of the Centre for Elite Performance, Expertise and Training November 12-13, 2018 MGSM Executive Hotel and Conference Centre, Macquarie University The Centre for Elite Performance, Expertise, and Training (CEPET) is a University Research Centre based at Macquarie University. Its aim is to facilitate and promote research leading to an understanding of elite performance and expertise, with applied implications for training and practice. As part of its commitment to collaboration and knowledge sharing, CEPET coordinates a free annual conference exploring the latest developments in expertise research. In 2018, the conference theme is ?High-Stakes Expertise? with four paper sessions over the two-day event: Cyber Security, Defence, Sport, and the Arts. The Sports session will also comprise a panel of elite Australian national/international champion athletes who will share their perspectives on the topic. Ideal for academics, business leaders and those interested in elite level performance, this conference will explore how existing models of expertise might be applied in high-stakes environments; what organisations need to do to develop, retain and reward expertise; and how maintaining high-stakes expertise affects practitioners. Keynotes include: ? Dr. Siva Sivasubramanian (Chief Information Security Officer, Optus Australia) ? Associate Professor Ian Renshaw (Queensland University of Technology) ? Professor Dianna Kenny (University of Sydney) Conference registration and program will be available soon. Please click here to preregister your interest in attending the conference and the organising committee will contact you as soon as full registration opens. On the Monday evening of the conference (November 12), CEPET will host a networking drinks event at the Macquarie University Ubar, where complimentary drinks and food will be provided. For more information about CEPET and the conference, please visit our website here and follow the links. We look forward to welcoming you on November 12-13 to Macquarie University. Kind regards, The 2018 CEPET Conference Organising Committee (Dr. Kirk Olsen, Prof. Mark Wiggins, Dr. Kim Curby, Prof. John Sutton, Mr. Glenn Warry) ? Dr. Kirk N. Olsen Postdoctoral Researcher and Web Developer, Department of Psychology, Faculty of Human Sciences Associate Member & Centre Manager: Research & Engagement, Centre for Elite Performance, Expertise & Training Lab Manager, Music, Sound & Performance Research Group Macquarie University, NSW 2109, Sydney, Australia Room: Hearing Hub, 3.410 Phone: +61 2 9850 9430 Web: https://protect-au.mimecast.com/s/-0LvC0YZWVFKlGQ5HDHYr_?domain=kirkolsen.weebly.com -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From calendar-notification at google.com Fri Oct 5 13:59:50 2018 From: calendar-notification at google.com (Google Calendar) Date: Fri, 05 Oct 2018 03:59:50 +0000 Subject: [SydPhil] Notification: Luara Ferracioli @ Thu 11 Oct 2018 15:00 - 16:30 (AEDT) (Current Projects) Message-ID: <000000000000a1466b0577734dcf@google.com> This is a notification for: Title: Luara Ferracioli Towards a Dual Interest Account of Moral Parenthood In this paper I focus on the following question: what gives a person a moral right to parent a particular child? I first argue that the correct answer to this question must (i) take seriously the interests of both parents and children, (ii) include the claims of adoptive parents, and (iii) do justice to the entirety of the parent-child relationship. I then put forward a novel account of moral parenthood that meets all of these conditions. I call this account the commitment account. On this account, a moral parent is not someone who merely consents to the parental role or who merely played a role in the child?s existence; rather, a moral parent is someone who engages in certain kinds of moral actions due to a recognition of the value of the parent-child relationship. When: Thu 11 Oct 2018 15:00 ? 16:30 Eastern Australia Time - Sydney Calendar: Current Projects Who: * Kristie Miller- creator Event details: https://protect-au.mimecast.com/s/H0FSCNLwM9iA1A94UmIO8D?domain=google.com Invitation from Google Calendar: https://protect-au.mimecast.com/s/hgxCCOMxNytJoJwWhviK9n?domain=google.com 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://protect-au.mimecast.com/s/hgxCCOMxNytJoJwWhviK9n?domain=google.com and change your notification settings for this calendar. Forwarding this invitation could allow any recipient to modify your RSVP response. Learn more at https://protect-au.mimecast.com/s/FPJBCP7yOZtOqOZpU1uIAr?domain=support.google.com -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: