2011-2012
AUTUMN
September 30
Adrian Haddock (University of Stirling)
“Self-Conscious Perceptual Knowledge”
October 13 *special Thursday meeting* Wieboldt 408, 4:30pm
Sebastian Rödl (Universität Basel)
“Testimony and Generality”
October 14 (joint meeting with Wittgenstein Workshop)
Sebastian Rödl (Universität Basel)
“Joint Action and Plural Self-Consciousness”
October 21
Hans Fink (Universität Aarhus)
“Hard, Soft, and Absolute Naturalism”
November 10 *special Thursday meeting: 4:30pm, Wieboldt 408*
Clark Remington (University of Chicago)
“Heidegger meets Rödl: Originary Temporality as a System of Forms of Predicative Unity”
November 25 – THANKSGIVING – NO MEETING
December 2
Rafeeq Hasan (University of Chicago)
“Politics, Property, and Personhood: Kant’s Rousseauian Return”
December 9
Taylor Carman (Barnard College)
“Heidegger on the Meaning and Value of Truth”
WINTER
January 13
Daniel Sutherland (UIC)
“Kant on Cardinality without Fregean Equinumerosity”
January 27
Nate Zuckerman (University of Chicago)
“Heidegger’s Notion of Originary Temporality”
February 6 *Monday Mock Job Talk Meeting* Wieboldt 408, 10:30am
Thomas Land (Cambridge University)
“Judgment and Construction: Kant’s Conception of the Understanding”
February 9 *special Thursday meeting* Wieboldt 408, 4:30pm
Daniel Smyth (University of Chicago)
“Infinity and Givenness: The Intuitive Roots of Spatial Representation”
February 17 (joint meeting with Wittgenstein Workshop)
Matt Boyle (Harvard University)
“Transparent Self-Knowledge”
February 24
Alptekin Sanli (University of Chicago)
“The Concept of Right and Objectivity: Some Preliminary Considerations”
March 9
Jose Torralba (Universidad de Navarra)
“The Individuality and Sociality of Action: the Kingdom of Ends as a Relational Theory of Action”
March 16
Tucker McKinney (University of Chicago)
“Self-Interpretation and the Tragedy of Meaning in Being and Time”
SPRING
April 6
Ulrich Schlösser (University of Toronto)
“Concept Formation, Synthesis, and Judgment”
April 20
Thomas Land (University of Cambridge)
“The Nonconceptualist Reading of Kant and the Transcendental Deduction”
May 4
Johannes Haag (Universität Potsdam)
“The First Act of Self-Knowledge Traced in its Pure Consequence: Fichte on Kant’s Categories”
May 18
Emily Hartz (Southern University of Denmark)
“Subjective Freedom in the Medieval Ages? – Hegel’s Response”
2010-2011
AUTUMN
Oct 1
Robert Pippin
“Reason’s Form: Kant on Practical Reason”
Oct 15
Daniel Sutherland (University of Illinois, Chicago)
“Kant on Ordinals and Cardinals”
Oct 29
Thomas Khurana (Universität Frankfurt)
“‘Life’ and ‘Autonomy’ – On Two Forms of Self-Grounding Order”
Nov 12
Justin Shaddock (University of Chicago)
“Kant’s Transcendental Method”
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Nov 19
Pirmin Stekeler (Universität Leipzig)
“Classified Generic Inference and Modality”
(Joint Meeting With Wittgenstein Workshop)
Nov 26 – THANKSGIVING – NO MEETINGS
WINTER
Jan 7
Thomas Land (University of Chicago)
“Kant on Productive Imagination”
Jan 21
Nate Zuckerman (University of Chicago)
“Existence and Ability: The Aristotelian Insights behind Heidegger’s Conception of Dasein”
Feb 11
Jennifer Lockhart (University of Chicago)
“A Jewel that Shines by its Own Light: Kierkegaard on Inwardness and Subjective Willing
Feb 18
Johannes Haag (Universität Potsdam)
“The Role of Imagination in Kant’s Theory of Reflective Judgment”
SPRING
Apr 1
Robert Pippin (University of Chicago)
“After the Beautiful: Hegel and the Philosophy of Visual Modernism”
CONFERENCE: Apr. 2-3 The Philosophy of Anselm Müller
Apr 14 (Thursday Meeting)
John McDowell (University of Pittsburgh)
“Autonomy and Community: some remarks on the second movement of Brandom’s sonata”
(Joint Meeting with Wittgenstein Workshop)
CONFERENCE: Apr 15-17 Kant & Aristotle on Form and Matter
Apr 29
Matthias Haase (Universität Basel)
“The Laws of Thought and the Power of Thinking”
May 6
May 13
Sheela Kumar (University of Chicago)
“Kant’s Philosophy of Right”
May 27
Erica Holberg (University of Chicago)
“Against a Two-Stage Reading of Kant’s Conception of Pleasure in the Beautiful”
CONFERENCE: June 2-4 Wittgenstein on the Literary, the Ethical, and the Unsayable