The American Philosophical Association
EASTERN DIVISIONO N E H U N D R E D S I X T E E N T H
A N N U A L M E E T I N G P R O G R A M
PHILADELPHIA 201 HOTEL
PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA
JANUARY 8 – 11, 2020
Merleau-Ponty and Contemporary PhilosophyEmmanuel Alloa, Frank Chouraqui, and Rajiv Kaushik, editors
Philosophers and Their PoetsReflections on the Poetic Turn in Philosophy since KantCharles Bambach and Theodore George, editors
Earthly Encounters Sensation, Feminist Theory, and the AnthropoceneStephanie D. Clare
Speaking Face to FaceThe Visionary Philosophy of María LugonesPedro J. DiPietro, Jennifer McWeeny, and Shireen Roshanravan, editors
Merleau-Ponty between Philosophy and SymbolismThe Matrixed OntologyRajiv Kaushik
Homer’s HeroHuman Excellence in the Iliad and the OdysseyMichelle M. Kundmueller
Walter Benjamin’s Antifascist EducationFrom Riddles to RadioTyson E. Lewis
AnnouncementsOn NoveltyKristina Mendicino
Eckhart, Heidegger, and the Imperative of ReleasementIan Alexander Moore
The Other EmptinessRethinking the Zhentong Buddhist Discourse in TibetMichael R. Sheehy and Klaus-Dieter Mathes, editors
Conflict in Aristotle’s Political PhilosophySteven Skultety
Revolutionary TimeOn Time and Difference in Kristeva and IrigarayFanny Söderbäck
Genealogies of the SecularThe Making of Modern German ThoughtWillem Styfhals and Stéphane Symons, editors
The Beauty of DetoursA Batesonian Philosophy of TechnologyYoni Van Den Eede
Being MeasuredTruth and Falsehood in Aristotle’s MetaphysicsMark R. Wheeler
Visit our table at APA Easternoffering a 20% (pb)/40% (hc) discount with free
shipping to the contiguous u.s. for orders placed at the conference.
www.sunypress.edu
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IMPORTANT NOTICES FOR MEETING ATTENDEES
SESSION LOCATIONS
Please note: this online version of the program does not include session locations. The locations of all individual sessions will be included in the paper program that you will receive when you pick up your registration materials at the meeting (if you opted to receive a paper program) as well as in the meeting app beginning the first day of the meeting.
IMPORTANT INFORMATION ABOUT REGISTRATION
Please note: it costs $50 less to register in advance than to register at the meeting.
Early bird registration at www.apaonline.org is available until December 18 at 11:59 p.m. Eastern Time. Online registration will be closed from December 19 through January 7. Beginning on January 8, registration will reopen, and you may register online or at the meeting registration desk.
PRONOUN STICKERS
As a show of the APA’s commitment to diversity and inclusion, we will provide pronoun stickers for your name badge, including blank stickers that will allow you to use a pronoun of your own choosing. Stickers will be available for pickup at registration and help make APA meetings a friendly and safe environment for all.
GENDER-NEUTRAL BATHROOMS AND QUIET ROOM
Gender-neutral bathrooms and a quiet room will be available at the Philadelphia 201 Hotel. A key for the quiet room is available at the registration desk.
MEETING HASHTAG
The hashtag for the 2020 Eastern Division meeting is #APAEastern20.
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Acknowledgment of Right Relationship and Open DialogueA STATEMENT OF THE APA COMMITTEE ON NATIVE AMERICAN AND INDIGENOUS PHILOSOPHERS
Obligation: The American Philosophical Association Committee on Native American and Indigenous Philosophers wishes to underscore that we as philosophers have an obligation to acknowledge and address situations in which the rights of others are, have been, or continue to be disregarded.
Context: The American Philosophical Association owes its existence and success not only to those special founding members, but also to the vitality of generations around the globe whose hopes, dreams and energies have created a constellation of historical relationships in the Americas. Some of these generations have left distant lands for many reasons, some brought against their will, and some having lived here for more generations than can be counted. These latter include the current five hundred sixty-seven (567) federally recognized Indian Nations, and state recognized tribes, and bands, pueblos, communities, and native villages, some stretching across America’s northern and southern boundaries.
Committee Specificity: Although we recognize abuses against and debts owed to many groups, especially those for which the APA maintains diversity committees, this statement focuses on disregard for the rights of native and indigenous peoples and perpetration of harms against them, which are on a scale that approaches cultural erasure.
Acknowledgment: The American Philosophical Association acknowledges and pays respect to the indigenous people upon whose ancestral lands this conference is being held. We recognize that the rights of native and indigenous people and nations have been and continue to be denied and violated, and we honor with gratitude the land itself and the people who have stewarded it throughout the generations.
Truth: The APA Committee on Native American and Indigenous Philosophers affirms that building mutual respect across barriers of heritage and difference is often made possible by honoring truth. Honoring America’s Indigenous truth means acknowledging that human violence, displacement,
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Acknowlegdment of Right Relationship and Open Dialogue
migration and settlement have created legacies of distrust. Yet truth and trust are critical to building mutual respect for our common connections across all barriers of difference.
Recognition: The APA Committee on Native American and Indigenous Philosophers emphasizes the importance of acknowledging the often-erased history, overlooked debt, frequently contested and forgotten contributions of traditional indigenous philosophical heritage, and traditional stewardship and stewards of our ancestral lands throughout the past and present. The committee respectfully acknowledges that we exist on a land debt, that this event is taking place on the traditional ancestral lands of Indigenous Native Americans, in the context of the discipline of philosophy’s traditional indigenous philosophical heritage, and pays honor to this past and present history, philosophy, and elders.
... NEW SERIES ... BLACK MALE STUDIES ...This series looks to fill the gaps in the existing masculinities literatures that often assign the peculiar sexual violence and particular lethal oppression racially subjugated men have suffered throughout history to our more generic understanding of racism. Books published in this series would strive to create empirically informed theories of Black men and boys that can motivate our understanding of Black males beyond problem and pathology.
Black Male Studies also welcomes innovative comparative and interna-tional projects drawing parallels between Black males and the experiences of other racialized males affected by deportation, genocide, poverty, and regional conflict and war.
Prospective authors should contact the series editor TOMMY J. CURRY at [email protected] to discuss their work in progress for inclusion in the series.
Visit us in the book exhibit tupress.temple.edu
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Special Events
PUBLIC SESSIONS: “ASK A PHILOSOPHER” BOOTHEach day during the meeting, Ian Olasov will host an “Ask a Philosopher” booth at Suburban Station (16th St. and JFK Blvd.). To volunteer at the booth, contact Ian Olasov ([email protected]).Wednesday, January 8, 10:00 a.m.–2:00 p.m.Thursday, January 9, 10:00 a.m.–NoonFriday, January 10, 10:00 a.m.–2:00 p.m.Saturday, January 11, 10:00 a.m.–2:00 p.m.
EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE MEETINGWednesday, January 8, 1:00–6:00 p.m.
DIVERSITY INSTITUTE ADVISORY PANEL MEETINGInvited participants only.Thursday, January 9, 9:00 a.m.–Noon
AAPT-APA TEACHING HUBThursday, January 9, 9:00 a.m.–9:30 p.m.Friday, January 10, 9:00 a.m.–10:00 p.m.
APA STRATEGIC PLANNING FOCUS GROUPOpen to all interested in attending.Thursday, January 9, 12:15–2:15 p.m.
PRIZE RECEPTIONThursday, January 9, 5:30–6:30 p.m.
RECEPTIONThursday, January 9, 8:00 p.m.–Midnight
APA DEPARTMENT CHAIRS NETWORKFriday, January 10, 9:00–11:00 a.m.
POSTER SESSIONFriday, January 10, 11:00 a.m.–1:30 p.m.
BUSINESS MEETINGFriday, January 10, 11:15 a.m.–12:15 p.m.
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2020 Program Committee and 2020 AAPT-APA Teaching Hub Planning Committee
APA JOURNAL GOVERNING COMMITTEE MEETINGFriday, January 10, 11:15 a.m.–1:15 p.m.
PRESIDENTIAL ADDRESSFriday, January 10, 4:45–7:00 p.m.
RECEPTIONFriday, January 10, 9:00 p.m.–Midnight
2020 Program Committee
Patricia Blanchette, chairJeff Dunn, ex officioAmy AllenOtavio BuenoTherese CoryAlice CraryMiranda FrickerShaun GallagherJorge GarciaJoshua GertSteven GrossChris HaufeCarol Hay
Anja JauernigCeline LeboeufJohn LysakerKris McDanielMichaela McSweeneyJose MedinaEduardo MendietaJohn MurungiAndrea PittsSusanna SiegelRachel SingpurwallaKathryn Tabb
2020 AAPT-APA Teaching Hub Planning Committee
Dave Concepción, ChairJane DrexlerRussell MarcusKaitlin Louise PettitRebecca ScottIan Smith
Renée SmithGiancarlo TarantinoWendy C. TurgeonKimberly Van OrmanRobin Zebrowksi
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The AAPT-APA Teaching Hub
The American Association of Philosophy Teachers (AAPT) and the American Philosophical Association Committee on the Teaching of Philosophy (CTP) have co- organized a two-day conference on teaching for the 2020 Eastern Division meeting. We are aiming to bring the collegial and supportive culture of the AAPT to the APA; highlight teaching within the context of an APA meeting; stretch beyond the traditional APA session format to offer sessions that model active learning; and attract a broader range of philosophers to the divisional meetings.
THURSDAY, JANUARY 9
M1 Welcome9:00–9:15 a.m.
Speakers: Russell Marcus (Hamilton College) Wendy C. Turgeon (St. Joseph’s College, New York)
M2 Teaching Core Texts: Aristotle’s Nicomachean Ethics9:15 a.m.–Noon
Organizer and Chair: Fritz McDonald (Oakland University) Presenters: Heather Stewart (University of Western Ontario) “Diversifying… Aristotle? Engaging Diverse
Undergraduates with Contemporary Approaches to the Nicomachean Ethics”
Jerry Green (University of Central Oklahoma) “Teaching the Nicomachean Ethics: Transformative
Learning and Epistemic Virtue” Giulio Di Basilio (Trinity College Dublin) “Teaching Aristotle’s Nicomachean Ethics with
Podcasts”
M3 Philosophy Begins in Apathy: Building Student Curiosity in Introductory Courses 12:15–2:15 p.m.Sponsored by the American Association of Philosophy Teachers
Chair: Joshua Duclos (St. Paul’s School, Concord, NH) Presenter: Merritt Rehn-Debraal (Texas A&M University at
San Antonio)
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The AAPT-APA Teaching Hub
M4 Navigating Philosophy Classrooms2:30–5:30 p.m.
Organizer: Andrew M. Winters (Yavapai College) Chair: TBA Presenters: Ernesto O. Hernández (Valencia College)
“(In)adequate Responses to Mental Health Episodes in the Classroom”
Ravit Dotan (University of California, Berkeley) “Increasing and Diversifying Participation” Kaija Mortensen (Randolph College) “Using Discussion Cards to Balance Philosophical
Conversations”
M5 Penn Project for Philosophy for the Young 5:30–7:30 p.m.Sponsored by the Philosophy Learning and Teaching Organization
Organizers: Roberta Israeloff (Squire Foundation) and Stephen Miller (Oakwood Friends School, Marist College)
Chair: Stephen Miller (Oakwood Friends School, Marist College)
Presenters: Karen Detlefsen (University of Pennsylvania) Dustin Webster (University of Pennsylvania Graduate School of Education) Stephen Esser (Penn Project for Philosophy for Young Children)
M6 Pre-College Philosophy as Pedagogy: Lessons for Teaching in Higher Education 7:30–9:30 p.m.Sponsored by the APA Committee on Pre-College Instruction in Philosophy
Organizer: Wendy C. Turgeon (St. Joseph’s College, New York) Chair: Darryl DeMarzio (University of Scranton) Presenters: Amy Reed-Sandoval (University of Nevada, Las
Vegas) “Race, Pre-College Philosophy, and the Pursuit of a
Critical Race Pedagogy for Higher Education” Wendy Way (Bethpage High School) and a high
school student TBD “Jerry Maguire and Philosophy: Help Me Help You” John Torrey (Buffalo State University) “Pre-College Philosophy and Undergraduate
Teaching: Lessons from Philosophy Camp”
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The AAPT-APA Teaching Hub
FRIDAY, JANUARY 10
M7 The Bhagavad Gita in the Philosophy Classroom9:00–11:00 a.m.Sponsored by the Society for the Teaching of Comparative Philosophy
Chair: Aaron Creller (University of North Florida) Presenter: Keya Maitra (University of North Carolina at
Asheville)
M8 Teaching Philosophy as a Way of Life11:15 a.m.–1:15 p.m.Sponsored by the APA Committee on Teaching Philosophy
Organizer and Chair: Jane Drexler (Salt Lake Community College) Presenters: Mark Ralkowski (George Washington University) Jacob Stump (Northeastern University) Julia Jorati (Universtity of Massachusetts Amherst) David Storey (Boston College) Philip Schoenberg (Western New Mexico
University) Marisa Diaz-Waian (Merlin CCC, Helena, MT)
M9 Creative Assignments for Philosophical Skills 1:30–4:30 p.m.
Organizer and Chair: August Gorman (Princeton University) Presenters: Galen Barry (Iona College) “Using Op-Eds to Teach the Normative-Descriptive
Distinction” Oisin Deery (York University) “Evaluating Truth: A Flipped Classroom Exercise” Elizabeth Edenberg (Georgetown University) “Ethics in Action” Rebecca Scott (Harper College) “Developing Reading Skills Through Creative
Interpretation”
M10 My Top Five: Philosophers Share Their Lists7:00–8:00 p.m.
Chair: Russell Marcus (Hamilton College) Presenters: Elisabeth Camp (Rutgers University) Dean Zimmerman (Rutgers University) Galen Strawson (University of Texas at Austin) Tommy J. Curry (University of Edinburgh)
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The AAPT-APA Teaching Hub
M11 Closing Reception: Undergraduate Research and Faculty SoTL Poster Session 8:15–10:00 p.m.Cash bar and light refreshments.
Organizer: Kaitlin Louise Pettit (University of Utah)Faculty and Graduate Students
Posters: Jane Drexler (Salt Lake Community College), Mark Ralkowski (George Washington University), Jacob Stump (Northeastern University), Julia Jorati (University of Massachusetts Amherst), David Storey (Boston College), Philip Schoenberg (Western New Mexico University), and Marisa Diaz-Waian (Merlin CCC, Helena, MT)
“Immersive Assignments for Teaching Philosophy as a Way of Life”
Samuel Gordon (University of North Carolina at Charlotte)
“Theory Based Reasoning: Using Ethical Theories and Case Studies as an Early Introduction for Philosophy Students”
Emre Çetin Gürer (Villanova University) “Political Philosophy on Mars” Andrew MacDonald (University of California,
Riverside) “Teaching Philosophy Through Film: Rashomon” Matt Pierlott (West Chester University) and Zachary
Wooten (West Chester University) “Visions of the Good Life: The Leadership
Anthology Project” Mark William Westmoreland (Villanova University) “Enhancing Class Participation and Promoting the
Common Good” Martha K. Woodruff (Middlebury College) “Intersections of Philosophy and Literature”
Undergraduate Students Posters: Marc Biemiller (University of Georgia) “Augustine and Plato: Clarifying Misconceptions” Jason Fong (Wesleyan University) “Using ‘Muddiest Points’ to Assess Understanding
and Expand Class Participation in the Philosophy Classroom”
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Divisional and Affiliated Group Programs
WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 8
REGISTRATION9:30 a.m.–5:00 p.m., registration desk
“ASK A PHILOSOPHER” BOOTH10:00 a.m.–2:00 p.m., Suburban Station
EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE LUNCH11:00 a.m.–1:00 p.m., location TBA
EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE MEETING1:00–6:00 p.m., location TBA
WEDNESDAY LATE MORNING, 10:45 A.M.–12:45 P.M.
DIVISIONAL PROGRAM
1A Invited Symposium: Philosophy of Sex and Love Chair: Austin Andrews (Washington University in St. Louis) Speakers: Becca Rothfeld (Harvard University) Elizabeth Emens (Columbia University)
1B Author Meets Critics: Øystein Linnebo, Thin Objects: An Abstractionist Account
Chair: Scott Shalkowski (University of Leeds) Critics: Eileen Nutting (University of Kansas) James Studd (University of Oxford) Author: Øystein Linnebo (University of Oslo)
1C Invited Symposium: Philosophy of Psychiatry: Dissociative Identity Disorder
Chair: Ginger Hoffman (St. Joseph’s University) Speaker: Elizabeth Schechter (Indiana University,
Bloomington) Commentator: Hanna Pickard (Johns Hopkins University)
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Wednesday Late Morning, 10:45 a.m.–12:45 p.m.
1D Symposium: The Hermeneutics of Progress Chair: Natalie Nenadic (University of Kentucky) Speaker: Zachary Biondi (University of California, Los
Angeles) Commentators: Madeline Georgevich (Towson University) Daniel J. Brunson (Morgan State University)
1E Symposium: Metaphysical Nihilism and Modal Logic Chair: Christopher Fruge (Rutgers University) Speaker: Ethan Brauer (Ohio State University) Commentators: Phillip Bricker (University of Massachusetts
Amherst) Ben Burgis (Georgia State University, Perimeter
College)
1F Symposium: Perception Is Analog: The Argument from Weber’s Law
Chair: Ben Baker (University of Pennsylvania) Speaker: Jacob Beck (York University) Commentators: Geoffrey Lee (University of California, Berkeley) Zoe Drayson (University of California, Davis)
1G Symposium: Need and Necessity in Kant’s Doctrine of Right Chair: Ronni Gura Sadovsky (Harvard University) Speaker: Rafeeq Hasan (Amherst College) Commentators: Constance Perry (Drexel University) Yoon Choi (Marquette University)
1H Symposium: Solving the Ideal-Worlds Problem Chair: Arthur Krieger (Temple University) Speaker: Caleb Perl (University of Colorado Boulder) Commentators: Gregory Pence (University of Alabama) Teresa Bruno-Nino (Syracuse University)
1I Symposium: Indicative/Subjunctive Collapse Chair: Philip Atkins (Temple University) Speaker: Sam Carter (Rutgers University–New Brunswick) Commentators: Joseph Shieber (Lafayette College)
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Wednesday Late Morning, 10:45 a.m.–12:45 p.m. (cont.)
1J Colloquium: Choice and Action Chair: Randolph Clarke (Florida State University) Speaker: Juan Sebastian Piñeros Glasscock (University of
Toronto) “Alienation or Regress: A Dilemma for
Inferentialism about Agential Knowledge” Commentator: Eugene Chislenko (Temple University) Speaker: Christian Tarsney (University of Oxford) “Maximizing Expected Choiceworthiness: A Guide
for Bounded Agents” Commentator: Kenny Easwaran (Texas A&M University)
1K Colloquium: Metaethics Chair: Julie McDonald (St. Joseph’s University) Speaker: Logan Wigglesworth ( Rice University) “Moral Deference, Ground Projects, and the Moral
Web of Belief” Commentator: Owen Aldritt (Emory University) Speaker: Adam Frederic Patterson (Syracuse University) “Avoid Avoiding the Wishful Thinking Problem” Commentator: Andrew Culbreth (Emory University)
1L Colloquium: Race and Racism Chair: Victor Fabian Abundez-Guerra (University of
California, Riverside) Speaker: Keunchang Oh (Purdue University) “Racism as Vice and Civility as Social Norm” Commentator: Matt Hernandez (University of North Carolina at
Chapel Hill) Speaker: Mukasa Mubirumusoke (Claremont McKenna
College) “Concerns with White Privilege” Commentator: TBA
1M Colloquium: Social and Political Philosophy Chair: Nicole Whalen (The Graduate Center, CUNY) Speaker: Steven Haug (Independent Scholar) “From the Beautiful to the Political: How
Arendt’s Kantian Political Philosophy Avoids the Situatedness Critique”
Commentator: Elvira Basevich (University of Massachusetts Lowell)
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Speaker: Iaan Reynolds (Villanova University) “Three Kinds of Social Critique: Popper, Adorno,
Mannheim” Commentator: Clarisse Wells (Harvard University)
1N Invited Symposium: Heidegger Chair: Jeffery Kinlaw (McMurry University) Speaker: Taylor Carman (Barnard College) Commentators: James Kinkaid (University of Boston) Filippo Casati (Lehigh University)
AFFILIATED GROUP PROGRAM
G1A International Society for Chinese PhilosophyTopic: Comparative Chinese Philosophy
Speakers: Hannah H. Kim (Stanford University) “Human Nature and Music: Competing Confucian
Views on Music’s Moral Relevance Jordan Davis (Zhejiang University) “Greco-Roman and Han Dynasty Psychological
Models: An Initial Comparison” Zhen Ma (California Institute of Integral Studies) “I-Ching’s Metaphysical Numero-cosmology and
Teilhard’s Panentheistic Philosophy: Similarities and Differences”
Fr. James Dominic Rooney (Saint Louis University) “Zhu Xi: Confucian Hylomorphism?”
G1B Association for the Philosophy of EducationTopic: Topics in the Philosophy of Education
Chair: TBD Speakers: Kathryn Joyce (University of San Diego) “Relational Equality and Educational Justice” Emma Prendergast (University of Wisconsin–
Madison) “Trust and Moral Education” Lindsey Schwartz (University of Wisconsin–
Madison) “Educated Abroad: Identifying Challenges for Just
Resource Distribution for Inter- and Transnational Students”
Elizabeth Southgate (Cornell University) “Democracy, Education, and Epistemology”
Wednesday Late Morning, 10:45 a.m.–12:45 p.m. (cont.)
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Wednesday Late Morning, 10:45 a.m.–12:45 p.m. (cont.)
G1C American Society for Value InquiryTopic: On Truth and Deception
Chair: G. John Abbarno (D’Youville College) Speakers: Andrew Payne (St. Joseph’s University) “Socratic Irony, Deception, and the Politics of Truth” David Kaspar (St. John’s University) “Morally Acceptable Deception”
WEDNESDAY EARLY AFTERNOON, 1:00–3:00 P.M.
DIVISIONAL PROGRAM
2A Author Meets Critics: Kathrin Koslicki, Form, Matter, Substance Chair: Dean Zimmerman (Rutgers University) Critics: Louis deRosset (University of Vermont) Meagan Fairchild (University of Michigan) Author: Kathrin Koslicki (University of Alberta)
2B Invited Symposium: Recent Work on Phenomenal Intentionality Chair: David Pitt (California State University) Speakers: Michelle Montague (University of Texas at Austin) David Gray (University of Memphis)
2C Author Meets Critics: Todd Hedrick, Reconciliation and Reification Chair: Marcia Morgan (Muhlenberg College) Critics: Espen Hammer (Temple University) Andreja Novakovic (University of California,
Berkeley) Author: Todd Hedrick (Michigan State University)
2D Author Meets Critics: Ori Simchen, Semantics, Metasemantics, Aboutness
Chair: Lorraine Keller (St. Joseph’s University) Critics: Michael Rieppel (Syracuse University) Maria de Ponte (University of the Basque Country) Author: Ori Simchen (University of British Columbia)
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Wednesday Early Afternoon, 1:00–3:00 p.m.
2E Author Meets Critics: Mark Wilson, Physics Avoidance Chair: Jennifer Jhun (Duke University) Critics: Alexis Wellwood (University of Southern California) Sheldon Smith (University of California, Los
Angeles) Author: Mark Wilson (University of Pittsburgh)
2F Symposium: Women and Comic Heroines: A Look at Hegel on Aristophanian Comedy
Chair: Timothy Davis (The Community College of Baltimore County)
Speaker: Meryl F. Lumba (Temple University) Commentators: Rachel Aumiller (University of Hamburg) Rachel Falkenstern (St. Francis College)
2G Invited Symposium: Mass Incarceration and Prison Abolition Chair: Perry Zurn (American University) Speakers: Sarah Tyson (University of Colorado Denver) Kempis Ghani Songster(The Redemption Project) Robert Saleem Holbrook (The Abolitionist Law
Center)
2H Symposium: Kant’s Two Conceptions of the Highest Good: Secular and Theological
Chair: Andrew Fyfe (Harvard University) Speaker: Saniye Vatansever (Bilkent University) Commentators: Chuck Goldhaber (University of Pittsburgh) Brian Hutler (Johns Hopkins University)
2I Colloquium: Depression and Mental Illness Chair: Carlin Romano (University of Pennsylvania) Speaker: Abigail E. Gosselin (Regis University) “Confronting Mental Illness Stigma: Hermeneutical
Heroism in the Face of Mental Illness Bias” Commentator: Joel de Lara (New School for Social Research)
2J Symposium: How We Know Pain Is Bad Chair: Matthew Lyskawa (Harvard University) Speaker: Andrew Y. Lee (New York University) Commentators: Chaney Burlin (Harvard University) Jada Wiggletonlittle (University of California, San
Diego)
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Wednesday Early Afternoon, 1:00–3:00 p.m. (cont.)
2K Symposium: Consent, Feminist Critique, and Responsibility to a Sexual Partner
Chair: Nico Orlandi (University of California, Santa Cruz) Speaker: Caleb Ward (Stony Brook University) Commentators: Naomi Zack (Lehman College, CUNY) Amelia Wirts (Boston College)
2L Colloquium: Epistemology: Higher Order Attitudes and Evidence Chair: Savannah Leon (University of California, Berkeley) Speaker: Eyal Tal (University of Cologne)
“A Dilemma for Higher-Level Suspension” Commentator: Elise Woodard (University of Michigan) Speaker: Blake Hereth (University of Washington) “Higher-Order Evidence in Groups: A Defense of a
Summative Account of Group Justification” Commentator: Cat Saint-Croix (University of Minnesota)
2M Colloquium: Ethics and Public Policy Chair: Janelle Derstine (Rutgers University) Speaker: Peter A. Gildenhuys (Lafayette College) “Differential Normative Statuses and the Institution
of Responsibility” Commentator: Lizabeth Dijkstra (New School for Social Research)
2N Colloquium: Politics and Place Chair: Kevin Gray (Osgoode University) Speaker: Dana Francisco Miranda (University of Connecticut) “Theorizing Spatial Dis/appearance as a Middle
Passage” Commentator: Miranda Pilipchuk (Villanova University) Speaker: Sasha L. Biro (Marist College) “Once We Were Somebodies: Arendt, Agamben,
and the Right to Have Rights—Rethinking a Topology of Belonging”
Commentator: Aminah Hasan-Birdwell (Furman University)
2O Author Meets Critics: Justin Clarke-Doane, Morality and Mathematics
Chair: Sarah McGrath (Princeton University) Critics: Sinan Dogramaci (University of Texas at Austin) Catarina Dutilh-Novaes (Vrije Universiteit
Amsterdam) Author: Justin Clarke-Doane (Columbia University)
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Wednesday Early Afternoon, 1:00–3:00 p.m. (cont.)
AFFILIATED GROUP PROGRAM
G2A Society for the Study of Indian and Tibetan Buddhist Philosophy Chair: Ben Abelson (Mercy College) Speaker: Edward Allen Arnold (Columbia University) “Tsong Khapa’s Commitment to Dharmakirti’s Logic
in a Tantric Context” Marie Friquegnon (William Paterson University) “Shantarakshita’s Defence of the Arts as a Means
to Enlightenment” Karsten J. Struhl (John Jay College of Criminal
Justice) “What Kind of an Illusion Is the Illusion of Self?” Jigme Ken Faber (Austin Peay State University) “Knowing Reality Just As It Is: Reflections on
Relative and Absolute Truth”
G2B Society for the Philosophy of Human RightsTopic: New Work in the Philosophy of Human Rights
Chair: Adam Etinson (University of St Andrews) Speakers: Zachary Manfredi (University of California,
Berkeley) “Beyond Liberalism and Neoliberlism: Social and
Economic Rights in the Future of Left Political Thought”
Jesse Tomalty (University of Bergen) “Reflections on the Relationship between Human
Rights and the Good Life” Chair: Jesse Tomalty (University of Bergen) Speakers: Ashwini Vasanthakumar (Queen’s Law School) “Transitional Justice as Transnational Justice:
Rights of Emigrants to Promote Justice from Abroad”
Adam Etinson (University of St Andrews) “Remorse and Retribution”
G2C Philosophy and Religion Conference in Africana Traditions (PRAT)Topic: Race, Class, and Economic Justice
Chair: Brittany O’Neal (Lehman College, CUNY) Speakers: Shaeeda Mensah (Franklin & Marshall College) “On the Assumed Irrationality of Individuals Living
in Poverty”
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Wednesday Early Afternoon, 1:00–3:00 p.m. (cont.)
Jameliah Shorter-Bourhanou (College of the Holy Cross, Georgia College)
“Maria Stewart, Black Feminist Ethnologist” Anwar Uhuru (Monmouth University) “Insurrectionist Ethics and the Case for
Reparations”
G2D Society of Study of Process Philosophy, Session 2Topic: Process, Comparative Theology and Affects
Chair: Joseph Harroff (Temple University) Speakers: Brian C. Mcallan (Stirling Theological College) “Back to Bergson: The Continuing Importance of
Bergson for Process Philosophy and Theology” Alice Kim (Drew University) “Whitehead, Deleuze, and Traumatic Affect Theory” Jea Sophia Oh (West Chester University of
Pennsylvania) “Nature’s Entanglement and Harmony: A Process
Ecofeminist Ethic”
WEDNESDAY LATE AFTERNOON, 3:15–6:15 P.M.
DIVISIONAL PROGRAM
3A Invited Symposium: Philosophy of Space and Time Chair: Ege Yumusak (Harvard University) Speakers: Mohan Matthen (University of Toronto) Alex Kerr (University of California, Berkeley) Commentator: Carla Merino (University of North Carolina at
Chapel Hill)
3B Invited Symposium: History of Introspections Chair: John Roman (University of Pennsylvania) Speakers: Maja Spener (University of Birmingham) Cat Prueitt (University of British Columbia) Commentator: Gary Hatfield (University of Pennsylvania)
3C APA Committee Session: PunishmentArranged by the APA Committee on Philosophy and Law
Chair: Craig Agule (Rutgers University–Camden) Speakers: Nathan Hanna (Drexel University) “Hearts of Darkness: Why Punitive Intent Matters”
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Wednesday Late Afternoon, 3:15–6:15 p.m.
Hsin-Wen Lee (University of Delaware) “Some Bullets Are Worth Biting—Reviving the
Utilitarian Theory of Punishment” Mitchell Berman (University of Pennsylvania) “Blameworthiness, Desert, and Luck”
3D APA Committee Session: Early Chinese and Anglo-Analytic Philosophy of Language in DialogueArranged by the APA Committee on Asian and Asian-American Philosophers and Philosophies
Chair: Hannah H. Kim (Stanford University) Speaker: Alexus McLeod (University of Connecticut) “The Syncretic Origins of Truth Pluralism in Early
China” Commentator: Joe Ulatowski (University of Connecticut) Speaker: Susan Blake (Skidmore College) “Competence and Reference in Early China” Commentator: Danielle Macbeth (Haverford College)
3E Colloquium: Epistemology and Transparency Chair: Joshua Myers (New York University) Speaker: Benjamin Winokur (York University) “Critical Reasoning and the Transparency Method” Commentator: Hannah Trees (University of Texas at Austin) Speaker: Blakely L. Phillips (Indiana University–Bloomington) “The Transparency Procedure and the Opacity of
Desires” Commentator: Lauren Ashwell (Bates College) Speaker: Mason Westfall (University of Toronto) “The Epistemology of Looks” Commentator: Alison Springle (University of Pittsburgh)
3F Colloquium: Ancient and Medieval Chair: Milo Crimi (University of California, Los Angeles) Speaker: Sosseh Assaturian (University of Texas at Austin) “How to Do Things with Complete Lekta: The Stoics
on Illocutionary Acts” Commentator: Luca Gili (Université du Québec à Montréal) Speaker: Jan Maximilian Robitzsch (Sungkyunkwan
University) “The Epicurean Classification of Desires Revisited” Commentator: John Proios (Cornell University)
20
Wednesday Late Afternoon, 3:15–6:15 p.m. (cont.)
Speaker: Boaz Faraday Schuman (University of Toronto) “What Are Modal Propositions About? A Medieval
Alternative to Possible-Worlds Semantics” Commentator: Philip-Neri Reese (University of Notre Dame)
3G APA Committee Session: Directions in Africana PhenomenologyArranged by the APA Committee on the Status of Black Philosophers
Speakers: Qrescent Mali Mason (Haverford College) “Intersectional Ambiguity and Africana
Phenomenology” Dana Francisco Miranda (Muhlenberg College) “Phenomenology & Psychopathology: Africana
Perspectives” Thomas Meagher (University of Memphis) “The Decolonial Reduction and the Transcendental-
Phenomenological Reduction” Commentator: Lewis R. Gordon (University of Connecticut)
3H Diversity Institute Alumni Panel Speakers: Claire Becerra (Teachers College, Columbia
University) “What Should We Ask? Toward a Normative Theory
of Questions and Their Asking” Si-Hua Chang (University of North Carolina at
Chapel Hill) “When May Police Kill? An Argument Against Moral
Parity about Police Self-Defence” Meyra Çoban (University of Edinburgh) “Afro-Pessimist Interventions in Mari Mikkola’s
Account of Dehumanization in The Wrong of Injustice”
AFFILIATED GROUP PROGRAM
G3A Society for Analytical FeminismTopic: Feminist Interrogations of Moral Foundations
Chair: Elizabeth Lanphier (Vanderbilt University) Speakers: Sabina V. Bremner (Columbia University) “On Moral Conceivability” Nancy Daukas (Guilford College) “Toward a Testimonially Just Gender Theory” Asia Ferrin (American University) “Political Reasons for Abandoning Moral
Rationalism”
21
Wednesday Late Afternoon, 3:15–6:15 p.m. (cont.)
G3B Penn Project for Philosophy for the YoungTopic: Models of Dialogue between the Academy and the Community
Chair: Michael Vazquez (University of Pennsylvania) Speakers: Janice Moskalik (Seattle University) “Hermeneutical Injustice: The Case of Children” Megan Jane Laverty (Teachers College, Columbia
University) “Socrates on the Role of Just Discussion in
Philosophizing with Young People” Wendy C. Turgeon (St. Joseph’s College, New York) “Finding Resources to Bring Philosophy into the
Classroom and Beyond”
G3C International Association for the Philosophy of Death and DyingTopic: Being Dead and Being Mortal
Chair: David Beglin (University of California, Los Angeles) Speakers: Roman Altshuler (Kutztown University) “Death: State and Limit” August Gorman (Princeton University) “Discounting the Desire to Die” Heine Holmen (University of Tromsø) “The Meaning of Death” Jeff Noonan (University of Windsor) “The Importance of Being Frank about Dying”
G3D American Society for Value InquiryTopic: Principles of Biomedical Ethics
Chair: G. John Abbarno (D’Youville College) Speaker: Chalmers C. Clark (Drexel University) “A Kantian Resolution to the Dilemma of Research
and Therapeutic Medicine” Commentators: Robert Duckrow (Yale University) Christopher Ketcham (University of Houston) Philip Taylor (West Chester University of
Pennsylvania) Stephen Gambescia (Drexel University)
G3E The Society of Philosophers in America (SOPHIA)Topic: On Writing Public Philosophy
Chair: Daniel J. Brunson (Morgan State University) Speakers: Carol Hay (University of Massachusetts Lowell) “Forget Everything You Think You Know about
Writing”
22
Wednesday Late Afternoon, 3:15–6:15 p.m. (cont.)
Bertha Manninen (Arizona State University) “What I Learned Writing for HuffPost” Andrew Pessin (Connecticut College) “My Experiences Writing Public Philosophy”
G3F Karl Jaspers Society of North AmericaTopic: Author Meets Critics: Richard Eldridge, Werner Herzog: Filmmaker and Philosopher
Chair: Alina N. Feld (Hofstra University) Critics: Francey Russell (Barnard College) John M. Baker Jr. (The University of the Arts,
Philadelphia) Helmut Wautischer (Sonoma State University) Alexander W. Stern (University of Notre Dame) Bradley Prager (University of Missouri) Verena Kick (Georgetown University) Author: Richard Eldridge (Swarthmore College)
G3G Society for German Idealism and RomanticismTopic: Feeling and Agency
Chair: Keren Gorodeisky (Auburn University) Speakers: Erica Holberg (Utah State University) Timothy Stoll (Franklin and Marshall College) Charlotte Sabourin (University of British Columbia)
WEDNESDAY EVENING, 6:30–9:30 P.M.
AFFILIATED GROUP PROGRAM
G4A Society for LGBTQ Philosophy**THIS SESSION HAS BEEN CANCELED**Topic: Thinking Trans // Trans Thinking
Chair: Tamsin Kimoto (Emory University) Speakers: Amy Marvin (Independent Scholar) “The Chaser Continuum” Brooklyn Leo (Pennsylvania State University) “Fat Trans of Color Subjectivity: Moving Toward the
Abject in Merleau-Ponty”
23
Wednesday Evening, 6:30–9:30 p.m.
G4B Society for Analytical FeminismTopic: Engagements and Intersections of Health and Care
Chair: Sabina V. Bremner (Columbia University) Speakers: Elizabeth Lanphier (Vanderbilt University Medical
Center) “Care Justice: A Conceptual Approach from Health
Care Practice” Lauren Freeman (University of Louisville) and
Heather Stewart (Western University) “Self-Identity Microaggressions in Medical
Contexts: Understanding Experiences of Fat, Trans, and Non-Binary Patients”
Usochi Zumba (Pan-Atlantic University) “The Centrality of Carol Gilligan’s Ethics of Care
Towards a New Difference Feminism”
G4C International Plato SocietyTopic: Plato’s Republic
Chair: Debra Nails (Michigan State University) Speakers: Roslyn Weiss (Lehigh University) “Socrates and Thrasymachus on Perfect and
Imperfect Injustice” Mary Townsend (St. John’s University, New York) “Gymnastic Exercise in Plato’s Republic and
Parmenides” Kristian Larsen (University of Bergen, Norway) “Seeing Double: Contemplation, Forms, and Action
in Plato’s Republic” Renato Matoso (Pontifical Catholic University of Rio
de Janeiro) “Objects, Proportions, and Clarity in the Divided Line” Richard Parry (Agnes Scott College) “Republic 9: Pleasure, Pain, Calm, and the
Philosophical Soul”
G4D North American Society for Social Philosophy (NASSP)Topic: Author Meets Critics: Anna Stilz, Territorial Sovereignty: A Philosophical Exploration
Chair: Avery Kolers (University of Louisville) Critics: Cecile Fabre (University of Oxford) Clare Heyward (University of Tromsø) Paulina Ochoa Espejo (Haverford College) Author: Anna Stilz (Princeton University)
24
Wednesday Evening, 6:30–9:30 p.m. (cont.)
G4E International Society for Buddhist PhilosophyTopic: Knowledge and Doubt in Buddhist Philosophy
Chair: Douglas Duckworth (Temple University) Speakers: Eyal Aviv (George Washington University) Ethan Mills (University of Tennessee, Chattanooga) Oren Hanner (University of California, Berkeley) Commentator: Christian Coseru (College of Charleston)
G4F The Charles S. Peirce SocietyTopic: Presidential Address and Annual General Meeting
Chair: Michael L. Raposa (Lehigh University) Speakers: Ahti-Veikko Pietarinen (Nazarbayev University) “Peirce’s Last Graphs: The Beginning of an Era” 2019–20 Peirce Essay Prize Winner (TBD)
G4G Philosophy of the City Research GroupTopic: Against Urban Permanence
Chair: Shane Epting (Missouri University of Science and Technology)
Speakers: Rebecca Kukla (Georgetown University) “Making Space through Street Art in New York City” Zed Adams (New School for Social Research) “Against Historic Preservation” Kenny Easwaran (Texas A&M University) “Transformations of the City” Thi Nguyen (Utah Valley University) “The City as Process Art”
G4H Philosophy of Mathematics Association (PMA)Topic: Author Meets Critics: John Baldwin, Model Theory and the Philosophy of Mathematical Practice: Formalization without Foundationalism
Chair: Juliette Kennedy (University of Helsinki) Critics: Timothy Bays (University of Notre Dame) Colin McLarty (Case Western Reserve University) Scott Weinstein (University of Pennsylvania) Author: John Baldwin (University of Illinois at Chicago)
G4I Institute for the Advancement of Philosophy for ChildrenTopic: Essentially Contestable Concepts in Philosophy for Children: A Re-examination of P4C Founders Matthew Lipman, Ann Margaret Sharp, and Gareth B. Matthews
Speakers: Megan Jane Laverty (Columbia University) Maughn Rollins Gregory (Montclair State University)
25
Thursday Morning, 9:00 a.m.–Noon
THURSDAY, JANUARY 9
REGISTRATION8:30 a.m.–5:00 p.m., registration desk
DIVERSITY INSTITUTE ADVISORY PANEL MEETING9:00 a.m.–Noon, location TBA, invited participants only
EXHIBITS9:00 a.m.–6:30 p.m.
AAPT-APA TEACHING HUB9:00 a.m.–10:00 p.m.
“ASK A PHILOSOPHER” BOOTH10:00 a.m.–Noon, Suburban Station
PRIZE RECEPTION5:30–6:30 p.m.
RECEPTION8:00 p.m.–Midnight
THURSDAY MORNING, 9:00 A.M.–NOON
DIVISIONAL PROGRAM
5A Colloquium: Ontology Chair: Christopher Tomaszewski (Baylor University) Speaker: Michael Bertrand (Ohio State University) “Two Concepts of Metaphysical Grounding” Commentator: Kelly Trogdon (Virginia Tech University) Speaker: Jan Swiderski (Syracuse University) “No Foundations without Unity: A Defense of
Grounding Infinitism” Commentator: Alexander Skiles (Rutgers University–New
Brunswick) Speaker: Noel B. Saenz (University of Illinois at Urbana-
Champaign) “A New Approach to Ontological Economy” Commentator: Jonathan Schaffer (Rutgers University–New
Brunswick)
26
Thursday Morning, 9:00 a.m.–Noon (cont.)
5B Colloquium: Early Modern Chair: Allauren Forbes (University of Pennsylvania) Speaker: Walter R. Ott (University of Virginia) “Émilie du Châtelet and the Illusions of Space and
Body” Commentator: Karen Detlefsen (University of Pennsylvania) Speaker: Kenneth L. Pearce (Trinity College Dublin) “John Toland’s Extreme Epistemic Egoism” Commentator: Philip Yaure (Columbia University) Speaker: Richard J. Brook (Bloomsburg University) “Does Berkeley Need a Concept of Transcendental
Space” Commentator: Scott Harkema (Ohio State University)
5C Invited Symposium: New Directions in Medieval Philosophy: Action, Powers, Dispositions
Chair: Therese Cory (University of Notre Dame) Speakers: Gloria Frost (University of St. Thomas (MN)) Can Laurens Löwe (Purdue University) Commentator: Kara Richardson (Syracuse University)
5D Colloquium: Memory and the Self Chair: Adam Bradley (University of California, Berkeley) Speaker: Simon Alexander Burns Brown (Columbia
University) “The Significance of Episodic Memory” Commentator: Shayna Rosenbaum (York University) Speaker: Thomas Ames (University of Missouri–St. Louis) “Systems of Memory and the Self” Commentator: Albert Newen (Ruhr Universität-Bochum) Speaker: Alexandra Romanyshyn (Saint Louis University) “Agency and the Self: Insights from Schizophrenia
Research” Commentator: Laura Matthews (University of Georgia)
5E Colloquium: Obligation, Goodness, and Agency Chair: Dana Flint (Lincoln University) Speaker: Mark Howard Herman (Bowling Green State
University) “Towards Enhancing Moral Agency through
Subjective Moral Debiasing” Commentator: Eduardo Martinez (University of Michigan)
27
Thursday Morning, 9:00 a.m.–Noon (cont.)
Speaker: Max Hayward (University of Sheffield) “The Priority of the Good and the Contingency of
the Right” Commentator: Daniel Koltonski (University of Delaware) Speaker: Alida Liberman (Southern Methodist University) “Obligation and the Ethics of Non-Hindrance” Commentator: Laura Specker Sullivan (College of Charleston)
5F Invited Symposium: Ethics and Epistemology Chair: Nishi Shah (Amherst College) Speakers: Jennifer Lackey (Northwestern University) David Owens (Kings College London) Commentator: Jorah Danenberg (Stanford University)
5G Invited Symposium: Pleasure in Ancient Greek Philosophy Chair: Emily Fletcher (University of Wisconsin) Speakers: David Ebrey (Humboldt University in Berlin) Marta Jimenez (Emory University) Commentator: Mathew Strohl (University of Montana)
5H Invited Symposium: Black Masculinities Chair: TBA Speakers: Tommy J. Curry (University of Edinburgh) Lionel McPherson (Tufts University) John Torrey (Buffalo State University) Corey Reed (University of Memphis)
5I Invited Symposium: Scope Validity in Medicine Chair: Kathryn Tabb (Bard College) Speaker: Lara Keuck (Humboldt University) Commentators: Jan-Willem Romeijn (University of Groningen) Miriam Solomon (Temple University) Linda Douw (VU University Medical Center
Amsterdam) Klaus Eyer (ETH Zurich)
5J APA Committee Session: Author Meets Critics: Martin Powers, China and England: The Preindustrial Struggle for Justice in Word and ImageArranged by the APA Committee on Asian and Asian-American Philosophers and Philosophies
Chair: Susan Blake (Skidmore College) Critics: Longxi Zhang (City University of Hong Kong) Stephen Macedo (Princeton University)
28
Thursday Morning, 9:00 a.m.–Noon (cont.)
Sandra Field (Yale-NUS College) Jeffrey Flynn (Fordham University) Author: Martin Powers (University of Michigan)
5K Journal of the American Philosophical Association Session Chair: Miranda Fricker (The Graduate Center, CUNY) Speaker: Denise Vigani (Seton Hall University) “Virtuous Construal: In Defense of Silencing” Commentators: Michele Mason Bizri (University of Minnesota) Susan Sauvé Meyer (University of Pennsylvania)
5L Invited Symposium: Future of Feminism in Philosophy Chair: Miranda Young (New School for Social Research) Speakers: Nancy Bauer (Tufts University) Teresa Blankmeyer Burke (Gallaudet University) Robin Dembroff (Yale University)
5M Diversity Institute Advisory Panel MeetingInvited participants only.
AFFILIATED GROUP PROGRAM
G5A Society for Philosophy of EmotionTopic: Author Meets Critics: Aaron Ben-Ze’ev, The Arc of Love
Chair: Cecilea Mun (Independent Scholar) Critics: Nöel Carroll (The Graduate Center, CUNY) Iskra Fileva (University of Colorado Boulder) Troy A. Jollimore (California State University, Chico) Cecilea Mun (Independent Scholar) Author: Aaron Ben-Ze’ev (University of Haifa, Israel)
G5B Society for the Philosophy of CreativityTopic: Creative Time: Film, Poetry, and Disruptive Temporalities
Speakers: Rebecca Longtin (SUNY New Paltz) “Interweavings: Poetry, Art, and Nonlinear
Temporalities” Theodore T. Bergsma (Pennsylvania State
University) “‘The Independence of the Work’: Time, Death, and
the Conditions of Novelty” Vernon Cisney (Gettysburg College) “Time and the Power of the False”
29
Thursday Morning, 9:00 a.m.–Noon (cont.)
Jordan Kokot (Boston University) “Immediacy, Presence, and Attention:
Schutz, Tengelyi, and Merleau-Ponty on the Phenomenology of Creative Time”
John Landreville (Wayne State University) Title TBD
G5C Society for Philosophy of AgencyTopic: Author Meets Critics: Erin Kelly, The Limits of Blame: Rethinking Punishment and Responsibility
Chair: Andrei A. Buckareff (Marist College) Critics: Justin Coates (University of Houston) Randall Harp (University of Vermont) Adina Roskies (Dartmouth College) Author: Erin Kelly (Tufts University)
G5D Philosophy of Time SocietyTopic: Philosophy of Time Society
Chair: TBD Speakers: Alison Springle (University of Pittsburgh) and Rick
Grush (University of California, San Diego) “Experiencing Time: Behavioral Dispositions and
the Temporal Content of Perception” Ulrich Meyer (Colgate University) “The Future of the Present” David Builes (Massachusetts Institute of
Technology) “Derivatives and Consciousness”
G5E Molinari SocietyTopic: New Work in Libertarian and Anarchist Thought
Chair: Roderick T. Long (Auburn University) Speakers: Zachary Woodman (Western Michigan University) “The Implications of Philosophical Anarchism for
National Identity” Jason Lee Byas (University of Michigan) “What Is Violence?” William Nava (New York University) “The Causal Case Against Contributing to Public
Goods” Roderick T. Long (Auburn University) “Ayn Rand’s ‘New’ (Posthumous) Critique of
Anarchism: A Counter-Critique”
30
Thursday Morning, 9:00 a.m.–Noon (cont.)
G5F Experimental Philosophy SocietyTopic: Causation
Chair: James R. Beebe (University at Buffalo) Speakers: Paul Henne (Lake Forest College) “Causal Superseding with Action” Jason Shepard (Life University) “Forces, Forces Everywhere: Expressions of
Causation Ubiquitously Encode Force Dynamic Information”
G5G Center for New Narratives in PhilosophyTopic: Mary Shepherd’s “Essays on the Perception of an External Universe”
Chair: Keota Fields (University of Massachusetts Dartmouth)
Speakers: Antonia Lolordo (University of Virginia) “Mind and Body in Shepherd’s Essays on the
Perception of an External Universe” Don Garrett (New York University) “External Existence and the Rejection of Idealism in
Hume and Shepherd” Marina Folescu (University of Missouri) “Some Remarks on Mary Shepherd’s Views on the
Perception of the External World”
G5H Heidegger CircleTopic: World and Worlding: Politics, Art, and Tools
Chair: Nikolay Tugushev (New School for Social Research) Speakers: Dennis Skocz (Independent Scholar) “Ancient Politics, the Modern State, and Freedom:
The Heideggerian Polis” Ellen Miller (Rowan University) “Seeing Brancusi’s First Cry, a First Time, Again” Melayna Schiff (Georgetown University) “On Heidegger’s Analysis of the Worldhood of the
Environment” Rex Gilliland (Southern Connecticut State University) “Being as a Whole and the Truth of Being”
31
Thursday Early Afternoon, 12:15–2:15 p.m.
THURSDAY EARLY AFTERNOON, 12:15–2:15 P.M.
DIVISIONAL PROGRAM
6A Committee Session: Danto/ASA Prize LectureArranged by the APA Committee on Lectures, Publications, and Research
Chair: Dominic McIver Lopes (University of British Columbia)
Speakers: Keren Gorodeisky (Auburn University) and Eric Marcus (Auburn University)
“Aesthetic Rationality” Commentators: Robbie Kubala (University of California, Santa Cruz) Aaron Meskin (University of Georgia)
6B APA Committee on LGBTQ People in the ProfessionTopic: Framing Gender
Speakers: Simon Ruchti (Westchester University) “Becoming Cis: The Crisis in Coming to Know
Yourself Through the Eyes of Your Other” Kelli Potter (Utah Valley State) “Mormon Materialism and Gender” Amy Marvin (Independent Scholar) “Transphobia and Institutions” Moderator: Perry Zurn (American University)
6C APA Committee Session: Jobs and Careers Teaching Philosophy at a Two-Year College: Find and Keep a PositionArranged by the APA Committee on Philosophy in Two-Year Colleges. Co-sponsored by the APA Committee on Teaching Philosophy and the APA Committee on Academic Careers Opportunities and Placement.
Chair: Rich Legum (Kingsborough Community College, CUNY)
Panelists: Aaron Champene (St. Louis Community College) Timothy Davis (The Community College of
Baltimore County) A. J. Kreider (Miami-Dade Community College) Mark Bobro (Santa Barbara City College) Rebecca Scott (Harper College) Thomas Urban (Houston Community College)
32
Thursday Early Afternoon, 12:15–2:15 p.m. (cont.)
6D APA Strategic Planning Focus GroupOpen to all interested in attending.
6E Colloquium: Kant and Fichte Chair: Andrew Chignell (Princeton University) Speaker: Alejandro Naranjo Sandoval (Princeton University) “Kant on the Singularity of Intuition:
Thoroughgoing Determination and Cognition” Commentator: Farshid Baghai (Villanova University) Speaker: G. Anthony Bruno (Royal Holloway University of
London) “Facticity in Fichte’s Berlin Wissenschaftslehre” Commentator: Karl Hahn (Villanova University)
AFFILIATED GROUP PROGRAM
G6A The Wilfrid Sellars SocietyTopic: Author Meets Critics: Jeremy Koons, The Ethics of Wilfrid Sellars
Chair: Carl Sachs (Marymount University) Critics: Joey Jebari (Georgetown University) Jack Samuel (University of Pittsburgh) Audre Brokes (St. Joseph’s University) Author: Jeremy Koons (Georgetown University in Qatar)
G6B Society for the Study of Women PhilosophersTopic: Expanding the Canon: Three Women Philosophers
Chair: Mary Ellen Waithe (Cleveland State University) Speakers: Ronny Miron (Bar Ilan University) “The Phenomenological Problem of the Beginning:
Hedwig Conrad-Martius’s Realistic Response to Husserl’s Transcendentalism”
Emanuele Costa (Birkbeck College, University of London)
“‘Pen and Paper, not Needle and Spindle’: Maria Gaetana Agnesi on Women’s Equality”
Luciana Santos (Federal University of Maranhão) “Lou Andreas-Salomé on the ‘Woman Question’:
Glimpses into the Feminist Philosophy of Biology”
33
Thursday Early Afternoon, 12:15–2:15 p.m. (cont.)
G6C North American Korean Philosophy AssociationTopic: Korean Confucianism: Interpretations and Developments
Chair: Jea Sophia Oh (West Chester University of Pennsylvania)
Speakers: Edward Chung (University of Prince Edward Island) “Yi Yulgok on the Role of Emotions (Chŏng/Qing
情) in Self-Cultivation and Public Ethics: A Korean Neo-Confucian and Comparative Perspective”
Jea Sophia Oh (West Chester University of Pennsylvania)
“An Ecofeminist Epistemological Approach to Junzi (君子 exemplary person): Women’s Role in the Korean Confucian Family”
Joseph Harroff (Temple University) “Confucian Ethical Individuality: The Four-Seven
Debate and Creative Democracy”
G6D Concerned Philosophers for PeaceTopic: Concerned Philosophers for Peace Group Session
Chair: Brian C. Barnett (St. John Fisher College) Speakers: Graham Parsons (U.S. Military Academy at West
Point) “Facing Up to the Subjugation of Military Service
Members” Bat-Ami Bar-On (Binghamton University) “War. Trauma. And Entertainment” Sahar Heydari Fard (University of Cincinnati) “Social Explanation, Social Epistemology, and the
Target of Collective Action” Jean-Marie Makang (Frostburg State University) “Trumpism, American Exceptionalism, and the
Democratic World Order”
G6E Society for the Philosophy of Sex and LoveTopic: Trans-formative Erotics
Chair: Andrea Warmack (Emory University) Speakers: Tamsin Kimoto (Emory University) Brooklyn Leonhart (Pennsylvania State University) Bailey Thomas (Pennsylvania State University)
34
Thursday Early Afternoon, 12:15–2:15 p.m. (cont.)
G6F Public Philosophy NetworkTopic: Philosophical Progress Through Public Philosophy
Speakers: Ian Olasov (The Graduate Center, CUNY) “Public Philosophy and Philosophical Progress” Cristina Cammarano (Salisbury University) “Becoming a Better Thinker, Teacher, and Writer:
Thoughts from the Tenure Track on How Philosophy for/with Children Improves Me as a Philosopher”
Thi Nguyen (Utah Valley University) “Seductions of Clarity”
G6G National Philosophical Counseling AssociationTopic: Philosophical Counseling
Chair: TBD Speakers: Martha Lang (Florida State University) “The Limits of Logic and Language in Logic-Based
Therapy” Keith Morrison (Independent Scholar) “The Role of Emotions in LBT, Reconsidered”
G6H Josiah Royce SocietyTopic: Royce’s Fugitive Essays and his Ethics
Chair: Daniel J. Brunson (Morgan State University) Speakers: Kara Barnette (Westminster College) “Communities of Memory, Communities of Hate” Robin Friedman (Independent Scholar) “The Fugitive Essays: Loewenberg and the
Continuity Of Royce’s Philosophy” Jacquelyn Ann Kegley (California State University,
Bakersfield) “The Doctrine of the Present Moment: A
Fundamental Royce Concept from the Fugitive Essays”
Presidential Address: Michael Brodrick (Arkansas Tech University) “Can Royce Agree with James and Santayana on
Ethics?”
G6I International Society for Chinese PhilosophyTopic: Ethics and Chinese Philosophy
Speakers: Yong Huang (The Chinese University of Hong Kong) “In What Sense Aristotle Is Not a Virtue Ethicist But Zhu Xi Is?”
35
Thursday Early Afternoon, 12:15–2:15 p.m. (cont.)
Guy Schuh (Boston College) “Virtue, Integrity, and Self-Interest in Ancient Greek
and Classical Chinese Ethical Thought David Elstein (SUNY New Paltz) “Knowledge of Human Nature in Ruism: A New
Approach Thought” Bongrae Seok (Alvernia University) “Art and Ethics of War: Just War Theory and
Intelligence Ethics”
G6J The International Institute for Field BeingTopic: Philosophy of Religion and Field Being
Chair: Therese Dykeman (Fairfield University) Speakers: Laura Weed (The College of Saint Rose) “Embodied Philosophy of Religion: A
Neuroscientific Approach” Maja Milčinski ( Ljubljana University) “Wholeness as a way of Being in the World” Miran Bozovic (Ljubljana University) “The Diluvian Philosophy: The Utilitarian Origins of
Melville’s Moby Dick”
G6K The Charles S. Peirce SocietyTopic: Peirce’s Logic
Chair: Ahti-Veikko Pietarinen (Nazarbayev University) Speakers: Sun-Joo Shin (Yale University) “Abduction in Peirce’s Theorematic Reasoning” Francesco Bellucci (University of Bologna) “Peirce on Analysis and Decomposition” Richard Kenneth Atkins (Boston College) “Three Levels of Abstractness in Peirce’s Beta
Graphs”
G6L Association for the Advancement of Philosophy and PsychiatryTopic: Psychedelic Evidence
Chair: Ginger Hoffman (St. Joseph’s University) Speaker: Benjamin Lewis (University of Utah) “The Epistemic Status of Psychedelic States” Commentator: Kathryn Tabb (Bard College)
36
Thursday Early Afternoon, 12:15–2:15 p.m. (cont.)
G6M Evangelical Philosophical SocietyTopic: Metaphysics and Persons: Human and Divine
Chair: TBD Speakers: Paul Gould (Trinity Evangelical Divinity School) “Neo-Aristotelian Accounts of Divine Creative
Activity” Ross Inman (Southeastern Baptist Theological
Seminary) “Getting Personal: On Mereology and Personal
Ontology”
G6N Publishing WorkshopSponsored by Cambridge University Press. Please join commissioning editors from Cambridge University Press, Brill, de Gruyter, Oxford University Press, Palgrave, PDC, Routledge and Wiley, and the editors of the Journal of the APA, Episteme, and Philosophical Studies to learn more about how to publish your first book or journal article. Short presentations from each publisher/editor will be followed by a Q&A session.
Participants: Sally Hoffmann (Cambridge University Press) Jennifer Pavelko (Brill) Lucy Randall (Oxford University Press) Philip Getz (Palgrave) George Leaman (PDC) Andy Beck (Routledge) Andrew Kenyon (SUNY Press) Marissa Koors (Wiley) John Heil (Journal of the APA) Jennifer Lackey (Episteme, Philosophical Studies)
THURSDAY AFTERNOON, 2:30–5:30 P.M.
DIVISIONAL PROGRAM
7A APA Committee Session: De Gruyter Kant LectureArranged by the APA Committee on Lectures, Publications, and Research
Chair: Aaron Zimmerman (University of California, Santa Barbara)
Speaker: Patricia Kitcher (Columbia University) “Kant’s Ordinary Moral Agent”
This session will end at 4:30 p.m.
37
Thursday Afternoon, 2:30–5:30 p.m.
7B Colloquium: Identity and Resistance Chair: Oli Stephano (Vasser College) Speaker: Matthew Salett Andler (University of Virginia) “The Sexual Orientation/Identity Distinction” Commentator: Elizabeth Victor (William Paterson University) Speaker: Cheryl Ann Frazier (University of Oklahoma) “‘Fuck Flattering!’ and Beauty Resistance” Commentator: Gertrude González de Allen (Spelman College)
7C Colloquium: Aristotelian Metaphysics Chair: Nefeli Ralli (University of California, Los Angeles) Speaker: Federica Bocchi (Boston University) “Toward a Clarification of ‘Aristotelian Essentialism’” Commentator: Tyler Huismann (University of Oklahoma) Speaker: James R. Finley (Columbia University) “The Two Views of Aristotle on the Infinite” Commentator: Scott O’Connor (New Jersey City University) Speaker: Rory Hanlon (University of Chicago) “Aristotle on Perceptual Discrimination: Perception
as Substance and as Point” Commentator: Jongsuh Lee (Notre Dame University)
7D Colloquium: Epistemology and Truth Chair: Danny Forman (Rutgers University) Speaker: Jim Hutchinson (Indiana University–Bloomington) “Why Can’t Truth Be Valuable?” Commentator: Kelley Annesley (University of Rochester) Speaker: Kian Mintz-Woo (University of Graz) “Drain the Swamp!” Commentator: Han Li (Independent Scholar) Speaker: Aaron M. Griffith (College of William & Mary) “True by Default” Commentator: Rohan Sud (Ryerson University)
7E Invited Symposium: Modeling and Climate Change Chair: Otávio Bueno (University of Miami) Speakers: Mathias Frisch (Leibniz University Hannover) Elisabeth Lloyd (Indiana University) Commentator: Stuart Gluck (Indiana University)
7F Invited Symposium: New Pro-Life Bioethics Chair: Jorge Garcia (Boston College) Speakers: Francis Beckwith (Baylor University) Anthony McCarthy (Bios Center) Celia Wolf-Devine (Stonehill College)
38
Thursday Afternoon, 2:30–5:30 p.m. (cont.)
7G Invited Symposium: Dimensions of Normative Strength Chair: Alan Goldman (College of William & Mary) Speakers: Mark Timmons (University of Arizona) Justin Snedegar (University of St Andrews) Matt Bedke (University of British Columbia)
7H Author Meets Critics: Verena Erlenbusch-Anderson, Genealogies of Terrorism: Revolution, State Violence, Empire
Chair: Andrea Pitts (University of North Carolina at Charlotte)
Critics: Sandra Harvey (University of California, Irvine) Tuomo Tiisala (New York University) George Fourlas (Hampshire College) Author: Verena Erlenbusch-Anderson (Memphis University)
7I APA Committee Session: CivilityArranged by the APA Committee on Public Philosophy
Chair: John Corvino (Wayne State University) Speakers: Olúfémi Táíwò (Georgetown University) Regina Rini (York University) Alice MacLaclan (York University)
7J APA Committee Session: Revisiting Philosophy of Abortion in a Time of CrisisArranged by the APA Committee on Philosophy and Medicine
Chair: Laura Specker Sullivan (College of Charleston) Speakers: Bertha Alvarez Manninen (Arizona State University) “A Pro-Choice Advocate’s Response to New York’s
Reproductive Health Act” Amy Berg (Rhode Island College) “Abortion and Miscarriage, Updated” Margaret Olivia Little (Georgetown University) “Philosophers on Abortion: A Plea for Translational
Ethics” David DeGrazia (George Washington University) “The Ethics of Abortion through the Lens of Moral
Status (in Case the Other Major Lens Fails to Clarify)”
39
Thursday Afternoon, 2:30–5:30 p.m. (cont.)
AFFILIATED GROUP PROGRAM
G7A Society for Skeptical Studies Chair: James R. Beebe (University at Buffalo) Speakers: Kevin McCain (University of Alabama at Birmingham) “What Debasing Demons Can Teach Us about
Understanding and Wisdom” Lindsay Crawford (Connecticut College) “Suspending Judgment Is Something You Do” Ted Poston (University of Alabama) “Gaining Knowledge from Skepticism about
Isolated Evidence”
G7B Society for Philosophy of EmotionTopic: Emotion, Binding, and Natural Psychological Kinds
Chair: Cecilea Mun (Independent Scholar) Speakers: Charles Starkey (Clemson University) “Emotion, Synesthesia, and Natural Psychological
Kinds” Remy Debes (University of Memphis) “Is Respect an Emotion?” Charlie Kurth (University of Western Michigan) “Shame and Its Moral Significance”
G7C Society for Philosophy and Public Affairs, co-sponsored by the North American Society for Social PhilosophyTopic: Putting the Socialism Back into Feminism
Chair: Carol C. Gould (City University of New York) Speakers: Ann Ferguson (University of Massachusetts
Amherst) “Dual Systems Again? The Affective Economy and
Socialist-Feminist Visions” Susan Erck (City University of New York) “Return to the Exploitation Paradigm” Nancy Holmstrom (Rutgers University–Newark) “A Non-reductive Marxist Feminism” Carol C. Gould (City University of New York) “Cooperative Care beyond Capitalism: Theoretical
Horizons for a New Feminist Praxis”
40
Thursday Afternoon, 2:30–5:30 p.m. (cont.)
G7D National Philosophical Counseling Association Chair: TBD Speakers: Elliot D. Cohen (Indian River State College) “Ministering to Perfectionism in Philosophical
Consulting” Laura Newhart (Eastern Kentucky University) “Logic-Based Therapy for Mentally Strong Women” Biskin Lee (London School of Economics) “A Case for End of Life Options and Consulting
Through Them”
G7E Minorities and Philosophy (MAP)Topic: Distribution and Recognition of Service Work
Panelists: Elise Woodard (University of Michigan) Carolina Flores (Rutgers University) Jingyi Wu (University of California, Irvine) Keyvan Shafiei (Georgetown University)
G7F International Society for Buddhist PhilosophyTopic: Book Symposium: Douglas Duckworth, Tibetan Buddhist Philosophy of Mind and Nature
Chair: Christian Coseru (College of Charleston) Critics: Jonathan Gold (Princeton University) Sara McClintock (Emory University) Davey Tomlinson (Villanova University) Author: Douglas Duckworth (Temple University)
G7G Society for Asian and Comparative PhilosophyTopic: Dōgen as Founder, Dōgen as Philosopher, and Related Paradigms
Speakers: Ralf Müller (University of Hildescheim) “Kyoto School Expounding the Texts of Zen Master
Dōgen as Religious Commentary or Philosophical Interpretation?”
Steven Heine (Florida International University) “On Juxtaposing the Dōgen Interpretations of
Traditionalist Nishiari Bokusan and Philosopher Akiyama Hanji”
George Wrisley (University of North Georgia) “Dōgen’s Shōbōgenzō is Supersaturated with
Philosophy as Philosophical Response, Expression, and Facilitation”
Commentator: Sarah Mattice (University of North Florida)
41
Thursday Evening, 5:30–6:30 p.m.
G7H The Society for Medieval and Renaissance PhilosophyTopic: Author Meets Critics: Roslyn Weiss, H
˙asdai Crescas: Light of
the Lord (‘Or Hashem’) Chair: Sean Erwin (Barry University) Critics: Alexander Green (University at Buffalo) Ari Ackermann (Schechter Institute of Jewish
Studies) Julie Klein (Villanova University) Author: Roslyn Weiss (Lehigh University)
G7I Society of Study of Process Philosophy, Session 1Topic: Language, Logic, and the Art of Process
Chair: Jea Sophia Oh (West Chester University of Pennsylvania)
Speakers: Kyle Barbour (Memorial University of Newfoundland) “Whitehead, Bradley, and the Lingering Threat of
Subject-Predicate Logic” Joseph Harroff (Temple University) “Diversifying Process—Philosophical Translation as
ars contextualis” Anthony Sean Neal (Mississippi State University) “Poetry, Art, and Process: An Applicative Notion of
Whiteheadian Process Philosophy
THURSDAY EVENING, 5:30–6:30 P.M.
APA PRIZE RECEPTION (open to all: wine and cheese served)5:30–6:30 p.m., location TBA
APA NATIONAL PRIZESAPA/PDC Prize 2019
Corrupt the YouthBarwise Prize 2018
Gualtiero Piccinini (University of Missouri–St. Louis)Barwise Prize 2019
Margaret Boden (University of Sussex)Book Prize 2019
Kate Manne (Cornell University) for Down Girl: The Logic of MisogynyHonorable Mention: Sarah Moss (University of Michigan) for Probabilistic Knowledge
Danto/ASA Prize 2020Keren Gorodeisky and Eric Marcus (Auburn University)
42
Thursday Evening, 5:30–6:30 p.m. (cont.)
De Gruyter Kant Lecture 2020Patricia Kitcher (Columbia University), “Kant’s Ordinary Moral Agent”
Dewey Lecture 2020Gisela Striker (Harvard University), “The Academic Practice of Philosophy (. . . in Two Countries)”
Edinburgh Fellowship 2019–2020Carrie Figdor (University of Iowa)
Essay Prize in Latin American Thought 2019Noell Birondo (Wichita State University)
Gittler Award 2019Robert Sugden (University of East Anglia) for The Community of Advantage: A Behavioural Economist’s Defence of the Market
Kavka/UCI Prize 2020Massimo Renzo (King’s College London)Honorable Mention: Patrick Tomlin (University of Warwick)
Lebowitz Prize 2019Michael E. Bratman (Stanford University) and Margaret Gilbert (University of California, Irvine) for “What Is It to Act Together?”
Quinn Prize 2019Geoff Sayre-McCord (University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill)
Prize for Excellence in Philosophy Teaching 2019Sandra Dwyer (Georgia State University) and Claire Katz (Texas A&M University)
Public Philosophy Op-Ed Contest 2019Brenden de Kenessey (University of Toronto) for “People Are Dying because We Misunderstand How Those with Addiction Think”Benjamin Mitchell-Yellin (Sam Houston State University) for “The Mirror Test and the Problem of Understanding Other Minds”Amia Srinivasan (St. John’s College, Oxford) for “Does Anyone Have the Right to Sex?”Bryan Van Norden (Vassar College) for “The Ignorant Do Not Have a Right to an Audience”Karina Vold (University of Cambridge) for “Are ‘You’ Just Inside Your Skin or Is Your Smartphone Part of You?”
Romanell Lecture 2020Daniel Dennett (Tufts University), “Herding Cats and Free Will Inflation”
Routledge, Taylor & Francis Prize 2019William D’Alessandro (University of Illinois at Chicago) for “Viewing-as Explanations and Ontic Dependence”
43
Thursday Evening, 5:30–6:30 p.m. (cont.)
Tyke Nunez (University of South Carolina) for “Logical Mistakes, Logical Aliens, and the Laws of Kant’s Pure General Logic”
Sanders Book Prize 2019Douglas Edwards (Utica College) for The Metaphysics of TruthHonorable Mention: Carrie Figdor (University of Iowa) for Pieces of Mind, and Susanna Schellenberg (Rutgers University) for The Unity of Perception: Content, Consciousness, Evidence
Sanders Lecture 2020David Chalmers (New York University)
Sharp Prize 2019Blake Hereth (University of Washington) for “Animal Rights Pacifism”
EASTERN DIVISION PRIZESSanders Graduate Student Awards 2020
Maria Altepeter (Washington University in St. Louis) for “The Focus of Virtue: Broadening Attention in Empirically Informed Accounts of Virtue Cultivation”Jesse Daniel Lopes (Boston University) for “Phenomenology and Cognitive Science: Husserl’s Computational Theory of Mind”Alexandra Romanyshyn (Saint Louis University) for “Agency and the Self: Insights from Schizophrenia Research”
Graduate Student Travel Stipend WinnersMaria Altepeter (Washington University in St. Louis) for “The Focus of Virtue: Broadening Attention in Empirically Informed Accounts of Virtue Cultivation”Dong An (Texas A&M University) for “The Capacity of Reflection, Normativity, and Moral Action”Matthew Salett Andler (University of Virginia) for “The Sexual Orientation/Identity Distinction”Sosseh Assaturian (University of Texas at Austin) for “How to Do Things with Complete Lekta: The Stoics on Illocutionary Acts”Michael Randall Barnes (Georgetown University) for “Who Do You Speak For? And How?: Anonymity and Identity in Online Abuse”Michael Begun (Fordham University) for “Nietzsche’s Natural History”Federica Bocchi (Boston University) for “Toward a Clarification of ‘Aristotelian Essentialism’”Ethan Brauer (Ohio State University) for “Metaphysical Nihilism and Modal Logic”Laura Brown (University of Iowa) for “Trickery as Epistemic Resistance”
44
Thursday Evening, 5:30–6:30 p.m. (cont.)
Simon Alexander Burns Brown (Columbia University) for “The Significance of Episodic Memory”Jeff Carroll (University of Virginia) for “Optimal, Practical, and Insightful: Why Ideal Theory Needs to Pick Two”Sam Carter (Rutgers University–New Brunswick) for “Indicative/Subjunctive Collapse”Laurenz Casser (University of Texas at Austin) for “Pain Modulation and Sensory Inhibition”Michael Deigan (Yale University) for “Having a Concept Has a Cost”Corey Nathaniel Dethier (University of Notre Dame) for “Variation in Evidence and Simpson’s Paradox”Ravit Dotan (University of California, Berkeley) for “Machine Learning, Theory Choice, and Non-Epistemic Values”Leonard Feldblyum (Brown University) for “Higher Types, Not Great Men: Nietzsche’s Critique of Carlyle”Vivian Feldblyum (University of Pittsburgh) for “Medicine’s Transparency Problem: What We Can Learn By Paying Attention to Attention Deficit Disorder”Cheryl Ann Frazier (University of Oklahoma) for “‘Fuck Flattering!’ and Beauty Resistance”James Fritz (Ohio State University) for “Radical Moral Encroachment and Reasons of the Wrong Kind”Kelly Gaus (Massachusetts Institute of Technology) for “Conventions and Counterlogicals”Veronica Gomez Sanchez (Rutgers University–New Brunswick) for “Interventionism and the Causal Relevance of Semantics”Rory Hanlon (University of Chicago) for “Aristotle on Perceptual Discrimination: Perception as Substance and as Point”Sydney Harvey (University of Calgary) for “Advancing Imagination: Perceptual Illusions in Film”Steven Haug (Independent Scholar) for “From the Beautiful to the Political: How Arendt’s Kantian Political Philosophy Avoids the Situatedness Critique”Mark Howard Herman (Bowling Green State University) for “Towards Enhancing Moral Agency through Subjective Moral Debiasing”Ting Fung Ho (University of Texas at Austin) for “Understanding Physicalism”Mario Ivan Juarez Garcia (University of Arizona) for “Moral Incompetence and Expert Failure: How to Be Virtuous in Corrupt Environments”Hannah H. Kim (Stanford University) for “Fictional Truth and Formal Features: Critique of D’Alessandro, Lewis, and Searle”
45
Thursday Evening, 5:30–6:30 p.m. (cont.)
Liang Zhou Koh (University of Toronto) for “Standards-Based Permissivism and the Problem of Irrelevant Influences on Belief”Sara Kolmes (Georgetown University) for “A Case for Case-Based Epistemology: Clinical Bioethics and Miracle Cures”Casey Landers (University of Miami) for “A Constraint on Rich Visual Experience”JJ Lang (Stanford University) for “What Is the Difference Between Telling and Asserting? Reconsidering the Social Nature of Assertion”Joanna Lawson (Yale University) for “Identity and Society: What Makes You Who You Are”Andrew Y. Lee (New York University) for “Knowing Pain Is Bad”Junhyo Lee (University of Southern California) for “‘Ought’ and Intensionality”Madeleine M. Levac (University of California, Berkeley) for “Sane Sensing: Art and Affective Disorder in Merleau-Ponty”Daniel Lindquist (Indiana University–Bloomington) for “Why Hegel’s Philosophy of Nature?”Wenjin Liu (Princeton University) for “The Fabric of Akrasia—A New Reading of Plato’s Protagoras 351b-358e”Haoying Liu (University of Massachusetts Amherst) for “On the Antipathetic Fallacy in Phenomenal Thought”Jesse Daniel Lopes (Boston University) for “Phenomenology and Cognitive Science: Husserl’s Computational Theory of Mind”Josiah R. Lopez-Wild (University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee) for “A Can of Precisificational Worms”Lisa M. Madura (Vanderbilt University) for “Giving Weight to Reasons: Toward a Feminist Conception of Deliberation”Kevin Mager (Loyola University Chicago) for “Being-in-a-World: Is Badiou’s ‘Objective Phenomenology’ Useful to Husserlian (and Other) Phenomenologists?”Michael Montess (York University) for “Demedicalizing PrEP for HIV Prevention: The Social and Political Effects on MSM”Parisa Moosavi (University of Toronto) for “Neo-Aristotelian Naturalism as Ethical Naturalism”Joshua Mund (University of Wisconsin–Madison) for “The Non-Identity Problem Does Not Exonerate Farmers Who Raise and Slaughter Animals Humanely”Wade E. Munroe (Indiana University) for “What’s So Special About Reasoning? Rationality, Belief Updating, and Internalism”Zachariah A. Neemeh (University of Memphis) for “Cultural Affordances in AI Perception”
46
Thursday Evening, 5:30–6:30 p.m. (cont.)
Keunchang Oh (Purdue University) for “Racism as Vice and Civility as Social Norm”Ryan A. Olsen (University of Massachusetts Amherst) for “On the Epistemic Objection to Non-presentist A-theories”Tyler Olsson (University of California, Santa Cruz) for “The Perceived Fit Between Music and Movement: A Multisensory Approach to Understanding Innocent Dance Appreciation”Larkin Philpot (University of Pittsburgh) for “Aristotle on the Role of Prohairesis in Philia”Alexandra Romanyshyn (Saint Louis University) for “Agency and the Self: Insights from Schizophrenia Research”Eric John Scarffe (Boston University) for “The Paradox of State Sovereignty: A Call for Revision”Boaz Faraday Schuman (University of Notre Dame) for “What Are Modal Propositions About? A Medieval Alternative to Possible-Worlds Semantics”Nick Schuster (Washington University in St. Louis) for “When Silence Is Golden: Rethinking the Virtue-Continence Distinction”Colin C. Smith (University of Kentucky) for “Communion, Division, and Dialectic in the Sophist”Joris Spigt (Institute of Philosophy, Katholieke Universiteit Leuven) for “Hegel on the Principle of (Non-)Contradiction”Alex R. Steers-McCrum (The Graduate Center, CUNY) for “Here, We Are: A Native American Relational Social Ontology”Andrew Stewart (University of Southern California) for “Are Normative Truths Deliberatively Indispensable?”Bronwyn Stippa (University of Texas at Austin) for “Inner Speech, Cognitive Phenomenology, and Conscious Thought”Christopher Michael Stratman (University of Nebraska–Lincoln) for “Limited Phenomenal Infallibility and Cognitive Phenomenology”Jan Swiderski (Syracuse University) for “No Foundations without Unity: A Defense of Grounding Infinitism”Kuizhi Wang (University of Oxford) for “On the Location of Kant’s Refutation of Idealism”Caleb Ward (Stony Brook University) for “Consent, Feminist Critique, and Responsibility to a Sexual Partner”Isaac Wilhelm (Rutgers University) for “Centering the Principal Principle”
47
Thursday Evening, 5:30–7:30 p.m.
THURSDAY EVENING, 5:30–7:30 P.M.
DIVISIONAL PROGRAM
8A APA Committee Session: Author Meets Critics: Eva Feder Kittay, Learning from My DaughterArranged by the APA Committee on the Status of Women
Chair: Nancy Bauer (Tufts University) Critics: Christine Wieseler (Skidmore College) Kevin Timpe (Calvin College) Lisa Tessman (Binghamton University) Elizabeth Barnes (University of Virginia) Author: Eva Feder Kittay (Stony Brook University)
AFFILIATED GROUP PROGRAM
G8A Society of Christian PhilosophersTopic: Philosophy of Religion and Metaphysics
Chair: Stephen R. Grimm (Fordham University) Speakers: Jonathan Barker (Wake Forest University) “On Demanding a Metaphysical Explanation” Lorraine Juliano Keller (St. Joseph’s University) “Contemplation and Content” Robert Miner (Baylor University) “Responding to Nietzsche’s Critique of Religion”
G8B/G9F IAEP (International Association for Environmental Philosophy)Topic: Environmental Philosophy
Chair: TBA Speakers: Thomas Bown and Marian Staats (Oakton
Community College) “Taking Philosophy On the Road: De-colonizing
Land Ethics” Chandler Rogers (Boston College) “From Friendship to Reverence: On the Necessity
of Being More than Friends with Nature” Jordan Daniels (Emory University) “Hepburn and Adorno on the Aesthetic Experience
of Nature” David Pena (San Francisco State University) “Whale Phenomenology” Jeff Gessas (University of North Texas) “Decolonial Solidarity: Turning Towards a Critique
of Settler Colonial Privilege”
48
Thursday Evening, 5:30–7:30 p.m. (cont.)
G8C The Gandhi-King-Adams-Chavez SocietyTopic: Author Meets Critics: Douglas Allen, Gandhi After 9/11 Creative Nonviolence and Sustainability
Chair: Greg Moses (Texas State University at San Marcos) Critics: Sanjay Lal (Clayton State University) Karsten J. Struhl (John Jay College of Criminal
Justice) Jahanzaib Choudry (Carnegie Mellon University) Author: Douglas Allen (University of Maine)
G8D Association for Philosophy of the Unconscious Speakers: Daniel Tutt (Columbian College of Arts and Sciences) “The Shipwreck of Oedipus: Mapping the Post-
Oedipal” Wilfried Ver Eecke (Georgetown University) “Hegel Contra Psychiatry”
G8E International Berkeley SocietyTopic: Berkeley’s Philosophy
Chair: Nancy Kendrick (Wheaton College, MA) Speakers: David Mwakima (University of California, Irvine) “What Is Berkeley’s Master Argument?” Clare Moriarty (Trinity College Dublin) “The Ad Hominem Argument of Berkeley’s Analyst” Richard Brook (Bloomsburg University) “Berkeley and the Phenomenology of Action”
G8F Society for the Philosophy of Sex and LoveSession details TBA
G8G Society for Phenomenology and Existential Philosophy (SPEP)Topic: Carceral Humanism, Health, and the Civic Body
Chair: John Protevi (Louisiana State University) Speaker: Andrea Pitts (University of North Carolina at
Charlotte) “Health Empires Behind Bars: Carceral Humanism
and the Rise of Correctional Medicine” Commentator: Yannik Thiem (Columbia University)
G8H The Society for Medieval and Renaissance PhilosophyTopic: The Influence on Early Modern Thought of Medieval and Renaissance Notions of Quantity and Force
Chair: Dave Mesing (Villanova University)
49
Thursday Evening, 5:30–7:30 p.m. (cont.)
Speakers: Francesca Bruno (Cornell University) “Descartes on (the Scholastic Notion of) Quantity” Sean Erwin (Barry University) “The Commensurability of Forces: Proporzione in
Machiavelli” Helen Hattab (University of Houston) “Individuating Substances: How Do 16th Century
Scholastic Views Relate to the 17th Century?” Mario De Caro (Tufts University and Università
Roma Tre) “Machiavelli’s Naturalism”
G8I North American Korean Philosophy AssociationTopic: Feminism, Environment, Democracy, and the Moral Mind: Korean Philosophy in the Broad Context of Asian Philosophy
Chair: Bongrae Seok (Alvernia University) Speakers: Ann Pang-White (University of Scranton) “Deconstructing Chastity in the Book of Change:
Abuse or Adaptation?” Josh Hayes (Alvernia University) “Steps Toward an Ecology of Mind: Non-Dual
Action (Wei-Wu-Wei) and Perceiving Not-Knowing (Shi Shim Ma) in a Time of Environmental Crisis”
Hyo-Dong Lee (Drew University) “Jeong (情), Civility, and the Heart of a Pluralistic
Democracy” Bongrae Seok (Alvernia University) “The Pure Consciousness and Emotion in the Horak
Debate of Korean Neo-Confucianism”
G8J Leibniz Society of North AmericaTopic: Annual Meeting of Leibniz Society of North America
Chair: Daniel Garber (Princeton University) Speaker: Julia Jorati (University of Massachusetts Amherst) “The Guise of the Good in Leibniz” Commentator: Nabeel Hamid (Concordia University)
G8K John Dewey SocietyTopic: Intercultural Horizons of Education: Deweyan and Confucian Transactions
Chair: Joseph Harroff (Temple University) Speakers: Kyle Greenwalt (Michigan State University) “Theorizing the ‘Home’ in Homeschooling:
Pragmatist and Confucian Analyses of the Family, Education, and Civic Belonging”
50
Thursday Evening, 5:30–7:30 p.m. (cont.)
Joshua Rosen (Bronx Compass High School) “Democratic Character Education in the History
Classroom” Tung-Yi Kho (SOAS, University of London) “The Case for Physical-Sports Training as Aesthetic
Education”
G8L The Society for the History of Political PhilosophyTopic: Perspectives on the Good Life: The Ancients and Their Legacy
Chair: Allen Ray (Tulane University) Speakers: Mark Pryor (Tulane University) “Plato on the Tyrannic Soul” Tom Cleveland (Jack Miller Center, PA) “Lucretius on the Prizes of Life in Book V of de
Rerum Natura” Gabrielle Ray (Tulane University) “Glory and Self-Interest in Hobbes’s Auxiliary Law
of Nature” Commentator: Allen Ray (Tulane University)
G8M Society for Philosophy in the Contemporary WorldTopic: Author Meets Critics: Serene Khader, Decolonizing Universalism: A Transnational Feminist Ethic
Chair: Si-Hua Chang (University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill)
Critics: Keyvan Shafiei (Georgetown University) José Jorge Mendoza (University of Massachusetts
Lowell) Adriel M. Trott (Wabash College) Author: Serene J. Khader (Brooklyn College, CUNY)
G8N Philosophy, Politics, and Economics SocietyTopic: Just Ideas: Philosophy in Prison
Chair: Geoff Sayre-McCord (University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill)
Title: “Taking Philosophy Inside” Speakers: Christia Mercer (Columbia University), Michael
Holmes (Columbia University), Dhananjay Jaggannathan (Columbia University), Morgaine Gooding-Silverwood (Rethinking Justice, Columbia University), and Francesca Merrick (Marc Sanders Intern, Columbia College)
51
Thursday Evening, 7:30–10:30 p.m.
Title: “Learning Philosophy Inside, The Student Experience”
Speakers: Aisha Elliott (Justice Lab, Columbia University), Miranda McConniughey (Marc Sanders Scholar), Syretta Johnson (Marc Sanders Scholar), David Simpson (Marc Sanders Scholar), and Larry Williams (Rethinking Justice, Columbia University)
THURSDAY EVENING, 7:30–10:30 P.M.
AFFILIATED GROUP PROGRAM
G9A The Society for the History of Political PhilosophyTopic: Perspectives on the Good Life: Modern
Chair: Allen Ray (Tulane University) Speakers: Joshua Lott (Holy Cross College) “Rousseau’s Socratic Pedagogy and the Value of
Liberal Education” Adam Sliwowski (Boston College) “Rousseau and the Politics of Taste in Kant’s Third
Critique” Aaron Halper (Catholic University of America) “Kant’s Anti-Eroticism” Commentator: Allen Ray (Tulane University)
G9B Society for the Advancement of American PhilosophyTopic: Pragmatism and Culture: The Philosophical Legacy of Joseph Margolis
Chair: Daniel J. Brunson (Morgan State University) Speakers: Armen T. Marsoobian (Southern Connecticut State
University) James Campbell (University of Toledo) Vincent Colapietro (Pennsylvania State University) Larry Cahoone (College of the Holy Cross) Respondent: Joseph Margolis (Temple University)
G9C Society for Asian and Comparative PhilosophyTopic: Authors and Critics: Recent Publications in Comparative Epistemology
Chair: Bryan Van Norden (Wuhan University China, Yale-NUS Singapore, Vassar College)
52
Thursday Evening, 7:30–10:30 p.m. (cont.)
Speaker: Ethan Mills (University of Tennessee, Chattanooga) “Three Pillars of Skepticism in Classical India:
Nāgārjuna, Jayarāśi, and Śrī Harṣa: Overview and Response to Comments”
Commentator: Julianne Chung (University of Louisville) Speaker: Aaron Creller (University of North Florida) “Making Space for Knowing: A Capacious
Approach to Comparative Epistemology: Overview and Response to Comments”
Commentator: Alexus McLeod (University of Connecticut)
G9D Political Theology GroupTopic: Author Meets Critics: Marquis Bey, Them Goon Rules: Fugitive Essays on Radical Black Feminism
Chair: Troizel Carr (New York University) Critics: Jasmine Syedullah (Vassar College) Yasmeen Chism (New York University) Brittany Friedman (Rutgers University) Andrea Warmack (Emory University) Troizel Carr (New York University) Author: Marquis Bey (Northwestern University)
G9E Philosophy of the City Research GroupTopic: Philosophy, the City, and Public Space
Chair: Michael Nagenborg (University of Twente) Speakers: Paula Cristina Pereira (Universidade do Porto)
“Philosophy and Public Space” Shane Epting (Missouri University of Science and
Technology) “Annexation and Environmental Harm” Maria João Couto (Universidade do Porto) “Ethics and Communication” Elsa González Esteban (Universitat Jaume I) “Spaces of Ethical Reflexivity in the City”
G9F IAEP (International Association for Environmental Philosophy)Session details TBA
G9G International Hobbes Association, Session 1 Chair: Marcus Adams (University at Albany, SUNY) Speakers: Sarah Meier (Xavier University of Louisiana) “The Political Psychology of the Hobbesian Subject”
53
Thursday Evening, 7:30–10:30 p.m. (cont.)
Christopher Fremaux (Stony Brook University) “Reason, Sovereignty, and Obligation in Hobbes
and Pufendorf” Ryan Quandt (University of South Florida) “Moses, a True Prophet: Thomas Hobbes and the
Authority of Scripture” Rosamond Rhodes (Mount Sinai School of Medicine) “Hobbesian Equality, Baumrin, and Egoist
Interpretations”
G9H Friends of Mary AstellTopic: Astell on Metaphysics and Friendship
Speaker: Colin Chamberlain (Temple University) “Mary Astell and the Embodied Self” Commentator: Michaela Manson (University of Toronto) Speaker: Penny Weiss (St. Louis University) “Mary Astell’s Female Retirement” Commentator: Allauren Forbes (University of Pennsylvania) Speaker: Timothy Yenter (University of Mississippi) “Mary Astell on the Metaphysics of Love” Commentator: Stephanie Wesson (University of Pennsylvania)
G9I Karl Jaspers Society of North AmericaTopic: Structuralism after Kant
Chair: Richard Eldridge (Swarthmore College) Speakers: Andrew Cutrofello (Loyola University of Chicago) “Was It for This: Brandom, Wordsworth, and the
French Revolution” Pierre Keller (University of California, Riverside) “Dynamic Structuralism and the Parallax View” Adrian Johnston (University of New Mexico) “Meta-Transcendentalism and Error-First
Ontology: German Idealism and the Underside of Epistemology”
Katherina Kinzel (Temple University) “Ernst Cassirer: Structural Concepts and Expressive
Meaning in the Sciences of Culture” Courtney Morris (U.S. Military Academy at West
Point) “Kant on How to Read Kant”
54
Thursday Evening, 7:30–10:30 p.m. (cont.)
G9J International Society for Comparative Studies of Chinese and Western PhilosophyTopic: Causality and Reality
Chair: Pengbo Liu (Bentley College) Speakers: Jordan Davis (Zhejiang University) “Resonance and Sympathy: The Philosophy of
Causality in Early Chinese and Hellenistic Thought” Ann Pang-White (University of Scranton) “Mystic Non-sense or Logic of Indeterminacy? A
Comparative Study of the Plotinian One and the Daoist Dao”
G9K North American Kant SocietyTopic: Kant’s Formula of Humanity
Chair: Japa Pallikkathayil (University of Pittsburgh) Speakers: Christine Korsgaard (Harvard University) “Practical Implications of Kant’s Formula of
Humanity” Kyla Ebels-Duggan (Northwestern University) “Love, Respect, and the Value of Humanity” David Sussman (University of Illinois at Urbana-
Champaign) “Inhuman Beings”
G9L Indian Philosophy AssociationTopic: Author Meets Critics: Edward P. Butler, Polytheism and Indology: Lessons from the Nay Science
Critics: Joydeep Bagchee (Independent Scholar) Galina Krasskova (Fordham University) Vishwa Adluri (Hunter College) Author: Edward P. Butler (Independent Scholar)
55
Friday Morning, 9:00–11:00 a.m.
FRIDAY, JANUARY 10
REGISTRATION8:30 a.m.–5:00 p.m., registration desk
EXHIBITS9:00 a.m.–5:00 p.m.
AAPT-APA TEACHING HUB9:00 a.m.–10:00 p.m.
APA DEPARTMENT CHAIRS NETWORK9:00–11:00 a.m.
“ASK A PHILOSOPHER” BOOTH10:00 a.m.–2:00 p.m., Suburban Station
POSTER SESSION11:00 a.m.–1:30 p.m.
BUSINESS MEETING11:15 a.m.–12:15 p.m.
JOURNAL GOVERNING COMMITTEE MEETING11:15 a.m.–1:15 p.m.
APA LEADERSHIP LUNCHEON12:15–1:15 p.m.
RECEPTION9:00 p.m.–Midnight
FRIDAY MORNING, 9:00–11:00 A.M.
DIVISIONAL PROGRAM
10A APA Committee Session: Philosophical Approaches to Data JusticeArranged by the APA Committee on Philosophy and Computers
Chair: Daniel Susser (Pennsylvania State University) Speakers: Annette Zimmerman (Princeton University) “Cumulative Wrongs in Sequential Decisions
56
Friday Morning, 9:00–11:00 a.m. (cont.)
Maria Brincker (University of Massachusetts Boston) “Privacy Without Property—On the Relational
Privacy Needs of Humans and Other Animals” Dylan Wittkower (Old Dominion University) “Disaffordances and Designed Privilege” Commentator: Daniel Susser (Pennsylvania State University)
10B Invited Symposium: Philosophical Issues in the History of Geometry Chair: Lisa Shabel (Ohio State University) Speakers: Francesca Biagioli (University of Vienna) Michael Hallett (McGill University)
10C Author Meets Critics: Veena Das, Textures of the Ordinary Chair: Alice Crary (New School for Social Research) Critics: Sandra Laugier (Paris 1 Sorbonne) Penny Deutscher (Northwestern University) Author: Veena Das (Johns Hopkins University)
10D Author Meets Critics: Henry Richardson, Articulating the Moral Community
Chair: Max Lewis (University of Pennsylvania) Critics: Cheryl Misak (University of Toronto) Linda Radzik (Texas A&M University) Author: Henry Richardson (Georgetown University)
10E Invited Symposium: Perception Chair: Sukaina Hirji (University of Pennsylvania) Speaker: Grace Helton (Princeton University) Commentator: Gabbrielle Johnson (New York University)
10F Invited Symposium: Medieval Philosophers and the Philosophy of Emotion
Chair: Therese Cory (University of Notre Dame) Speaker: Simo Knuuttila (University of Helsinki) Commentator: Martin Pickavé (University of Toronto)
10G Symposium: Transformative Choice and the Non-Identity Problem Chair: Kelley Annesley (University of Rochester) Speaker: Nilanjan Das (University College London) and L. A. Paul (Yale University) Commentators: Eva Boodman (Rowan University) Simone M. Gubler (University of North Carolina at
Chapel Hill)
57
Friday Morning, 9:00–11:00 a.m. (cont.)
10H Colloquium: Metaphysics I Chair: Elliot Risch (Boston University) Speaker: Kenneth Silver (Trinity College Dublin) “Group Weakness” Commentator: Augie Faller (Cornell University) Speaker: Ryan A. Olsen (University of Massachusetts
Amherst) “On the Epistemic Objection to Non-presentist
A-theories” Commentator: Jonathan Barker (Wake Forest University)
10I APA Department Chairs Network: Building Support for Philosophy on Campus
Chair: Amy Ferrer (American Philosophical Association) Panelists: John Corvino (Wayne State University) David Levy (SUNY Geneseo) Sally Scholz (Villanova University)
10J Symposium: Does Definition Admit of Substitution? Chair: Zeynep Soysal (University of Rochester) Speaker: Samuel Z. Elgin (University of California, San Diego) Commentators: Kevin Richardson (North Carolina State University) Cian Dorr (New York University)
10K Invited Symposium: Philosophy of Africa and Latin America Chair: Ronke Oke (West Chester University) Speakers: Alejandro Vallegas (University of Oregon) Omar Rivera (Southwestern University) Jake Bartholomew (Missouri State University) John Murungi (Towson University)
10L Symposium: Confucian Meritocracy, Political Legitimacy, and Constitutional Democracy
Chair: Kathleen Wright (Haverford College) Speaker: Zhuoyao Li (St. John’s University) Commentatorss: Bryan Van Norden (Vassar College) Eirik Lang Harris (Hong Kong Baptist University)
10M Colloquium: Husserl Chair: Reese Faust (University of Memphis) Speaker: Jesse Daniel Lopes (Boston University) “Phenomenology and Cognitive Science: Husserl’s
Computational Theory of Mind” Commentator: James Kintz (Saint Joseph’s College of Maine)
58
Friday Morning, 9:00–11:00 a.m. (cont.)
Speaker: Kevin Mager (Loyola University Chicago) “Being-in-a-World: Is Badiou’s ‘Objective
Phenomenology’ Useful to Husserlian (and Other) Phenomenologists?”
Commentator: Olivia Brown (Katholieke Universiteit Leuven)
10N Colloquium: The State Chair: Benjamin Arah (Bowie State University) Speaker: Torsten Menge (Northwestern University in Qatar) “Neighborhoods and States: Why Collective Self-
Determination Is Not Always Valuable” Commentator: Melissa Yates (Smith College) Speaker: Eric John Scarffe (Boston University) “The Paradox of State Sovereignty: A Call for
Revision” Commentator: Jonathan Marks (Pennsylvania State University)
10O Colloquium: Normative Ethics Chair: Jose Jorge Mendoza (University of Massachusetts
Lowell) Speaker: David O’Brien (Tulane University) “Conservatism Reconsidered” Commentator: Peter Wicks (Elm Institute) Speaker: David P. Beglin (University of California, Los
Angeles) “Forgiveness and Normative Condescension: A
Worry for Unilateral Forgiveness” Commentator: Betty Stoneman (Emory University)
AFFILIATED GROUP PROGRAM
G10A Philosophy, Politics, and Economics SocietyTopic: How Idealized Models Can Help Answer Normative Questions
Chair: Geoff Sayre-McCord (University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill)
Speakers: Julia Staffel (University of Colorado) David Wiens (University of California, San Diego)
G10B The International Institute for Field BeingTopic: Comparative/Contrastive Philosophy and Field Being
Chair: Laura E. Weed (The College of Saint Rose) Speakers: Maja Milčinski: (Ljubljana University) “The Case for Contrastive Philosophy”
59
Friday Late Morning, 11:00 a.m.–1:30 p.m.
Therese Dykeman (Fairfield University) “In a Climate Change of Trust, an Ethics of Hope” David White (St. John Fisher College) “Field-Being in Western New York” Tim Madigan (St. John Fisher College) “Kenneth Inada and Field-Being”
G10C Descartes Society Chair: Daniel Garber (Princeton University) Speakers: Hanoch Ben-Yami (Central European University) “Descartes and the Possibility of Idealism” Evan Thomas (Ohio State University) “Descartes and the Passionate Animal”
G10D International Society for Environmental EthicsTopic: Sustainability in Philosophy
Chair: Eugene Chislenko (Temple University) Speakers: Eugene Chislenko (Temple University) Rebecca Millsop (University of Rhode Island)
FRIDAY LATE MORNING, 11:00–1:30 P.M.
POSTER SESSION Presenters: Dong An (Texas A&M University)
“The Capacity of Reflection, Normativity, and Moral Action”
Howard G. Callaway (Independent Scholar) “Oligarchic Structures and Democratic Networks” Laurenz Casser (University of Texas at Austin) “Pain Modulation and Sensory Inhibition” Chetan Cetty (University of Pennsylvania) “Alienation, Ideal Advisor Views, and Our Good” Thomas Hercules Davies (Princeton University) “Achilles Runs On: Some Alleged Solutions to a
Paradox of Zeno” Vivian Feldblyum (University of Pittsburgh) “Medicine’s Transparency Problem: What We Can
Learn By Paying Attention to Attention Deficit Disorder”
Ting Fung Ho (University of Texas at Austin) “Understanding Physicalism”
60
Friday Late Morning, 11:00 a.m.–1:30 p.m. (cont.)
Hannah H. Kim (Stanford University) “Fictional Truth and Formal Features: Critique of
D’Alessandro, Lewis, and Searle” Haoying Liu (University of Massachusetts Amherst) “On the Antipathetic Fallacy in Phenomenal
Thought” Joshua Mund (University of Wisconsin–Madison) “The Non-Identity Problem Does Not Exonerate
Farmers Who Raise and Slaughter Animals Humanely”
Geraldine Ng (University of Reading) “Transhumanism and the Iliad” Christopher Michael Stratman (University of
Nebraska–Lincoln) “Limited Phenomenal Infallibility and Cognitive
Phenomenology” Joshua Turkewitz (Florida State University) “Relocating Vagueness” Kuizhi Wang (University of Oxford) “On the Location of Kant’s Refutation of Idealism”
FRIDAY LATE MORNING, 11:15 A.M.–1:15 P.M.
DIVISIONAL PROGRAM
11A Author Meets Critics: Christine Korsgaard, Fellow Creatures: Our Obligations to the Other Animals
Chair: Jeff Sebo (New York University) Critics: Gary Watson (University of Southern California) Hilary Bok (Johns Hopkins University) Author: Christine Korsgaard (Harvard University)
11B Invited Symposium: Black Democratic Perfectionism Chair: John Lysaker (Emory University) Speakers: Chris Lebron (Johns Hopkins University) Melvin Rogers (Brown University)
11C Invited Symposium: Metaphysics Chair: Ricki Bliss (Lehigh University) Speaker: Kris McDaniel (University of Notre Dame) Commentator: Donald Baxter (University of Connecticut)
61
Friday Late Morning, 11:15 a.m.–1:15 p.m.
11D Invited Symposium: Aristotle on Goodness Chair: Susan Suavé Meyer (University of Pennsylvania) Speaker: Christopher Shields (Notre Dame University) Commentator: Phillip Brullmann (LMU, Munich)
11E Author Meets Critics: Elizabeth Radcliffe, Hume, Passion, and Action Chair: Margaret Watkins (St. Vincent College) Critics: Lauren Kopajtic (Fordham University) Don Garrett (New York University) Author: Elizabeth Radcliffe (College of William & Mary)
11F Symposium: Knowing Without a Doubt Chair: Audre Brokes (St. Joseph’s University) Speaker: Andrew Y. Moon (Virginia Commonwealth
University) Commentators: Luis Oliveira (University of Houston) Georges Dicker (The College at Brockport, SUNY)
11G Symposium: The Residual Access Problem Chair: Silvia de Toffoli (Princeton University) Speaker: Sharon E. Berry (Oakland University) Commentators: Aja Watkins (Boston University) Otávio Bueno (University of Miami)
11H Symposium: On Human Sexual Lust as a Non-Basic Emotion Chair: John Protevi (Louisiana State University) Speaker: Larry A. Herzberg (University of Wisconsin–Oshkosh) Commentators: Remy Debes (University of Memphis) Tyler Haddow (University of California, Berkeley)
11I Symposium: Interventionism and the Causal Relevance of Semantics
Chair: Javier Gomez-Lavin (University of Pennsylvania) Speaker: Veronica Gomez Sanchez (Rutgers University–New
Brunswick) Commentators: Eric Hiddleston (Wayne State University) Joseph Mendola (University of Nebraska)
11J Colloquium: Epistemology and Probability I Chair: Julia Smith (University of Toronto) Speaker: Dan Baras (The Hebrew University of Jerusalem) “A Strike Against a Striking Principle” Commentator: Liz Jackson (Australian National University and
Ryerson University)
62
Friday Late Morning, 11:15 a.m.–1:15 p.m. (cont.)
11K Symposium: Against Conventional Wisdom Chair: Matt Moss (Vassar College) Speakers: Ethan Jerzak (University of California, Berkeley) Arc Kocurek (Cornell University) Rachel Rudolph (Auburn University) Commentators: Cameron Domenico Kirk-Giannini (Rutgers
University–Newark) Theodore Locke (Concordia University)
11L Colloquium: Buddhism Chair: Jarrod Brown (Berea College) Speaker: Olga Louchakova-Schwartz (Hult International
Business School) “The Emancipatory Continuity of Buddhist Emotion” Commentator: Kristin Culbertson (University of Connecticut) Speaker: Zeyad Sameh El Nabolsy (Cornell University) “The Philosopher of Emptiness and the God-
Intoxicated Man: Nagarjuna in Dialogue with Spinoza”
Commentator: TBA
11M Symposium: Identity and Society: What Makes You Who You Are Chair: Moya Mapps (Yale University) Speaker: Joanna Lawson (Yale University) Commentators: Cathleen Muller (Marist College) Amy Berg (Rhode Island College)
11N Colloquium: Groups and Race Chair: Katharine Wolfe (St. Lawrence University) Speaker: Michael Randall Barnes (Georgetown University) “Who Do You Speak For? And How?: Anonymity and
Identity in Online Abuse” Commentator: Heather Stewart (University of Western Ontario) Speaker: Robin Zheng (Yale-NUS College) “On Activists and Allies: Solidarity and Good Faith
Across Disagreement and Difference” Commentator: Rochelle Duford (University of North Carolina at
Wilmington)
63
Friday Late Morning, 11:15 a.m.–1:15 p.m. (cont.)
AFFILIATED GROUP PROGRAM
G11A North American Nietzsche SocietyTopic: Author Meets Critics: Andrew Huddleston, Nietzsche on the Decadence and Flourishing of Culture
Chair: Bernard Reginster (Brown University) Critics: Kristin Gjesdal (Temple University) Jacqueline Scott (Loyola University Chicago) Author: Andrew Huddleston (Birkbeck College, University
of London)
G11B International Association for the Philosophy of Death and DyingTopic: Immortality and the Badness of Death
Chair: James DiGiovanna (John Jay College of Criminal Justice)
Speakers: Adam Buben (Leiden University) “What’s the Point: Meaninglessness in Mortality
and Immortality” Joseph Ulatowski (University of Waikato) and David
Beisecker (University of Nevada, Las Vegas) “The Exhaustion of Science and the Tedium of
Immortality” Greg Bognar (Stockholm University and Princeton
University Center for Human Values) “The Value of Longevity” J. L. Contos (University of Edinburgh) “Termination Without Time?”
G11C The Society of Philosophers in America (SOPHIA)Topic: 2020 U.S. Election Issues
Chair: Daniel J. Brunson (Morgan State University) Speakers: Tommy J. Curry (University of Edinburgh) “Trump’s Gendercidal Frame: Explaining Post-2016
Xenophobia and Anti-Black Racism as Misandric Aggression”
Myron Jackson (Xavier University) “Laughing and Crying at Once: American
Infotainment, Mediocrity, and Political Vandalism” Jacquelyn Ann Kegley (California State University,
Bakersfield) “Is the Real Issue Character and Values?”
64
Friday Early Afternoon, 1:30–4:30 p.m.
FRIDAY EARLY AFTERNOON, 1:30–4:30 P.M.
DIVISIONAL PROGRAM
12A Dewey Lecture Introduction: Jennifer Whiting (University of Pittsburgh) Speaker: Gisela Striker (Harvard University) “The Academic Practice of Philosophy (. . . in Two
Countries)”
12B APA Committee Session: Gentrification, Displacement, and the CityArranged by the APA Committee on Public Philosophy
Chair: Rebecca Kukla (Georgetown University) Speakers: Meena Krishnamurthy (Queens University) Margaret Moore (Queen’s University) Ronald Sundstrom (University of San Francisco) Tyler Zimmer (Northeastern Illinois University)
12C Colloquium: Epistemology Chair: Mack Sullivan (University of Notre Dame) Speaker: Sara Kolmes (Georgetown University) “A Case for Case-Based Epistemology: Clinical
Bioethics and Miracle Cures” Commentator: Jonathan Fuller (University of Pittsburgh) Speaker: Wade E. Munroe (Indiana University) “What’s So Special About Reasoning? Rationality,
Belief Updating, and Internalism” Commentator: Keshav Singh (University of North Carolina at
Chapel Hill) Speaker: Liang Zhou Koh (University of Toronto) “Standards-Based Permissivism and the Problem of
Irrelevant Influences on Belief” Commentator: Allison Balin (Massachusetts Institute of
Technology)
12D Colloquium: Nietzsche Chair: Katie Terezakis (Rochester Institute of Technology) Speaker: Leonard Feldblyum (Brown University) “Higher Types, Not Great Men: Nietzsche’s Critique
of Carlyle” Commentator: Elena Garadja (University of Pittsburgh) Speaker: Michael Begun (Fordham University) “Nietzsche’s Natural History” Commentator: Lucio Privitello (Stockton University)
65
Friday Early Afternoon, 1:30–4:30 p.m. (cont.)
Speaker: Joshua W. Rayman (University of South Florida) “What’s Heraclitus to Him, or He to Heraclitus? On
Nietzsche’s Beloved Personal Archetype Heraclitus” Commentator: Anne Ashbaugh (Towson University)
12E Colloquium: Aristotelian Ethics Chair: Ian McCready-Flora (University of Virginia) Speaker: Victor Saenz (Rice University) “Appetitive Desire and Aristotle’s Scheme of
Character Virtues” Commentator: Katherine Meadows (Indiana University) Speaker: Bryan Reece (University of Chicago) “Aristotle on Praise, Honor, and Activity” Commentator: Jonny Thakkar (Swarthmore College) Speaker: Larkin Philpot (University of Pittsburgh) “Aristotle on the Role of Prohairesis in Philia” Commentator: Paul Ludwig (St. John’s College)
12F Colloquium: Perception Chair: Steven Wagner (University of Illinois at Urbana-
Champaign) Speaker: Sydney Harvey (University of Calgary) “Advancing Imagination: Perceptual Illusions in
Film” Commentator: John Dyck (Auburn University) Speaker: Jacob Berger (Idaho State University) “Perceptual Holism and Reliable Misperception” Commentator: James Gulledge (Washington University in St.
Louis) Speaker: Casey Landers (University of Miami) “A Constraint on Rich Visual Experience” Commentator: Adrienne Prettyman (Bryn Mawr College)
12G Colloquium: Naturalism and Value Chair: Owen Aldritt (Emory University) Speaker: Parisa Moosavi (University of Toronto) “Neo-Aristotelian Naturalism as Ethical Naturalism” Commentator: Catharine Fullarton (Emory University) Speaker: Kristina M. Gehrman (University of Tennessee,
Knoxville) “Darwin, Disenchantment, and the Great Chain of
Being” Commentator: Vincent Colapietro (Pennsylvania State University)
66
Friday Early Afternoon, 1:30–4:30 p.m. (cont.)
Speaker: Vance A. Ricks (Guilford College) “‘A Craving for Higher Things’: John Stuart Mill’s
Secular Religion” Commentator: Jennifer Hansen (St. Lawrence University)
12H Invited Symposium: Racism and Moral Psychology Chair: Jorge Garcia (Boston College) Speakers: Macalaster Bell (Bryn Mawr College) Benjamin Mitchell-Yellin (Sam Houston State
University) Alberto Urquidez (Bowdoin College)
12I Colloquium: Philosophy of Language Chair: David Lindeman (Georgetown University) Speaker: JJ Lang (Stanford University) “What Is the Difference Between Telling and
Asserting? Reconsidering the Social Nature of Assertion”
Commentator: Edward Hinchman (Florida State University) Speaker: Giorgio Sbardolini (University of Amsterdam) “Wittgenstein’s Fundamental Thought: On
Redundancy and Hyperintensionality” Commentator: Peter Hanks (University of Minnesota) Speaker: Junhyo Lee (University of Southern California) “‘Ought’ and Intensionality” Commentator: David Boylan (Rutgers University–New Brunswick)
12J Invited Symposium: Expanding the Canon: Avicenna Chair: Therese-Anne Druart (The Catholic University of
America) Speakers: Jari Kaukua (University of Jyväskylä) Jon McGinnis (University of Missouri–St. Louis) Commentator: Taneli Kukkonen (New York University Abu Dhabi)
12K Invited Symposium: The Association of Ideas in Philosophy and Its History
Chair: Kathryn Tabb (Bard College) Speakers: Mike Dacey (Bates College) Cameron Buckner (University of Houston) Talia Morag (Deakin University)
67
Friday Early Afternoon, 1:30–4:30 p.m. (cont.)
12L Colloquium: Metaphysics II Chair: Otávio Bueno (University of Miami) Speaker: Josiah R. Lopez-Wild (University of Wisconsin–
Milwaukee) “A Can of Precisificational Worms” Commentator Daniel Rubio (Rutgers University) Speaker: Dana Goswick (University of Melbourne) “A Puzzle for Creationism about Fictional Objects” Commentator: Ned Markosian (University of Massachusetts
Amherst) Speaker: John McBride Bunke (University of Toronto) “Metaphysics and Explanatory Paradigms” Commentator: Scott Shalkowski (University of Leeds)
12M Invited Symposium: Aesthetics and Reasons Chair: Anthony Cross (Texas State University) Speakers: Keren Gorodeisky (Auburn University) Errol Lord (University of Pennsylvania) Commentator: Dominic McIver Lopes (University of British
Columbia)
AFFILIATED GROUP PROGRAM
G12A William James SocietyTopic: Themes in William James’s Philosophy
Chair: Stephen Bush (Brown University) Speakers: David Yaden (University of Pennsylvania) “William James’s Conversion to Self-Report Survey
Methods in Psychological Research” James Pawelski (University of Pennsylvania) “William James and the Quest for Meaningful
Measurement” Jake Spinelli (University of Illinois Chicago) Winner of the William James Society Young
Scholar’s Prize
G12B Association of Chinese Philosophers in AmericaTopic: Music, Knowledge, and Virtue: Interpretations and Criticisms of Confucian Philosophy
Chair: Bongrae Seok (Alvernia University) Speakers: Ori Tavor (University of Pennsylvania) “Music as Embodied Therapy in Classical
Confucianism”
68
Friday Early Afternoon, 1:30–4:30 p.m. (cont.)
Ruoyang Weng (University of Toronto) “Clash of Two Modes of Wind: A Philosophical
Investigation of Ji Kang’s Music Has in It Neither Grief nor Joy”
Harvey Lederman (Princeton University) “The Introspective Model of the Unity of
Knowledge and Action” Shirong Luo (Simmons University) “Rediscovering the Yin-Yang Theory” Seth Robertson (Harvard University) “To Cherish What We Ought: A Confucian Ethic of
Cherishing”
G12C Society for Teaching Comparative PhilosophyTopic: Teaching Comparative Philosophy: Syllabus and Activity WorkshopSession details TBA
G12D Radical Philosophy AssociationTopic: Radical Feminism
Chair: José Mendoza (University of Massachusetts Lowell) Speakers: Shaila Bora (Villanova University) “When Struggle Is Not Enough: Women’s Liberation
and the Promise of Freedom” Falguni Sheth (Emory University) “Colonial Subjects, Neocolonial Feminism, and
Race” Amelia M. Wirts (Boston College) “Criminal as Oppressed Social Group”
G12E Association for Informal Logica and Critical ThinkingTopic: Argument Diagrams: What Are They And How Should They Be Taught?
Chair: Lloyd Carr (Rivier University) Speakers: Nuhu Osman Attah (University of Pittsburgh) Nathan Otey (ThinkerAnalytix) Jonathan Haber (Degree of Freedom) Anne L’Hommedieu Sanderson (Harvard University) Jeff Buechner (Rutgers University–Newark and The
Saul Kripke Center, The Graduate Center, CUNY)
69
Friday Evening, 7:00–10:00 p.m.
G12F Association of Philosophy Journal EditorsTopic: The Corporatization of Journal Publishing and Its Alternatives: A Roundtable Discussion
Chair: Carol C. Gould (City University of New York) Speakers: Bruce Barry (Vanderbilt University) David Bourget (University of Western Ontario) John Heil (Washington University in St. Louis) Michelle Kosch (Cornell University) Udo Schuklenk (Queen’s University) Alex Guerrero (Rutgers University)
FRIDAY EVENING, 4:45–6:45 P.M.
DIVISIONAL PROGRAM
13A Presidential Address Speaker: Christia Mercer (Columbia University) “Empowering Philosophy”
FRIDAY EVENING, 7:00–10:00 P.M.
AFFILIATED GROUP PROGRAM
G14A The Ayn Rand SocietyTopic: Aristotle and Rand on Axioms
Chair: Robert Mayhew (Seton Hall University) Speaker: James G. Lennox (University of Pittsburgh) Commentator: Michail Peramatzis (Oxford University)
G14B Society for Mexican American Philosophy Topic: Author-Meet-Critics: Amy Reed-Sandoval’s Socially Undocumented: Identity and Immigration Justice
Chair: José Jorge Mendoza (University of Massachusetts Lowell)
Critic: Desiree Lim (Pennsylvania State University) John Kaiser Ortiz (Millersville University) Maria Morales (Florida State University) Author: Amy Reed-Sandoval (University of Nevada, Las
Vegas)
70
Friday Evening, 7:00–10:00 p.m. (cont.)
G14C Society for the Advancement of American PhilosophyTopic: Neglected Pragmatists I: Schiller, Locke and Follett
Chair: Daniel J. Brunson (Morgan State University) Speakers: Frederic Kellogg (Harvard University) “Logical Induction in Law: the Contribution of
Holmes to Pragmatic Epistemology” Carl Sachs (Marymount University) “Lewis’s Pragmatist Resistance to Naturalism” Hugh P. McDonald (New York City College of
Technology) “Values and First Philosophy: The Pragmatic
Humanism of F. C. S. Schiller”
G14D Political Theology GroupTopic: Author Meets Critics: Amber Musser, Sensual Excess: Queer Femininity and Brown Jouissance
Chair: Troizel Carr (New York University) Critics: Yasmeen Chism (New York University) Andrea Warmack (Emory University) Jingchao (Chris) Ma (Villanova University) Troizel Carr (New York University) Author: Amber Musser (George Washington University)
G14E North American Kant SocietyTopic: Kant’s Transcendental Idealism
Chair: Alex Englert (Johns Hopkins University) Speaker: Andrew Roche (Centre College) “A Priority and Ideality” Commentator: Rosalind Chaplin (University of California, San
Diego) Speaker: Yoon Choi (Marquette University) “Transcendental Idealism and the Self” Commentator: Damian Melamedoff (University of Toronto) Speaker: Tim Jankowiak (Towson University) “Sorting Out Transcendental Idealism By Sorting
Out Intentionality” Commentator: Brian Tracz (University of California, San Diego)
G14F International Hobbes Association, Session 2 Chair: Michael Byron (Kent State University) Speakers: Eva Odzuck (Friedrich Alexander University) “Hobbesian Eugenics” Karim Barakat (American University of Beirut) “Causation in Hobbes’s Method”
71
Friday Evening, 7:00–10:00 p.m. (cont.)
Sandra Field (Yale-NUS College) “A Puzzle for Hobbes’s Conception of Political
Unity” Sharon Lloyd (University of Southern California) “Hobbes’s Moral and Political Philosophy”
G14G Society for Ancient Greek Philosophy Chair: TBA Speakers: Wenjin Liu (Princeton University) “Plato on Absence and Deviation from Epistêmê:
Incomprehension and Ignorance in the Republic” Alan Pichanick (Villanova University) “Spiritness and Wonder: Plato’s Political Psychology
in the Symposium” Bjorn Wastvedt (University of Arizona) “A Modern Stylometric Approach to Aristotle’s
‘Common Books’”
72
Saturday Morning, 9:00–11:00 a.m.
SATURDAY, JANUARY 11
REGISTRATION8:30–11:30 a.m., registration desk
EXHIBITS9:00 a.m.–1:00 p.m.
“ASK A PHILOSOPHER” BOOTH10:00 a.m.–2:00 p.m., Suburban Station
SATURDAY MORNING, 9:00–11:00 A.M.
DIVISIONAL PROGRAM
15A Invited Symposium: Philosophy of Film Chair: Francey Russell (Columbia University) Speaker: Robert Pippin (University of Chicago) Commentator: Fred Rush (University of Notre Dame)
15B Author Meets Critics: Berit Brogaard, Seeing and Saying: The Language of Perception and the Representational View of Experience
Chair: Eileen Nutting (University of Kansas) Critics: Alex Byrne (Massachusetts Institute of Technology) Michael Martin (University of Oxford and University
of California, Berkeley) Author: Berit Brogaard (University of Miami)
15C Author Meets Critics: Ralph Wedgwood, The Value of Rationality Chair: Danny Forman (Rutgers University) Critics: Alex Worsnip (University of North Carolina at
Chapel Hill) Jennifer Carr (University of California, San Diego) Author: Ralph Wedgwood (University of Southern
California)
15D Author Meets Critics: Noelle McAfee, Fear of Breakdown Chair: Amy Allen (Pennsylvania State University) Critics: David McIvor (Colorado State University) Robyn Marasco (Hunter College, CUNY) Author: Noelle McAfee (Emory University)
73
Saturday Morning, 9:00–11:00 a.m. (cont.)
15E Author Meets Critics: Justin Steinberg, Spinoza’s Political Psychology: The Taming of Fortune and Fear
Chair: Kristin Primus (University of California, Berkeley) Critics: Julie Klein (Villanova University) Michael Rosenthal (University of Washington) Author: Justin Steinberg (The Graduate Center, CUNY)
15F Author Meets Critics: Jan Westerhoff, The Golden Age of Indian Buddhist Philosophy in the First Millennium CE
Chair: Krishna Pathak (Hindu College, University of Delhi) Critics: Nicholaos Jones (University of Alabama at
Huntsville) Mark Siderits (Seoul National University) Author: Jan Westerhoff (University of Oxford)
15G Symposium: Centering the Principal Principle Chair: Jeff Dunn (DePauw University) Speaker: Isaac Wilhelm (Rutgers University) Commentators: Jack Spencer (Massachusetts Institute of
Technology) Lisa Cassell (University of Maryland, Baltimore)
15H Symposium: Moral Incompetence and Expert Failure: How to Be Virtuous in Corrupt Environments
Chair: Ryan Doody (University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill)
Speaker: Mario Ivan Juarez Garcia (University of Arizona) Commentators: Cayla Clinkenbeard (New School for Social
Research) Bryan Pilkington (Seton Hall University)
15I Symposium: Epistemic Injustices and Political Responsibilities: Using Taylor to Aid Medina’s Project
Chair: Christiaan Reynolds (Villanova University) Speaker: Dennis McEnnerney (Colorado College) Commentators: Dana Grabelsky (City University of New York) Sahar Heydari Fard (University of Cincinnati)
15J Symposium: Are Normative Truths Deliberatively Indispensable? Chair: Rebecca Stangl (University of Virginia) Speaker: Andrew Stewart (University of Southern California) Commentators: Jared Millson (Agnes Scott College) Mark Coppenger (Southern Baptist Theological
Seminary)
74
Saturday Morning, 9:00–11:00 a.m. (cont.)
15K Symposium: Demedicalizing PrEP for HIV Prevention: The Social and Political Effects on MSM
Chair: Jonathan Fuller (University of Pittsburgh) Speaker: Michael Montess (York University) Commentators: Sean Aas (Georgetown University) Mercedes Corredor (University of Michigan)
15L Colloquium: Hegel Chair: Daniel Allen (Villanova University) Speaker: Daniel Lindquist (Indiana University–Bloomington) “Why Hegel’s Philosophy of Nature?” Commentator: Omar Quinonez (Emory University) Speaker: Joris Spigt (Institute of Philosophy, Katholieke
Universiteit Leuven) “Hegel on the Principle of (Non-)Contradiction” Commentator: Colin Bodayle (Villanova University)
15M Colloquium: Plato Chair: Brian Reese (University of Nebraska) Speaker: Colin C. Smith (University of Colorado) “Communion, Division, and Dialectic in the Sophist” Commentator: Jessica Deal (Catholic University) Speaker: Wenjin Liu (Princeton University) “The Fabric of Akrasia—A New Reading of Plato’s
Protagoras 351b-358e” Commentator: Mobus Freya (Cornell University)
15N Colloquium: Mental Content Chair: Lisa Miracchi (University of Pennsylvania) Speaker: Kateryna Samoilova (California State University,
Chico) “Agency Lost: Mental Action in Light of the
Kripkensteinian Paradox” Commentator: Michael Brent (University of Denver) Speaker: David Bourget (University of Western Ontario) “Debugging Two-Dimensionalism about Narrow
Content” Commentator: Elanor Taylor (Johns Hopkins University)
15O Colloquium: The Anthropocene Chair: Myron Jackson (Xavier University) Speaker: Jessica Ludescher Imanaka (Seattle University) “Contemplative Freedom in the Anthropocene:
Inspiration from Sloterdijk”
75
Saturday Morning, 9:00–11:00 a.m. (cont.)
Commentator: John Rose (Goucher College) Speaker: James Dow (Hendrix College) “The Anthropogenic Sublime” Commentator: Richard Wilson (Towson University)
15P Colloquium: Aesthetics and Perception Chair: August Gorman (Princeton University) Speaker: Madeleine M. Levac (University of California,
Berkeley) “Sane Sensing: Art and Affective Disorder in
Merleau-Ponty” Commentator: Rebecca Harrison (University of California,
Riverside) Speaker: Tyler Olsson (University of California, Santa Cruz) “The Perceived Fit Between Music and Movement:
A Multisensory Approach to Understanding Innocent Dance Appreciation”
Commentator: Jenny Judge (New York University)
15Q APA Committee Session: The National High School Ethics Bowl: How (and Why You Might Want) to Get InvolvedArranged by the APA Committee on Pre-College Instruction
Chair: Geoff Sayre-McCord (University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill)
Panelists: David Boonin (University of Colorado Boulder) Zoë Johnson King (New York University) Steve Swartzer (University of North Carolina at
Chapel Hill) Alex Richardson (University of North Carolina at
Chapel Hill)
15R Colloquium: Epistemology and Probability II Chair: Alexei Angelides (California State University, East
Bay) Speaker: Adam Edwards (University of Illinois at Urbana-
Champaign) “On the Variable Choice and Multiple Partitions
Problems” Commentator: John Pittard (Yale University) Speaker: Corey Nathaniel Dethier (University of Notre Dame) “Variation in Evidence and Simpson’s Paradox” Commentator: Branden Fitelson (Northeastern University)
76
Saturday Morning, 9:00–11:00 a.m. (cont.)
AFFILIATED GROUP PROGRAM
G15A Political Epistemology NetworkTopic: Political Epistemology
Chair: Elizabeth Edenberg (Georgetown University) Speakers: Amanda R. Greene (University College London) “Is There Political Expertise? Michael Hannon (University of Nottingham) “The Illusion of Political Disagreement” Étienne Brown (San Jose State University) “Autonomy, Free Speech, and the Legal Regulation
of Fake News”
G15B International Society for Comparative Studies of Chinese and Western PhilosophyTopic: Politics and Sacrifice
Chair: Jianping Hu (Nanyang Technological University) Speakers: L’ubomir Dunaj (University of Vienna) “Stimulating Inter- and Transcultural Dialogue:
Between Critical Theory and Chinese Political Philosophy”
Bin Song (Washington College) “The Utopian Seed of Modern Chinese Politics in
Ruism (Confucianism) and Its Tillichian Remedy” Shirong Luo (Simmons College) “Are There Things More Valuable Than Life?
Chinese and Western Perspectives”
SATURDAY LATE MORNING, 11:15 A.M.–1:15 P.M.
DIVISIONAL PROGRAM
16A Author Meets Critics: Tim Button and Sean Walsh, Philosophy and Model Theory
Chair: Mathias Frisch (Leibniz University Hannover) Critics: Vann McGee (Massachusetts Institute of
Technology) Lavinia Picollo (University College London) Daniel Waxman (Lingnan University) Authors: Tim Button (University of Cambridge) Sean Walsh (University of California, Los Angeles)
77
Saturday Late Morning, 11:15 a.m.–1:15 p.m.
16B Author Meets Critics: Sarah McGrath, Moral Knowledge Chair: Daniel Wodak (University of Pennsylvania) Critics: Julia Markovits (Cornell University) Nomy Arpaly (Brown University) Author: Sarah McGrath (Princeton University)
16C Invited Symposium: Consciousness and Intentionality Chair: Christina Friedlaender (University of Memphis) Speakers: Terry Horgan (University of Arizona) Brian McLaughlin (Rutgers University)
16D Invited Symposium: Accuracy Arguments in Formal Epistemology Chair: Han Li (Rowan University) Speakers: Richard Pettigrew (University of Bristol) Commentator: Kenny Easwaran (Texas A&M University)
16E Author Meets Critics: Christian List, Why Free Will Is Real Chair: Derk Pereboom (Cornell University) Critics: Al Mele (Florida State University) Gideon Rosen (Princeton University) Author: Christian List (London School of Economics)
16F Symposium: Having a Concept Has a Cost Chair: Ege Yumusak (Harvard University) Speaker: Michael Deigan (Yale University) Commentators: Jens Kipper (University of Rochester) Annette Martin (New York University)
16G Symposium: Conventions and Counterlogicals: Here There Be C-Monsters
Chair: John Keller (St. Joseph’s University) Speaker: Kelly Gaus (Massachusetts Institute of Technology) Commentators: Chris Blake-Turner (University of North Carolina at
Chapel Hill) Anthony Nguyen (University of Southern California)
16H Symposium: The Hole Argument Against Everything Chair: Flavia Padovani (Drexel University) Speaker: Joshua D. Norton (University of California, Irvine) Commentators: Tim Maudlin (New York University) Mahmoud Jalloh (University of Southern California)
78
Saturday Late Morning, 11:15 a.m.–1:15 p.m. (cont.)
16I Symposium: Here, We Are: A Native American Relational Social Ontology
Chair: Manasa Gopakumar (Temple University) Speaker: Alex R. Steers-McCrum (The Graduate Center, CUNY) Commentators: Wayne Wapeemukwa (Pennsylvania State
University) Dolleen Tisawii’ashii Manning (Michigan State
University)
16J Symposium: Social Location as Justification: Examining the Socially Marginalized’s Claim to Epistemic Advantage
Chair: Asia Ferrin (American University) Speaker: Lidal Dror (Harvard University) Commentators: Keyvan Shafiei (Georgetown University) Adam Burgos (Bucknell University)
16K Symposium: Guilt, Responsibility, and the Environmental Crisis Chair: Rachael Yonek (Vanderbilt University) Speaker: Roger S. Gottlieb (Worcester Polytechnic Institute) Commentators: Sally Scholz (Villanova University) Michael Sullivan (Emory University)
16L APA Graduate Student CouncilTopic: Outsiders Within: Reflections on Being a Low-Income and/or First-Generation Philosopher
Chairs: Arianna Falbo (Brown University) and Heather Stewart (University of Western Ontario)
Speakers: Robert Budron (Loyola University Chicago) “Dual-Desecration: A First-Generation Student’s
How-To Guide for Properly Stomping Over All of the Rules”
Ashley Lamarre (Pennsylvania State University) and Nompumelelo Zinhle Manzini (Pennsylvania State University)
“Marginal Disclosures: Standpoint, Sisterhood, Survival and Stipends”
Darien Pollock (Harvard University) “Academic Philosophy and the Problem of
Belonging”
16M Colloquium: Heidegger Chair: Jeffery Kinlaw (McMurry University)
79
Saturday Late Morning, 11:15 a.m.–1:15 p.m. (cont.)
Speaker: Adam J. Knowles (Drexel University) “Was Martin Heidegger a Völkisch Thinker? On
Landscape, People, and Belonging” Commentator: Dan Larkin (Georgia Southern University) Speaker: Lucas Fain (Boston University) “The Presuppositions of Being and Time:
Heidegger’s Interpretation of Aristotle in the Summer Course of 1924”
Commentator: John Rose (Goucher College)
16N Colloquium: Philosophy of Mind Chair: TBA Speaker: Bronwyn Stippa (University of Texas at Austin) “Inner Speech, Cognitive Phenomenology, and
Conscious Thought” Commentator: Zach Gabor (Harvard University)
16O Author Meets Critics: Sam Newlands, Reconceiving Spinoza Chair: Tom Cook (Rollins University) Critics: Michael Della Rocca (Yale University) Kristin Primus (University of California, Berkeley) Karolina Huebner (University of Toronto) Author: Sam Newlands (University of Notre Dame)
AFFILIATED GROUP PROGRAM
G16A Gandhi - King - Chavez - Addams SocietyTopic: Author Meets Critics: Sanjay Lal, Gandhi’s Thought and Liberal Democracy
Chair: Greg Moses (Texas State University at San Marcos) Critics: Doug Allen (University of Maine) Michael Allen (East Tennessee State University) Jeff Shawn Jose (Tilburg University) Author: Sanjay Lal (Clayton State University)
G16B Society for Mexican American PhilosophyTopic: Author-Meet-Critics: Adam Omar Hosein, The Ethics of Migration: An Introduction
Chair: George N. Fourlas (Hampshire College) Critics: Manuel Chávez (Monmouth University) James W. Boettcher (Saint Joseph’s University) Eric F. Cavallero (Southern Connecticut State
University) Author: Adam Omar Hosein (Northeastern University)
80
Saturday Late Morning, 11:15 a.m.–1:15 p.m. (cont.)
G16C International Society for Environmental EthicsTopic: Environmental Ethics in Social Context: Robots, Gene Drives, and Water Management
Chair: Marion Hourdequin (Colorado College) Speakers: Justin Donhauser (Bowling Green State University) “Environmental Robot Virtues?” Zahra Meghani (University of Rhode Island) “An Approach for Evaluating Arguments for the
Environmental Release of Genetically Engineered Animals with Gene Drives”
Gehad Abdelal (University of Georgia) “Water Ethics: The Problem of Uncertainty and
Colonial Implication on the Nile River Conflict”
G16D American Society for AestheticsTopic: Author Meets Critics: Thi Nguyen, Games: Agency as Art
Chair: Susan Feagin (Temple University) Critics: Gwen Bradford (Rice University) Elisabeth Camp (Rutgers University) Aaron Meskin (University of Georgia) Author: Thi Nguyen (Utah Valley University)
G16E George Santayana SocietyTopic: George Santayana Society Annual Meeting
Chair: Richard M. Rubin (George Santayana Society) Speaker: Katarzyna Kremplewska (Institute of Philosophy and
Sociology, Polish Academy of Sciences, Warsaw) “Ideal Allegiances and Practical Wisdom: Elements
of Santayana’s Political Philosophy” Chair: Glenn Tiller (Texas A&M University–Corpus Christi) Speaker: Lydia Amir (Tufts University) “Santayana, Nietzsche, Montaigne”
SATURDAY AFTERNOON, 1:30–4:30 P.M.
DIVISIONAL PROGRAM
17A Colloquium: Epistemology and Morality Chair: Miranda Fricker (City University of New York) Speaker: James Fritz (Ohio State University) “Radical Moral Encroachment and Reasons of the
Wrong Kind” Commentator: Marie Feldblyum Le Blevennec (Boston University)
81
Saturday Afternoon, 1:30–4:30 p.m.
Speaker: Alexander Scott Paparella (West Chester University) “Self-Deception and Epistemic Injustice” Commentator: Grace Boey (University of Pennsylvania) Speaker: Laura Brown (University of Iowa) “Trickery as Epistemic Resistance” Commentator: Eric Bayruns Garcia (California State University, San
Bernardino)
17B APA Committee Session: Land Acknowledgment: Traditions, Relations, and Land OntologyArranged by the APA Committee on Native American and Indigenous Philosophers
Chair: Brian Yazzie Burkhart (University of Oklahoma) Speakers: Brian Yazzie Burkhart (University of Oklahoma) “On the Meaning of Land in Land Acknowledgment” Andrea Sullivan-Clarke (University of Windsor) “Relations and How Allies Acknowledge Land”
17C Colloquium: Artificial Intelligence Chair: William Seeley (Boston College) Speaker: Ravit Dotan (University of California, Berkeley) “Machine Learning, Theory Choice, and Non-
Epistemic Values” Commentator: Michael Ashooh (University of Vermont) Speaker: Zachariah A. Neemeh (University of Memphis) “Cultural Affordances in AI Perception” Commentator: Austin Baker (Rutgers University) Speaker: Robert Long (New York University) “Nativism and Empiricism in Artificial Intelligence” Commentator: Brian Blanchette (University of California, Santa
Cruz)
17D Colloquium: Virtue Chair: Benjamin Arah (Bowie State University) Speaker: Matthew Wilson (Harvard University) “High-Fidelity Virtues, Situationism, and the
Measurement of Virtue” Commentator: Phillip Nelson (Stony Brook University) Speaker: Maria Altepeter (Washington University in St. Louis) “The Focus of Virtue: Broadening Attention
in Empirically Informed Accounts of Virtue Cultivation”
Commentator: James Flynn (Caldwell University)
82
Saturday Afternoon, 1:30–4:30 p.m. (cont.)
Speaker: Nick Schuster (Washington University in St. Louis) “When Silence Is Golden: Rethinking the Virtue-Continence Distinction”
Commentator: John Johnson (Concordia University Chicago)
17E Colloquium: Justice and Ideal Theory Chair: Samuel Duncan (Tidewater Community College) Speaker: Lisa M. Madura (Vanderbilt University) “Giving Weight to Reasons: Toward a Feminist
Conception of Deliberation” Commentator: Dee Payton (Rutgers University) Speaker: Jeff Carroll (University of Virginia) “Optimal, Practical, and Insightful: Why Ideal
Theory Needs to Pick Two” Commentator: Larry Udell (West Chester University)
17F Invited Symposium: Philosophical Method in Plato Chair: Sophie Ban (Mercer County Community College) Speakers: Tushar Irani (Wesleyan University) Evan Rodriguez (Idaho State University) Commentator: Allison Murphy (Carleton College)
17G APA Committee Session: Author Meets Critics: Alexander Sarch, Criminally Ignorant: Why the Law Pretends We Know What We Don’tArranged by the APA Committee on Philosophy and Law
Chair: Craig Agule (Rutgers University–Camden) Critics: Katrina Sifferd (Elmhurst College) Emad Atiq (Cornell University) Mihailis Diamantis (University of Iowa) Author: Alexander Sarch (University of Surrey)
17H Invited Symposium: Theoretical Virtues Chair: Galen Barry (Iona College) Speakers: Dana Tulodziecki (Purdue University) Chris Haufe (Case Western Reserve University) Commentator: Rune Nyrup (University of Cambridge)
17I Invited Symposium: Metaphysics of Mind: History Meets Contemporary
Chair: Galen Strawson (University of Texas at Austin) Speaker: Domenica Romagni (Colorado State) Commentator: John Kulvicki (Dartmouth University)
83
Saturday Afternoon, 1:30–4:30 p.m. (cont.)
Speaker: Umrao Sethi (Lehman College, CUNY) Commentator: Paul Audi (University of Rochester)
17J Author Meets Critics: Gayle Salamon, The Life and Death of Latisha King: A Critical Phenomenology of Transphobia
Chair: Perry Zurn (American University) Critics: Talia Bettcher (California State University, Los
Angeles) Alisa Bierria (University of California, Riverside) Tamsin Kimoto (Emory University) Author: Gayle Salamon (Princeton University)
17K Invited Symposium: Compassion in the History of Ethics: Schopenhauer and Nietzsche
Chair: Anja Jauernig (New York University) Speakers: Sandra Shapshay (Hunter College, CUNY) Bernard Reginster (Brown University) Commentator: Christopher Janaway (University of Southampton)
AFFILIATED GROUP PROGRAM
G17A William James SocietyTopic: Symposium on Aaron Zimmerman’s Belief: A Pragmatic Picture
Chair: Stephen Bush (Brown University) Critics: John Capps (Rochester Institute of Technology) Miriam McCormick (University of Richmond) Henry Jackman (York University) Author: Aaron Zimmerman (University of California, Santa
Barbara)
G17B Søren Kierkegaard SocietyTopic: Kierkegaard on Practice and Inner Strength
Chair: Marilyn G. Piety (Drexel University) Speakers: Dylan S. Bailey (Fordham University) “Kierkegaard and Socrates on Midwifery and
Practical Understanding” Kevin T. Di Camillo (Niagara University) “Jean Fouquet’s The Melun Diptych: Weaning in
Kierkegaard’s Fear and Trembling and in Melanie Klein—A Study in Kenosis and Theosis”
84
Saturday Afternoon, 1:30–4:30 p.m. (cont.)
Siobhan Marie Doyle (University College Dublin and St. Nicholas Montessori College of Ireland)
“Gender and the Practical Dimensions of Kierkegaard’s Existential Philosophy”
Commentator: Marilyn G. Piety (Drexel University)
G17C Radical Philosophy AssociationTopic: Anti-Colonial MENA Thought
Chair: George Fourlas (Hampshire College) Speakers: Marzouq Alnusf (Northwestern University) “Behind the ‘Seen’: A Reading of Al-Saji’s
Phenomenological Account of Racializing Vision and Hesitation”
Fulden Ibrahimhakkıoğlu (Middle East Technical University)
“Remembering Genocide, Past and Present: On Collective Memory, Forgetting, and Being Haunted by History in Contemporary Turkey”
Sabeen Ahmed (Vanderbilt University) “Rearticulating the Juridical as a Discursive Practice
of Ontopolitics: Reading Foucault Against the Grain”
G17D North American Spinoza SocietyTopic: Spinoza, Cavendish, and Conway
Chair: Julie R. Klein (Villanova University) Speakers: Alison Peterman (University of Rochester) “Cavendish and Spinoza on Holist Explanations” Nastassja Pugliese (Universidade Federal do Rio
de Janeiro) “Conway’s Critique of Spinoza and the Metaphysics
of Transmutation” Aminah Hasan-Birdwell (Columbia University) “Spinoza and Conway on Time, Duration, and
Perfection”
G17E Marxism and Philosophy AssociationTopic: Responding to the Environmental Crisis
Chair: Anne Fairchild Pomeroy (Stockton University) Speakers: Roger S. Gottlieb (Worcester Polytechnic Institute) “Morality and the Environmental Crisis: Answers
and Questions”
85
Saturday Afternoon, 1:30–4:30 p.m. (cont.)
Brian Henning (Gonzaga University) “From the Anthropocene to the Ecozoic:
Philosophy in an Age of Climate Crisis”
G17F Society for German Idealism and RomanticismTopic: Author Meets Critics: Lydia Moland, Hegel’s Aesthetic: The Art of Idealism
Chair: Keren Gorodeisky (Auburn University) Critics: Richard Eldridge (Swarthmore College) Ingvild Torsen (University of Oslo) Rachel Falkenstern (St. Francis College) Author: Lydia Moland (Colby College)
G17G Association of Chinese Philosophers in AmericaTopic: Symposium on Dao Annual Best Essay 2018: “Incongruent Names: A Theme in the History of Chinese Philosophy”
Chair: Yong Huang (The Chinese University of Hong Kong) Authors: Paul D’Ambrosio (East China Normal University) Hans-Georg Moeller (University of Macau) Hans-Rudolf Kantor (Huafan University) Commentators: Paul Goldin (University of Pennsylvania) Jane Geaney (University of Richmond) Sandra Wawrytko (San Diego State University) Respondents: Paul D’Ambrosio (East China Normal University) Hans-Georg Moeller (University of Macau) Hans-Rudolf Kantor (Huafan University)
G17H Indian Philosophy AssociationTopic: Reconsidering Romanticism: A Transnational Perspective
Chair: Vishwa Adluri (Hunter College, CUNY) Speakers: Edward P. Butler (Independent Scholar) “Romanticism and Polytheism: The Modern Gaze
on the Ancient and Non-Western Other” Katie Terezakis (Rochester Institute of Technology) “The Charm of Politics among Kant’s Romantic
Critics: Hamann, Jacobi, and Schlegel on Liberty and Illiberalism”
Marcia Morgan (Muhlenberg College) “Adorno and Said on ‘Late Style’ After
Existentialism and German Romanticism” Yi Wu (New School for Social Research) “The Concept of the Maritime, or How to De-
Colonize the Un-Colonizable with Hegel and Coleridge”
86
Saturday Afternoon, 1:30–4:30 p.m. (cont.)
Katia Hay (University of Lisbon and University of Amsterdam)
“On Laughter and Philosophy in Schlegel and Nietzsche”
Commentator: Joydeep Bagchee (Independent Scholar)
87
Program Participants
AAas, Sean (Georgetown University)............................................................ 15KAbbarno, G. John (D’Youville College) ..............................................G1C, G3DAbdelal, Gehad (University of Georgia) ...................................................G16CAbelson, Ben (Mercy College) ....................................................................G2AAbundez-Guerra, Victor Fabian (University of California, Riverside) ............1LAckermann, Ari (Schechter Institute of Jewish Studies) ............................G7HAdams, Marcus (University at Albany, SUNY) ............................................ G9GAdams, Zed (New School for Social Research) ......................................... G4GAdluri, Vishwa (Hunter College, CUNY) ........................................... G9L, G17HAgule, Craig (Rutgers University–Camden) ..........................................3C, 17GAhmed, Sabeen (Vanderbilt University) ...................................................G17CAldritt, Owen (Emory University) ..........................................................1K, 12GAllen, Douglas (University of Maine) ..........................................................G8CAllen, Amy (Pennsylvania State University) ................................................ 15DAllen, Daniel (Villanova University) ..............................................................15LAllen, Doug (University of Maine) ............................................................G16AAllen, Michael (East Tennessee State University) ....................................G16AAlnusf, Marzouq (Northwestern University) .............................................G17CAltepeter, Maria (Washington University in St. Louis)................................ 17DAltshuler, Roman (Kutztown University) .....................................................G3CAmes, Thomas (University of Missouri–St. Louis) ........................................ 5DAmir, Lydia (Tufts University) .................................................................... G16EAn, Dong (Texas A&M University) ..............................................Poster SessionAndler, Matthew Salett (University of Virginia) .............................................7BAndrews, Austin (Washington University in St. Louis) ................................. 1AAngelides, Alexei (California State University, East Bay) ............................15RAnnesley, Kelley (University of Rochester) ..........................................7D, 10GArah, Benjamin (Bowie State University) ............................................10N, 17DArnold, Edward Allen (Columbia University) ..............................................G2AArpaly, Nomy (Brown University) .................................................................16BAshbaugh, Anne (Towson University) ......................................................... 12DAshooh, Michael (University of Vermont) .................................................. 17CAshwell, Lauren (Bates College)....................................................................3EAssaturian, Sosseh (University of Texas at Austin) ........................................3FAtiq, Emad (Cornell University) .................................................................. 17GAtkins, Philip (Temple University) ...................................................................1IAtkins, Richard Kenneth (Boston College) .................................................G6KAttah, Osman (University of Pittsburgh) ................................................... G12E
88
Program Participants
Audi, Paul (University of Rochester) .............................................................17IAumiller, Rachel (University of Hamburg) .....................................................2FAviv, Eyal (George Washington University) ................................................ G4E
BBagchee, Joydeep (Independent Scholar) ..................................... G9L, G17HBaghai, Farshid (Villanova University) ...........................................................6EBailey, Dylan S. (Fordham University) ......................................................G17BBaker, Ben (University of Pennsylvania) ........................................................1FBaker, Austin (Rutgers University) .............................................................. 17CBaker Jr., John M. (The University of the Arts, Philadelphia) ..................... G3FBaldwin, John (University of Illinois at Chicago) ........................................G4HBalin, Allison (Massachusetts Institute of Technology) ............................. 12CBan, Sophie (Mercer County Community College) .....................................17FBar-On, Bat-Ami (Binghamton University) ..................................................G6DBarakat, Karim (American University of Beirut) ........................................ G14FBaras, Dan (The Hebrew University of Jerusalem) ......................................11JBarbour, Kyle (Memorial University of Newfoundland) ..............................G7IBarker, Jonathan (Wake Forest University) ....................................... G8A, 19HBarnes, Elizabeth (University of Virginia) ................................................5L, 8ABarnes, Michael Randall (Georgetown University) .................................... 11NBarnett, Brian C. (St. John Fisher College) .................................................G6DBarnette, Kara (Westminster College) ........................................................G6HBarry, Bruce (Vanderbilt University) .......................................................... G12FBarry, Galen (Iona College) .................................................................. 17H, M9Bartholomew, Jake (Missouri State University) .......................................... 10KBasevich, Elvira (University of Massachusetts Lowell) ................................1MBauer, Nancy (Tufts University) ................................................................5L, 8ABaxter, Donald (University of Connecticut) ................................................ 11CBays, Timothy (University of Notre Dame) .................................................G4HBecerra, Claire (Teacher’s College, Columbia University) ............................ 3HBeck, Andy (Routledge) ............................................................................. G6NBeck, Jacob (York University) ........................................................................1FBeckwith, Francis (Baylor University) ............................................................7FBedke, Matt (University of British Columbia) ............................................... 7GBeebe, James R. (University at Buffalo) ............................................ G5F, G7ABeglin, David P. (University of California, Los Angeles) .................... G3C, 10OBegun, Michael (Fordham University) ........................................................ 12DBeisecker, David (University of Nevada, Las Vegas) ................................G11BBell, Macalaster (Bryn Mawr College) ........................................................ 12HBellucci, Francesco (University of Bologna) ...............................................G6KBen-Yami, Hanoch (Central European University) ....................................G10CBen-Ze’ev, Aaron (University of Haifa, Israel) ............................................G5ABerg, Amy (Rhode Island College) .......................................................7J, 11MBerger, Jacob (Idaho State University) ........................................................12F
89
Program Participants
Bergsma, Theodore T. (Pennsylvania State University) ..............................G5BBerman, Mitchell (University of Pennsylvania) ............................................. 3CBerry, Sharon E. (Oakland University) ......................................................... 11GBertrand, Michael (Ohio State University) .................................................... 5ABettcher, Talia (California State University, Los Angeles) ...........................17JBey, Marquis (Northwestern University) ....................................................G9DBiagioli, Francesca (University of Vienna) ...................................................10BBiemiller, Marc (University of Georgia) ......................................................M11Bierria, Alisa (University of California, Riverside) ........................................17JBiondi, Zachary (University of California, Los Angeles) ............................... 1DBiro, Sasha L. (Marist College) ...................................................................... 2NBizri, Michele Mason (University of Minnesota)........................................... 5KBlake, Susan (Skidmore College) ............................................................3D, 5JBlake-Turner, Chris (University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill) ............... 16GBlanchette, Brian (University of California, Santa Cruz) ............................. 17CBliss, Ricki (Lehigh University) .................................................................... 11CBobro, Mark (Santa Barbara City College) .................................................... 6CBocchi, Federica (Boston University) ............................................................ 7CBodayle, Colin (Villanova University) ...........................................................15LBoettcher, James W. (Saint Joseph’s University) .....................................G16BBoey, Grace (University of Pennsylvania) ................................................... 17ABognar, Greg (Stockholm University and Princeton University Center for Human Values)..............................................................................G11BBok, Hilary (Johns Hopkins University)....................................................... 11ABoodman, Eva (Rowan University) .............................................................. 10GBoonin, David (University of Colorado Boulder) ........................................15QBora, Shaila (Villanova University) ............................................................G12DBourget, David (University of Western Ontario) ...............................G12F, 15NBown, Thomas (Oakton Community College) ............................................G8BBoylan, David (Rutgers University, New Brunswick) ....................................12IBozovic, Miran (Ljubljana University) ......................................................... G6JBradford, Gwen (Rice University) .............................................................G16DBradley, Adam (University of California, Berkeley) ...................................... 5DBrauer, Ethan (Ohio State University) ............................................................1EBremner, Sabina V. (Columbia University) .........................................G3A, G4BBrent, Michael (University of Denver) ........................................................ 15NBricker, Phillip (University of Massachusetts Amherst) ................................1EBrincker, Maria (University of Massachusetts Boston) .............................. 10ABrodrick, Michael (Arkansas Tech University) ............................................G6HBrogaard, Berit (University of Miami) ..........................................................15BBrokes, Audre (St. Joseph’s University) .............................................G6A, 11FBrook, Richard J. (Bloomsburg University) ...........................................G8E, 5BBrown, Olivia (Katholieke Universiteit Leuven) ..........................................10MBrown, Étienne (San Jose State University) .............................................G15A
90
Program Participants
Brown, Jarrod (Berea College) .....................................................................11LBrown, Laura (University of Iowa)............................................................... 17ABrown, Simon Alexander Burns (Columbia University) ................................ 5DBrullmann, Phillip (LMU, Munich) ............................................................... 11DBruno, Francesca (Cornell University) ........................................................G8HBruno, G. Anthony (Royal Holloway University of London)...........................6EBruno-Nino, Teresa (Syracuse University) .................................................... 1HBrunson, Daniel J. (Morgan State University) ..........1D, G3E, G6H, G9B, G11CBuben, Adam (Leiden University) .............................................................G11BBuckareff, Andrei A. (Marist College) .........................................................G5CBuckner, Cameron (University of Houston) ................................................ 12KBudron, Robert (Loyola University Chicago) ...............................................16LBuechner, Jeff (Rutgers University–Newark and The Saul Kripke Center, The Graduate Center, CUNY) ............................................................. G12EBueno, Otávio (University of Miami) ............................................ 7E, 11G, 12LBuiles, David (Massachusetts Institute of Technology) .............................G5DBunke, John McBride (University of Toronto)..............................................12LBurgis, Ben (Georgia State University, Perimeter College) ...........................1EBurgos, Adam (Bucknell University) ............................................................16JBurke, Teresa Blankmeyer (Gallaudet University) .........................................5LBurkhart, Brian Yazzie (University of Oklahoma) .........................................17BBurlin, Chaney (Harvard University) ...............................................................2JBush, Stephen (Brown University) ............................................................G17AButler, Edward P. (Independent Scholar) ........................................ G9L, G17HButton, Tim (University of Cambridge) ....................................................... 16AByas, Jason Lee (University of Michigan)................................................... G5EByrne, Alex (Massachusetts Institute of Technology) .................................15BByron, Michael (Kent State University) ..................................................... G14F
CCahoone, Larry (College of the Holy Cross) ...............................................G9BCallaway, Howard G. (Independent Scholar) ............................Poster SessionCammarano, Cristina (Salisbury University) ............................................... G6FCamp, Elisabeth (Rutgers University) ............................................. M10, G16DCampbell, James (University of Toledo) ....................................................G9BCapps, John (Rochester Institute of Technology) ....................................G17ACarman, Taylor (Barnard College) ................................................................. 1NCarr, Jennifer (University of California, San Diego) ................................... 15CCarr, Lloyd (Rivier University) ................................................................... G12ECarr, Troizel (New York University) ...................................................G9D, G14DCarroll, Jeff (University of Virginia) .............................................................17ECarroll, Nöel (The Graduate Center, CUNY) ................................................G5ACarter, Sam (Rutgers University–New Brunswick) ..........................................1ICasati, Filippo (Lehigh University) ................................................................ 1N
91
Program Participants
Cassell, Lisa (University of Maryland, Baltimore) ....................................... 15GCasser, Laurenz (University of Texas at Austin) .........................Poster SessionCavallero, Eric F. (Southern Connecticut State University) .......................G16BCetty, Chetan (University of Pennsylvania) ...............................Poster SessionChamberlain, Colin (Temple University) .....................................................G9HChampene, Aaron (St. Louis Community College) ....................................... 6CChang, Si-Hua (University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill) .............. 3H, G8MChaplin, Rosalind (University of California, San Diego) ........................... G14EChávez, Manuel (Monmouth University) ..................................................G16BChignell, Andrew (Princeton University) .......................................................6EChislenko, Eugene (Temple University) .............................................1J, G10DChism, Yasmeen (New York University) ...........................................G9D, G14DChoi, Yoon (Marquette University) .................................................... 1G, G14EChoudry, Jahanzaib (Carnegie Mellon University) .....................................G8CChung, Edward (University of Prince Edward Island) ................................G6CChung, Julianne (University of Louisville) ..................................................G9CCisney, Vernon (Gettysburg College) .........................................................G5BClark, Chalmers C. (Drexel University) ........................................................G3DClarke, Randolph (Florida State University)...................................................1JClarke-Doane, Justin (Columbia University) .................................................2OCleveland, Tom (Jack Miller Center, PA) ..................................................... G8LClinkenbeard, Cayla (New School for Social Research) ............................. 15HCoates, Justin (University of Houston) .......................................................G5CÇoban, Meyra (University of Edinburgh) ...................................................... 3HCohen, Elliot D. (Indian River State College) ..............................................G7DColapietro, Vincent (Pennsylvania State University) ......................... G9B, 12GContos, J. L. (University of Edinburgh) .....................................................G11BCook, Tom (Rollins University) ....................................................................16OCoppenger, Mark (Southern Baptist Theological Seminary) ......................15JCorredor, Mercedes (University of Michigan) ............................................ 15KCorvino, John (Wayne State University) ..................................................7I, 10ICory, Therese (University of Notre Dame)............................................ 5C, 10FCoseru, Christian (College of Charleston) ......................................... G4E, G7FCosta, Emanuele (Birkbeck College, University of London) ......................G6BCouto, Maria João (Universidade do Porto) ............................................... G9ECrary, Alice (New School for Social Research) ........................................... 10CCrawford, Lindsay (Connecticut College) ...................................................G7ACreller, Aaron (University of North Florida) .........................................G9C, M7Crimi, Milo (University of California, Los Angeles)........................................3FCross, Anthony (Texas State University) .....................................................12MCulbertson, Kristin (University of Connecticut) ...........................................11LCulbreth, Andrew (Emory University) ........................................................... 1KCurry, Tommy J. (University of Edinburgh) ............................... 5H, G11C, M10Cutrofello, Andrew (Loyola University of Chicago) .....................................G9I
92
Program Participants
DD’Ambrosio, Paul (East China Normal University) ................................... G17GDacey, Mike (Bates College) ....................................................................... 12KDanenberg, Jorah (Stanford University) ........................................................5FDaniels, Jordan (Emory University) ............................................................G8BDas, Nilanjan (University College London) ................................................. 10GDas, Veena (Johns Hopkins University) ...................................................... 10CDaukas, Nancy (Guilford College) ..............................................................G3ADavies, Thomas Hercules (Princeton University) .......................Poster SessionDavis, Jordan (Zhejiang University) ................................................... G9J, G1ADavis, Timothy (The Community College of Baltimore County) ..............2F, 6Cde Allen, Gertrude González (Spelman College) ..........................................7BDe Caro, Mario (Tufts University and Università Roma Tre) .......................G8Hde Lara, Joel (New School for Social Research).............................................2Ide Ponte, Maria (University of the Basque Country) .................................... 2Dde Toffoli, Silvia (Princeton University) ....................................................... 11GDeal, Jessica (Catholic University)..............................................................15MDebes, Remy (University of Memphis) .............................................. G7B, 11HDeery, Oisin (York University) .......................................................................M9deGrazia, David (George Washington University) .........................................7JDeigan, Michael (Yale University) ................................................................16FDella Rocca, Michael (Yale University)........................................................16ODeMarzio, Darryl (University of Scranton) ....................................................M6Dembroff, Robin (Yale University) .................................................................5LdeRosset, Louis (University of Vermont) ...................................................... 2ADerstine, Janelle (Rutgers University) ..........................................................2MDethier, Corey Nathaniel (University of Notre Dame) .................................15RDetlefsen, Karen (University of Pennsylvania) ...................................... 5B, M5Deutscher, Penny (Northwestern University) ............................................. 10CDi Basilio, Giulio (Trinity College Dublin) .....................................................M2Di Camillo, Kevin T. (Niagara University) ..................................................G17BDiamantis, Mihailis (University of Iowa) ..................................................... 17GDiaz-Waian, Marisa (Merlin CCC, Helena, MT)) ................................... M8, M11Dicker, Georges (The College at Brockport) ...............................................11FDiGiovanna, James (John Jay College of Criminal Justice) .....................G11BDijkstra, Lizabeth (New School for Social Research) ....................................2MDogramaci, Sinan (University of Texas at Austin) .........................................2ODonhauser, Justin (Bowling Green State University) ...............................G16CDoody, Ryan (University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill) ......................... 15HDorr, Cian (New York University) ..................................................................10JDotan, Ravit (University of California, Berkeley) ................................. M4, 17CDouw, Linda (VU University Medical Center Amsterdam) .............................5IDow, James (Hendrix College) ...................................................................15O
93
Program Participants
Doyle, Siobhan Marie (University College Dublin and St. Nicholas Montessori College of Ireland) ..........................................................G17BDrayson, Zoe (University of California, Davis) ...............................................1FDrexler, Jane (Salt Lake Community College) .................................... M8, M11Dror, Lidal (Harvard University) ....................................................................16JDruart, Therese-Anne (The Catholic University of America) .......................12JDuckrow, Robert (Yale University) ..............................................................G3DDuckworth, Douglas (Temple University) .......................................... G4E, G7FDuclos, Joshua (St. Paul’s School, Concord, NH) .........................................M3Duford, Rochelle (University of North Carolina at Wilmington) ................. 11NDunaj, L’ubomir (University of Vienna) .....................................................G15BDuncan, Samuel (Tidewater Community College) ......................................17EDunn, Jeff (DePauw University) .................................................................. 15GDutilh-Novaes, Catarina (Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam) ..............................2ODyck, John (Auburn University) ...................................................................12FDykeman, Therese (Fairfield University) ..........................................G6J, G10B
EEaswaran, Kenny (Texas A&M University) .................................... 1J, G4G, 16DEbels-Duggan, Kyla (Northwestern University) ..........................................G9KEbrey, David (Humboldt University in Berlin) ............................................... 5GEdenberg, Elizabeth (Georgetown University) ..................................M9, G15AEdwards, Adam (University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign) ....................15REl Nabolsy, Zeyad Sameh (Cornell University) ............................................11LEldridge, Richard (Swarthmore College) ..................................G3F, G9I, G17FElgin, Samuel Z. (University of California, San Diego) ................................10JElliott, Aisha (Columbia University) ........................................................... G8NElstein, David (SUNY New Paltz) ..................................................................G6IEmens, Elizabeth (Columbia University) ...................................................... 1AEnglert, Alex (Johns Hopkins University) ................................................. G14EEpting, Shane (Missouri University of Science and Technology) .....G4G, G9EErck, Susan (City University of New York)...................................................G7CErlenbusch-Anderson, Verena (Memphis University) .................................. 7HErwin, Sean (Barry University) ............................................................G7H, G8HEspejo, Paulina Ochoa (Haverford College) ...............................................G4DEsser, Stephen (Penn Project for Philosophy for Young Children) ..............M5Esteban, Elsa González (Universitat Jaume I) ............................................ G9EEtinson, Adam (University of St Andrews) ..................................................G2BEyer, Klaus (ETH Zurich) ..................................................................................5I
FFaber, Jigme Ken (Austin Peay State University) .......................................G2AFabre, Cecile (University of Oxford) ...........................................................G4DFain, Lucas (Boston University)...................................................................16MFairchild, Meagan (University of Michigan) ................................................. 2A
94
Program Participants
Falbo, Arianna (Brown University) ...............................................................16LFalkenstern, Rachel (St. Francis College) ........................................... 2F, G17FFaller, Augie (Cornell University) ................................................................ 10HFard, Sahar Heydari (University of Cincinnati) .....................................15I, G6DFaust, Reese (University of Memphis) .......................................................10MFeagin, Susan (Temple University) ...........................................................G16DFeld, Alina N. (Hofstra University) .............................................................. G3FFeldblyum, Leonard (Brown University) ..................................................... 12DFeldblyum, Vivian (University of Pittsburgh) .............................Poster SessionFeldblyum Le Blevennec, Marie (Boston University) ................................. 17AFerguson, Ann (University of Massachusetts Amherst) .............................G7CFerrer, Amy (American Philosophical Association) ......................................10IFerrin, Asia (American University) ...................................................... G3A, 16JField, Sandra (Yale-NUS College)........................................................ 5J, G14FFields, Keota (University of Massachusetts Dartmouth) ........................... G5GFileva, Iskra (University of Colorado Boulder) ............................................G5AFinley, James R. (Columbia University) ........................................................ 7CFitelson, Branden (Northeastern University) ...............................................15RFletcher, Emily (University of Wisconsin) ..................................................... 5GFlint, Dana (Lincoln University) ......................................................................5EFlores, Carolina (Rutgers University) .......................................................... G7EFlynn, James (Caldwell University) ............................................................. 17DFlynn, Jeffrey (Fordham University) ..............................................................5JFolescu, Marina (University of Missouri) ................................................... G5GFong, Jason (Wesleyan University) .............................................................M11Forbes, Allauren (University of Pennsylvania) ..................................... 5B, G9HForman, Danny (Rutgers University) .....................................................7D, 15CFourlas, George N. (Hampshire College) ................................7H, G17C, G16BFrazier, Cheryl Ann (University of Oklahoma) ...............................................7BFreeman, Lauren (University of Louisville) .................................................G4BFremaux, Christopher (Stony Brook University) ........................................ G9GFreya, Mobus (Cornell University) ..............................................................15MFricker, Miranda (The Graduate Center, CUNY) ..................................... 5K,17AFriedlaender, Christina (University of Memphis) ....................................... 16CFriedman, Brittany (Rutgers University) .....................................................G9DFriedman, Robin (Independent Scholar) ....................................................G6HFriquegnon, Marie (William Paterson University) .......................................G2AFrisch, Mathias (Leibniz University Hannover) ..................................... 7E, 16AFritz, James (Ohio State University) ........................................................... 17AFrost, Gloria (University of St. Thomas) ........................................................ 5CFullarton, Catharine (Emory University) ...................................................... 12GFuller, Jonathan (University of Pittsburgh) ......................................... 12C, 15KFyfe, Andrew (Harvard University) ................................................................ 2H
95
Program Participants
GGabor, Zach (Harvard University) ............................................................... 16NGambescia, Stephen (Drexel University) ....................................................G3DGaradja, Elena (University of Pittsburgh) ................................................... 12DGarber, Daniel (Princeton University) .............................................. G8J, G10CGarcia, Eric Bayruns (California State University, San Bernardino) ............ 17AGarcia, Jorge (Boston College)................................................................... 12HGarcia, Mario Ivan Juarez (University of Arizona) ...................................... 15HGarrett, Don (New York University) ..................................................... G5G,11EGaus, Kelly (Massachusetts Institute of Technology) ................................ 16GGeaney, Jane (University of Richmond) .................................................. G17GGehrman, Kristina M. (University of Tennessee, Knoxville) ....................... 12GGeorgevich, Madeline (Towson University) ................................................. 1DGessas, Jeff (University of North Texas) .....................................................G8BGetz, Philip (Palgrave) ................................................................................ G6NGildenhuys, Peter A. (Lafayette College) .....................................................2MGili, Luca (Université du Québec à Montréal) ...............................................3FGilliland, Rex (Southern Connecticut State University) ..............................G5HGjesdal, Kristin (Temple University) .........................................................G11AGlasscock, Juan Sebastian Piñeros (University of Toronto) ..........................1JGluck, Stuart (Indiana University) ..................................................................7EGold, Jonathan (Princeton University)........................................................ G7FGoldhaber, Chuck (University of Pittsburgh) ............................................... 2HGoldin, Paul (University of Pennsylvania) ................................................ G17GGoldman, Alan (College of William & Mary) ................................................ 7GGomez-Lavin, Javier (University of Pennsylvania)........................................11IGomez Sanchez, Veronica (Rutgers University–New Brunswick) ................11IGooding-Silverwood, Morgaine (Columbia University) ............................ G8NGopakumar, Manasa (Temple University) ....................................................16IGordon, Lewis R. (University of Connecticut) .............................................. 3GGordon, Samuel (University of North Carolina at Charlotte) ......................M11Gorman, August (Princeton University) .......................................G3C, M9, 15PGorodeisky, Keren (Auburn University) ........................... 12M, 6A, G3G, G17FGosselin, Abigail E. (Regis University) ...........................................................2IGoswick, Dana (University of Melbourne) ..................................................12LGottlieb, Roger S. (Worcester Polytechnic Institute)........................16K, G17EGould, Paul (Trinity Evangelical Divinity School) .......................................G6MGould, Carol C. (City University of New York).................................. G12F, G7CGrabelsky, Dana (City University of New York) ............................................15IGray, David (University of Memphis) ............................................................2BGray, Kevin (Osgoode University) ................................................................ 2NGreen, Alexander (University at Buffalo) ....................................................G7HGreen, Jerry (University of Central Oklahoma) ............................................M2Greene, Amanda R. (University College London) ....................................G15A
96
Program Participants
Greenwalt, Kyle (Michigan State University) ..............................................G8KGregory, Maughn Rollins (Montclair State University) ................................G4IGriffith, Aaron M. (College of William & Mary) ............................................ 7DGrimm, Stephen R. (Fordham University) ..................................................G8AGrush, Rick (University of California, San Diego) .......................................G5DGubler, Simone M. (University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill) ............... 10GGuerrero, Alex (Rutgers University) .......................................................... G12FGulledge, James (Washington University in St. Louis) ...............................12FGürer, Emre Çetin (Villanova University) ....................................................M11
HHaber, Jonathan (Degree of Freedom) .................................................... G12EHaddow, Tyler (University of California, Berkeley)..................................... 11HHahn, Karl (Villanova University) ...................................................................6EHallett, Michael (McGill University) .............................................................10BHalper, Aaron (Catholic University of America) ..........................................G9AHamid, Nabeel (Concordia University) ....................................................... G8JHammer, Espen (Temple University) ............................................................ 2CHanks, Peter (University of Minnesota) ........................................................12IHanlon, Rory (University of Chicago)............................................................ 7CHanna, Nathan (Drexel University) ................................................................ 3CHanner, Oren (University of California, Berkeley) ...................................... G4EHannon, Michael (University of Nottingham) ...........................................G15AHansen, Jennifer (St. Lawrence University) ............................................... 12GHarkema, Scott (Ohio State University) .........................................................5BHarp, Randall (University of Vermont) ........................................................G5CHarris, Eirik Lang (Hong Kong Baptist University) .......................................10LHarris, Keith Raymond (University of Missouri) ......................................... 16NHarrison, Rebecca (University of California, Riverside) ..............................15PHarroff, Joseph (Temple University) ................................. G6C, G7I, G2D, G8KHarvey, Sandra (University of California, Irvine) ........................................... 7HHarvey, Sydney (University of Calgary) .......................................................12FHasan, Rafeeq (Amherst College) ................................................................ 1GHasan-Birdwell, Aminah (Columbia University) ................................. 2N, G17DHatfield, Gary (University of Pennsylvania) ...................................................3BHattab, Helen (University of Houston) ........................................................G8HHaufe, Chris (Case Western Reserve University) ........................................ 17HHaug, Steven (Independent Scholar) ...........................................................1MHay, Carol (University of Massachusetts Lowell) ....................................... G3EHay, Katia (University of Lisbon and University of Amsterdam) ..............G17HHayes, Josh (Alvernia University) ................................................................G8IHayward, Max (University of Sheffield) .........................................................5EHedrick, Todd (Michigan State University) ................................................... 2CHeil, John (Washington University in St. Louis)...............................G6N, G12F
97
Program Participants
Heine, Steven (Florida International University) ....................................... G7GHelton, Grace (Princeton University) ...........................................................10EHenne, Paul (Lake Forest College) ............................................................. G5FHenning, Brian (Gonzaga University) ....................................................... G17EHereth, Blake (University of Washington) .....................................................2LHerman, Mark Howard (Bowling Green State University) .............................5EHernández, Ernesto O. (Valencia College) ...................................................M4Hernandez, Matt (University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill) .....................1LHerzberg, Larry A. (University of Wisconsin–Oshkosh) .............................. 11HHeyward, Clare (University of Tromsø) .......................................................G4DHiddleston, Eric (Wayne State University) ....................................................11IHinchman, Edward (Florida State University) ...............................................12IHirji, Sukaina (University of Pennsylvania) ..................................................10EHo, Ting Fung (University of Texas at Austin) ............................Poster SessionHoffman, Ginger (St. Joseph’s University) ...........................................1C, G6LHoffmann, Sally (Cambridge University Press) ......................................... G6NHolberg, Erica (Utah State University) ....................................................... G3GHolbrook, Robert Saleem (The Abolitionist Law Center) ............................. 2GHolmen, Heine (University of Tromsø) .......................................................G3CHolmes, Michael (Columbia University) .................................................... G8NHolmstrom, Nancy (Rutgers University–Newark) .......................................G7CHorgan, Terry (University of Arizona) .......................................................... 16CHosein, Adam Omar (Northeastern University) ........................................G16BHourdequin, Marion (Colorado College) ..................................................G16CHu, Jianping (Nanyang Technological University) ...................................G15BHuang, Yong (The Chinese University of Hong Kong) .....................G6I, G17GHuddleston, Andrew (Birkbeck College, University of London) ..............G11AHuebner, Karolina (University of Toronto) ..................................................16OHuismann, Tyler (University of Oklahoma) ................................................... 7CHutchinson, Jim (Indiana University–Bloomington) ..................................... 7DHutler, Brian (Johns Hopkins University) ...................................................... 2H
IIbrahimhakkıoğlu, Fulden (Middle East Technical University) .................G17CImanaka, Jessica Ludescher (Seattle University) .......................................15OInman, Ross (Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary) ......................G6MIrani, Tushar (Wesleyan University) ..............................................................17FIsraeloff, Roberta (Squire Foundation) .........................................................M5
JJackman, Henry (York University) .............................................................G17AJackson, Myron (Xavier University) .................................................G11C, 15OJackson, Liz (Australian National University and Ryerson University) ........11JJaggannathan, Dhananjay (Columbia University) ..................................... G8N
98
Program Participants
Jalloh, Mahmoud (University of Southern California) ................................ 16HJanaway, Christopher (University of Southampton) .................................. 17KJankowiak, Tim (Towson University) ......................................................... G14EJauernig, Anja (New York University) ......................................................... 17KJebari, Joey (Georgetown University) ........................................................G6AJerzak, Ethan (University of California, Berkeley) ...................................... 11KJhun, Jennifer (Duke University) ...................................................................2EJimenez, Marta (Emory University) ............................................................... 5GJohnson, Gabbrielle (New York University) .................................................10EJohnson, John (Concordia University Chicago) ......................................... 17DJohnson, Syretta (Marc Sanders Scholar) .................................................. G8NJohnson King, Zoë (New York University) ..................................................15QJohnston, Adrian (University of New Mexico) .............................................G9IJollimore, Troy A. (California State University, Chico) ................................G5AJones, Nicholaos (University of Alabama at Huntsville) .............................15FJorati, Julia (University of Massachusetts Amherst) .................. G8J, M8, M11Jose, Jeff Shawn (Tilburg University) .......................................................G16AJoyce, Kathryn (University of San Diego) ...................................................G1BJudge, Jenny (New York University) ............................................................15P
KKantor, Hans-Rudolf (Huafan University) ................................................. G17GKaspar, David (St. John’s University) ..........................................................G1CKaukua, Jari (University of Jyväskylä) .........................................................12JKegley, Jacquelyn Ann (California State University, Bakersfield) ...G11C, G6HKeller, Lorraine (St. Joseph’s University) ............................................. 2D, G8AKeller, Pierre (University of California, Riverside) .......................................G9IKeller, John (St. Joseph’s University) ......................................................... 16GKellogg, Frederic (Harvard University) .....................................................G14CKelly, Erin (Tufts University) ........................................................................G5CKendrick, Nancy (Wheaton College, MA) ................................................... G8EKennedy, Juliette (University of Helsinki) ..................................................G4HKenyon, Andrew (SUNY Press) ................................................................... G6NKerr, Alex (University of California, Berkeley) .............................................. 3AKetcham, Christopher (University of Houston) ..........................................G3DKeuck, Lara (Humboldt University) .................................................................5IKhader, Serene J. (Brooklyn College, CUNY) ............................................G8MKho, Tung-Yi (SOAS, University of London) ................................................G8KKick, Verena (Georgetown University) ....................................................... G3FKim, Alice (Drew University) .......................................................................G2DKim, Hannah H. (Stanford University) .........................G1A, 3D, Poster SessionKimoto, Tamsin (Emory University) ............................................ G4A, G6E, 17JKinkaid, James (University of Boston) .......................................................... 1NKinlaw, Jeffery (McMurry University) ..................................................16M, 1N
99
Program Participants
Kintz, James (Saint Joseph’s College of Maine) ........................................10MKinzel, Katherina (Temple University) ..........................................................G9IKipper, Jens (University of Rochester) ........................................................16FKirk-Giannini, Cameron Domenico (Rutgers University–Newark) .............. 11KKitcher, Patricia (Columbia University) ......................................................... 7AKittay, Eva Feder (Stony Brook University) ................................................... 8AKlein, Julie R. (Villanova University) ........................................15E, G7H, G17DKnowles, Adam J. (Drexel University) .........................................................16MKnuuttila, Simo (University of Helsinki) .......................................................10FKocurek, Arc (Cornell University) ................................................................ 11KKoh, Liang Zhou (University of Toronto) ..................................................... 12CKokot, Jordan (Boston University) ..............................................................G5BKolers, Avery (University of Louisville) .......................................................G4DKolmes, Sara (Georgetown University) ...................................................... 12CKoltonski, Daniel (University of Delaware) ....................................................5EKoons, Jeremy (Georgetown University in Qatar) .....................................G6AKoors, Marissa (Wiley) ............................................................................... G6NKopajtic, Lauren (Fordham University) ........................................................11EKorsgaard, Christine (Harvard University) ..........................................G9K, 11AKosch, Michelle (Cornell University) ........................................................ G12FKoslicki, Kathrin (University of Alberta) ........................................................ 2AKrasskova, Galina (Fordham University)..................................................... G9LKreider, A. J. (Miami-Dade Community College) ......................................... 6CKremplewska, Katarzyna (Institute of Philosophy and Sociology, Polish Academy of Sciences, Warsaw) .............................................. G16EKrieger, Arthur (Temple University) .............................................................. 1HKrishnamurthy, Meena (Queens University) ...............................................12BKubala, Robbie (University of California, Santa Cruz) .................................. 6AKukkonen, Taneli (New York University Abu Dhabi) ....................................12JKukla, Rebecca (Georgetown University).......................................... G4G, 12BKulvicki, John (Dartmouth University) ..........................................................17IKurth, Charlie (University of Western Michigan) ........................................G7B
LLackey, Jennifer (Northwestern University) .........................................5F, G6NLal, Sanjay (Clayton State University) ..............................................G8C, G16ALamarre, Ashley (Pennsylvania State University) ........................................16LLanders, Casey (University of Miami) ..........................................................12FLandreville, John (Wayne State University) ................................................G5BLang, JJ (Stanford University) .......................................................................12ILang, Martha (Florida State University) ..................................................... G6GLanphier, Elizabeth (Vanderbilt University) .......................................G3A, G4BLarkin, Dan (Georgia Southern University) .................................................16MLarsen, Kristian (University of Bergen) .......................................................G4C
100
Program Participants
Laugier, Sandra (Paris 1 Sorbonne) ............................................................ 10CLaverty, Megan Jane (Teachers College, Columbia University) ........ G3B, G4ILawson, Joanna (Yale University) ...............................................................11MLeaman, George (PDC) .............................................................................. G6NLebron, Chris (Johns Hopkins University) ...................................................11BLederman, Harvey (Princeton University) .................................................G12BLee, Andrew Y. (New York University) ............................................................2JLee, Biskin (London School of Economics) ................................................G7DLee, Geoffrey (University of California, Berkeley) .........................................1FLee, Hsin-Wen (University of Delaware) ....................................................... 3CLee, Hyo-Dong (Drew University) ................................................................G8ILee, Jongsuh (Notre Dame University) ........................................................ 7CLee, Junhyo (University of Southern California) ..........................................12ILegum, Rich (Kingsborough Community College, CUNY) ........................... 6CLennox, James G. (University of Pittsburgh) ............................................G14ALeo, Brooklyn (Pennsylvania State University) ...........................................G4ALeon, Savannah (University of California, Berkeley) .....................................2LLeonhart, Brooklyn (Pennsylvania State University) ................................... G6ELevac, Madeleine M. (University of California, Berkeley) ...........................15PLevy, David (SUNY Geneseo) ........................................................................10ILewis, Benjamin (University of Utah) ......................................................... G6LLewis, Max (University of Pennsylvania) .................................................... 10DLi, Han (Independent Scholar) ..............................................................7D, 16DLi, Zhuoyao (St. John’s University)...............................................................10LLiberman, Alida (Southern Methodist University) .........................................5ELim, Desiree (Pennsylvania State University) ...........................................G14BLindeman, David (Georgetown University) ..................................................12ILindquist, Daniel (Indiana University–Bloomington)...................................15LLinnebo, Øystein (University of Oslo) ...........................................................1BList, Christian (London School of Economics) .............................................16ELittle, Margaret Olivia (Georgetown University) ...........................................7JLiu, Haoying (University of Massachusetts Amherst) ...............Poster SessionLiu, Pengbo (Bentley College) .................................................................... G9JLiu, Wenjin (Princeton University) ................................................... G14G, 15MLloyd, Alexandra (University of Colorado Boulder) ...................Poster SessionLloyd, Elisabeth (Indiana University) .............................................................7ELloyd, Sharon (University of Southern California) .................................... G14FLocke, Theodore (Concordia University) .................................................... 11KLolordo, Antonia (University of Virginia) ................................................... G5GLong, Robert (New York University) ............................................................ 17CLong, Roderick T. (Auburn University) ........................................................ G5ELongtin, Rebecca (SUNY New Paltz) ...........................................................G5BLopes, Jesse Daniel (Boston University) ....................................................10MLopes, Dominic McIver (University of British Columbia) .................... 6A, 12M
101
Program Participants
Lopez-Wild, Josiah R. (University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee) ......................12LLord, Errol (University of Pennsylvania) ......................................................12MLott, Joshua (Holy Cross College) ..............................................................G9ALouchakova-Schwartz, Olga (Hult International Business School) .............11LLöwe, Can Laurens (Purdue University) ....................................................... 5CLudwig, Paul (St. John’s College) ................................................................12ELumba, Meryl F. (Temple University) .............................................................2FLuo, Shirong (Simmons University) ............................................... G12B, G15BLysaker, John (Emory University) ................................................................11BLyskawa, Matthew (Harvard University) ........................................................2J
MMa, Jingchao (Chris) (Villanova University) ..............................................G14DMa, Zhen (California Institute of Integral Studies) .....................................G1AMacbeth, Danielle (Haverford College) ........................................................ 3DMacedo, Stephen (Princeton University) ......................................................5JMacDonald, Andrew (University of California, Riverside) ..........................M11MacLaclan, Alice (York University) ..................................................................7IMadigan, Tim (St. John Fisher College) ...................................................G10BMadura, Lisa M. (Vanderbilt University) ......................................................17EMager, Kevin (Loyola University Chicago) .................................................10MMaitra, Keya (University of North Carolina at Asheville ...............................M7Makang, Jean-Marie (Frostburg State University) .....................................G6DManfredi, Zachary (University of California, Berkeley) ..............................G2BManninen, Bertha Alvarez (Arizona State University) ........................... G3E, 7JManning, Dolleen Tisawii’ashii (Michigan State University) ........................16IManson, Michaela (University of Toronto) .................................................G9HManzini, Nompumelelo Zinhle (Pennsylvania State University) .................16LMapps, Moya (Yale University) ...................................................................11MMarasco, Robyn (Hunter College, CUNY) ................................................... 15DMarcus, Eric (Auburn University) .................................................................. 6AMarcus, Russell (Hamilton College) .............................................................M1Margolis, Joseph (Temple University) ........................................................G9BMarkosian, Ned (University of Massachusetts Amherst) ............................12LMarkovits, Julia (Cornell University) ............................................................16BMarks, Jonathan (Pennsylvania State University)....................................... 10NMarsoobian, Armen T. (Southern Connecticut State University) ................G9BMartin, Annette (New York University) ........................................................16FMartin, Michael (University of Oxford and University of California, Berkeley) ...............................................................................................15BMartinez, Eduardo (University of Michigan) ..................................................5EMarvin, Amy (Independent Scholar) ....................................................G4A, 6BMason, Qrescent Mali (Haverford College).................................................. 3GMatoso, Renato (Pontifical Catholic University of Rio de Janeiro) ............G4C
102
Program Participants
Matthen, Mohan (University of Toronto) ...................................................... 3AMatthews, Laura (University of Georgia) ..................................................... 5DMattice, Sarah (University of North Florida) .............................................. G7GMaudlin, Tim (New York University) ........................................................... 16HMayhew, Robert (Seton Hall University) ...................................................G14AMcAfee, Noelle (Emory University) ............................................................ 15DMcallan, Brian C. (Stirling Theological College) .........................................G2DMcCain, Kevin (University of Alabama at Birmingham) .............................G7AMcCarthy, Anthony (Bios Center) ..................................................................7FMcClintock, Sara (Emory University)........................................................... G7FMcConniughey, Miranda (Marc Sanders Scholar) ..................................... G8NMcCormick, Miriam (University of Richmond) .........................................G17AMcCready-Flora, Ian (University of Virginia) ...............................................12EMcDaniel, Kris (University of Notre Dame) ................................................ 11CMcDonald, Fritz (Oakland University) ...........................................................M2McDonald, Hugh P. (New York City College of Technology) ....................G14CMcDonald, Julie (St. Joseph’s University) .................................................... 1KMcEnnerney, Dennis (Colorado College) .....................................................15IMcGee, Vann (Massachusetts Institute of Technology) ............................ 16AMcGinnis, Jon (University of Missouri–St. Louis) ........................................12JMcGrath, Sarah (Princeton University) .................................................2O, 16BMcIvor, David (Colorado State University) ................................................. 15DMcLarty, Colin (Case Western Reserve University) ....................................G4HMcLaughlin, Brian (Rutgers University) ...................................................... 16CMcLeod, Alexus (University of Connecticut) ....................................... 3D, G9CMcPherson, Lionel (Tufts University) ............................................................ 5HMeadows, Katherine (Indiana University) ...................................................12EMeagher, Thomas (University of Memphis) ................................................. 3GMeghani, Zahra (University of Rhode Island) ...........................................G16CMeier, Sarah (Xavier University of Louisiana) ............................................ G9GMelamedoff, Damian (University of Toronto) ........................................... G14EMele, Al (Florida State University) ...............................................................16EMendola, Joseph (University of Nebraska) ..................................................11IMendoza, José Jorge (University of Massachusetts Lowell) .............................................................................. G8M, 10O, G12D, G14BMenge, Torsten (Northwestern University in Qatar) .................................. 10NMensah, Shaeeda (Franklin & Marshall College) .......................................G2CMercer, Christia (Columbia University) .............................................. G8N, 13AMerino, Carla (University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill) .......................... 3AMerrick, Francesca (Columbia College) .................................................... G8NMesing, Dave (Villanova University) ...........................................................G8HMeskin, Aaron (University of Georgia) .............................................. 6A, G16DMeyer, Ulrich (Colgate University) .............................................................G5DMeyer, Susan Suavé (University of Pennsylvania) ................................ 5K, 11D
103
Program Participants
Milčinski, Maja (Ljubljana University) ...............................................G6J, G10BMiller, Ellen (Rowan University) ..................................................................G5HMiller, Stephen (Oakwood Friends School, Marist College) ........................M5Mills, Ethan (University of Tennessee, Chattanooga) ....................... G4E, G9CMillson, Jared (Agnes Scott College) ..........................................................15JMillsop, Rebecca (University of Rhode Island) ........................................G10DMiner, Robert (Baylor University)................................................................G8AMintz-Woo, Kian (University of Graz) ............................................................ 7DMiracchi, Lisa (University of Pennsylvania) ................................................ 15NMiranda, Dana Francisco (Muhlenberg College) .................................. 2N, 3GMiron, Ronny (Bar Ilan University) ..............................................................G6BMisak, Cheryl (University of Toronto) ......................................................... 10DMitchell-Yellin, Benjamin (Sam Houston State University) ......................... 12HMoeller, Hans-Georg (University of Macau) ............................................ G17GMoland, Lydia (Colby College) ................................................................. G17FMontague, Michelle (University of Texas at Austin) ......................................2BMontess, Michael (York University) ............................................................ 15KMoon, Andrew Y. (Virginia Commonwealth University) ..............................11FMoore, Margaret (Queen’s University) ........................................................12BMoosavi, Parisa (University of Toronto) ...................................................... 12GMorag, Talia (Deakin University) ................................................................. 12KMorales, Maria (Florida State University) .................................................G14BMorgan, Marcia (Muhlenberg College) ............................................. 2C, G17HMoriarty, Clare (Trinity College Dublin) ...................................................... G8EMorris, Courtney (U.S. Military Academy at West Point) .............................G9IMorrison, Keith (Independent Scholar) ..................................................... G6GMortensen, Kaija (Randolph College) ..........................................................M4Moses, Greg (Texas State University at San Marcos) ......................G8C, G16AMoskalik, Janice (Seattle University) ..........................................................G3BMoss, Matt (Vassar College) ....................................................................... 11KMubirumusoke, Mukasa (Claremont McKenna College) ..............................1LMuller, Cathleen (Marist College) ..............................................................11MMüller, Ralf (University of Hildescheim) .................................................... G7GMun, Cecilea (Independent Scholar) .................................................G5A, G7BMund, Joshua (University of Wisconsin–Madison) ...................Poster SessionMunroe, Wade E. (Indiana University) ........................................................ 12CMurphy, Allison (Carleton College) .............................................................17FMurungi, John (Towson University) ............................................................ 10KMusser, Amber (George Washington University) ....................................G14DMwakima, David (University of California, Irvine) ...................................... G8EMyers, Joshua (New York University) ............................................................3E
NNagenborg, Michael (University of Twente) .............................................. G9E
104
Program Participants
Nails, Debra (Michigan State University) ....................................................G4CNava, William (New York University) ........................................................... G5ENeal, Anthony Sean (Mississippi State University) .....................................G7INeemeh, Zachariah A. (University of Memphis) ........................................ 17CNelson, Phillip (Stony Brook University) ..................................................... 17DNenadic, Natalie (University of Kentucky) ................................................... 1DNewen, Albert (Ruhr Universität-Bochum) ................................................... 5DNewhart, Laura (Eastern Kentucky University) ...........................................G7DNewlands, Sam (University of Notre Dame) ...............................................16ONg, Geraldine (University of Reading) ......................................Poster SessionNguyen, Anthony (University of Southern California) ................................ 16GNguyen, Thi (Utah Valley University) ......................................G4G, G6F, G16DNoonan, Jeff (University of Windsor) .........................................................G3CNorton, Joshua D. (University of California, Irvine) .................................... 16HNovakovic, Andreja (University of California, Berkeley) .............................. 2CNutting, Eileen (University of Kansas) .................................................. 1B, 15BNyrup, Rune (University of Cambridge) ..................................................... 17H
OO’Brien, David (Tulane University) ..............................................................10OO’Connor, Scott (New Jersey City University) .............................................. 7CO’Neal, Brittany (Lehman College, CUNY) ..................................................G2COdzuck, Eva (Friedrich Alexander University) .......................................... G14FOh, Jea Sophia (West Chester University of Pennsylvania) ......G6C, G2D, G7IOh, Keunchang (Purdue University) ..............................................................1LOke, Ronke (West Chester University) ....................................................... 10KOlasov, Ian (The Graduate Center, CUNY) .................................................. G6FOliveira, Luis (University of Houston) ..........................................................11FOlsen, Ryan A. (University of Massachusetts Amherst) ............................. 10HOlsson, Tyler (University of California, Santa Cruz) .....................................15POrlandi, Nico (University of California, Santa Cruz) ...................................... 2KOrtiz, John Kaiser (Millersville University) ................................................G14BOtey, Nathan (ThinkerAnalytix) ................................................................. G12EOtt, Walter R. (University of Virginia) .............................................................5BOwens, David (Kings College London) .........................................................5F
PPadovani, Flavia (Drexel University) ........................................................... 16HPallikkathayil, Japa (University of Pittsburgh) ............................................G9KPang-White, Ann (University of Scranton) ...........................................G8I, G9JPaparella, Alexander Scott (West Chester University) ................................ 17AParry, Richard (Agnes Scott College) ..........................................................G4CParsons, Graham (U.S. Military Academy at West Point) ............................G6DPathak, Krishna (Hindu College, University of Delhi) ..................................15F
105
Program Participants
Patterson, Adam Frederic (Syracuse University) .......................................... 1KPaul, L. A. (Yale University) .......................................................................... 10GPavelko, Jennifer (Brill) .............................................................................. G6NPayne, Andrew (St. Joseph’s University) ....................................................G1CPayton, Dee (Rutgers University) .................................................................17EPearce, Kenneth L. (Trinity College Dublin) ...................................................5BPena, David (San Francisco State University) .............................................G8BPence, Gregory (University of Alabama) ...................................................... 1HPeramatzis, Michail (Oxford University)....................................................G14APereboom, Derk (Cornell University) ...........................................................16EPereira, Paula Cristina (Universidade do Porto) .......................................... G9EPerl, Caleb (University of Colorado Boulder)................................................ 1HPerry, Constance (Drexel University) ............................................................ 1GPessin, Andrew (Connecticut College) ....................................................... G3EPeterman, Alison (University of Rochester) ..............................................G17DPettigrew, Richard (University of Bristol) .................................................... 16DPhillips, Blakely L. (Indiana University–Bloomington) ...................................3EPhilpot, Larkin (University of Pittsburgh) ....................................................12EPichanick, Alan (Villanova University) ...................................................... G14GPickard, Hanna (Johns Hopkins University) .................................................. 1CPickavé, Martin (University of Toronto) .......................................................10FPicollo, Lavinia (University College London) .............................................. 16APierlott, Matt (West Chester University) .....................................................M11Pietarinen, Ahti-Veikko (Nazarbayev University) ............................... G4F, G6KPiety, Marilyn G. (Drexel University) .........................................................G17BPilipchuk, Miranda (Villanova University) ..................................................... 2NPilkington, Bryan (Seton Hall University) .................................................... 15HPippin, Robert (University of Chicago) ....................................................... 15APitt, David (California State University) ..........................................................2BPittard, John (Yale University) ......................................................................15RPitts, Andrea (University of North Carolina at Charlotte) ....................7H, G8GPollock, Darien (Harvard University) ............................................................16LPomeroy, Anne Fairchild (Stockton University) ........................................ G17EPoston, Ted (University of Alabama)...........................................................G7APotter, Kelli (Utah Valley State) ......................................................................6BPowers, Martin (University of Michigan) .......................................................5JPrager, Bradley (University of Missouri) ..................................................... G3FPrendergast, Emma (University of Wisconsin–Madison) ...........................G1BPrettyman, Adrienne (Bryn Mawr College) ..................................................12FPrimus, Kristin (University of California, Berkeley).............................15E, 16OPrivitello, Lucio (Stockton University) ......................................................... 12DProios, John (Cornell University) ...................................................................3FProtevi, John (Louisiana State University) .........................................G8G, 11HPrueitt, Cat (University of British Columbia) ..................................................3B
106
Program Participants
Pryor, Mark (Tulane University) ................................................................... G8LPugliese, Nastassja (Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro) ...............G17D
QQuandt, Ryan (University of South Florida) ............................................... G9GQuinonez, Omar (Emory University) ............................................................15L
RRadcliffe, Elizabeth (College of William & Mary) ........................................11ERadzik, Linda (Texas A&M University) ......................................................... 10DRalkowski, Mark (George Washington University) ............................. M8, M11Ralli, Nefeli (University of California, Los Angeles) ..................................... 7CRandall, Lucy (Oxford University Press) .................................................... G6NRaposa, Michael L. (Lehigh University) ...................................................... G4FRay, Allen (Tulane University) ............................................................ G8L, G9ARay, Gabrielle (Tulane University) .............................................................. G8LRayman, Joshua W. (University of South Florida) ...................................... 12DReece, Bryan (University of Chicago) ..........................................................12EReed, Corey (University of Memphis) .......................................................... 5HReed-Sandoval, Amy (University of Nevada, Las Vegas) ..................M6, G14BReese, Brian (University of Nebraska) ........................................................15MReginster, Bernard (Brown University) .............................................17K, G11ARehn-Debraal, Merritt (Texas A&M University at San Antonio) ....................M3Reynolds, Christiaan (Villanova University) ..................................................15IReynolds, Iaan (Villanova University) ...........................................................1MRhodes, Rosamond (Mount Sinai School of Medicine) ............................ G9GRichardson, Alex (University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill) ..................15QRichardson, Henry (Georgetown University) .............................................. 10DRichardson, Kara (Syracuse University) ........................................................ 5CRichardson, Kevin (North Carolina State University) ...................................10JRicks, Vance A. (Guilford College) .............................................................. 12GRieppel, Michael (Syracuse University) ........................................................ 2DRini, Regina (York University) ..........................................................................7IRisch, Elliot (Boston University) .................................................................. 10HRivera, Omar (Southwestern University) .................................................... 10KRobertson, Seth (Harvard University) .......................................................G12BRobitzsch, Jan Maximilian (Sungkyunkwan University) ................................3FRoche, Andrew (Centre College) .............................................................. G14ERodriguez, Evan (Idaho State University) ....................................................17FRogers, Chandler (Boston College) ............................................................G8BRogers, Melvin (Brown University) ..............................................................11BRomagni, Domenica (Colorado State) ..........................................................17IRoman, John (University of Pennsylvania) ....................................................3BRomano, Carlin (University of Pennsylvania) ..................................................2IRomanyshyn, Alexandra (Saint Louis University) ......................................... 5D
107
Program Participants
Romeijn, Jan-Willem (University of Groningen) .............................................5IRooney, Fr. James Dominic (Saint Louis University) ..................................G1ARose, John (Goucher College)...........................................................15O, 16MRosen, Gideon (Princeton University) .........................................................16ERosen, Joshua (Bronx Compass High School) ...........................................G8KRosenbaum, Shayna (York University) .......................................................... 5DRosenthal, Michael (University of Washington) ..........................................15ERoskies, Adina (Dartmouth College) ..........................................................G5CRothfeld, Becca (Harvard University) ............................................................ 1ARubin, Richard M. (George Santayana Society) ....................................... G16ERubio, Daniel (Rutgers University) ...............................................................12LRuchti, Simon (Westchester University) ........................................................6BRudolph, Rachel (Auburn University) ......................................................... 11KRush, Fred (University of Notre Dame) ...................................................... 15ARussell, Francey (Barnard College).....................................................G3F, 15ARyan, Kevin (University of Nebraska–Omaha) ............................................ 16N
SSabourin, Charlotte (University of British Columbia) ................................ G3GSachs, Carl (Marymount University) ................................................G6A, G14CSadovsky, Ronni Gura (Harvard University) .................................................. 1GSaenz, Noel B. (University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign) ........................... 5ASaenz, Victor (Rice University) .....................................................................12ESaint-Croix, Cat (University of Minnesota) .....................................................2LSalamon, Gayle (Princeton University) ........................................................17JSamoilova, Kateryna (California State University, Chico) ........................... 15NSamuel, Jack (University of Pittsburgh) .....................................................G6ASanderson, Anne L’Hommedieu (Harvard University) .............................. G12ESandoval, Alejandro Naranjo (Princeton University) .....................................6ESantos, Luciana (Federal University of Maranhão) ....................................G6BSarch, Alexander (University of Surrey) ...................................................... 17GSayre-McCord, Geoff (University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill) .............................................................................................G8N, G10A, 15QSbardolini, Giorgio (University of Amsterdam) ............................................12IScarffe, Eric John (Boston University) ........................................................ 10NSchaffer, Jonathan (Rutgers University–New Brunswick) ............................ 5ASchechter, Elizabeth (Indiana University, Bloomington) .............................. 1CSchiff, Melayna (Georgetown University) ..................................................G5HSchoenberg, Philip (Western New Mexico University) ....................... M8, M11Scholz, Sally (Villanova University) ...................................................... 10I, 16KSchuh, Guy (Boston College) .......................................................................G6ISchuklenk, Udo (Queen’s University) ....................................................... G12FSchuman, Boaz Faraday (University of Notre Dame) ....................................3FSchuster, Nick (Washington University in St. Louis) .................................. 17D
108
Program Participants
Schwartz, Lindsey (University of Wisconsin–Madison) ..............................G1BScott, Jacqueline (Loyola University Chicago) .........................................G11AScott, Rebecca (Harper College) ........................................................... 6C, M9Sebo, Jeff (New York University) ................................................................ 11ASeeley, William (Boston College) ............................................................... 17CSeok, Bongrae (Alvernia University) ......................................... G6I, G8I, G12BSethi, Umrao (Lehman College, CUNY) ........................................................17IShabel, Lisa (Ohio State University) ............................................................10BShafiei, Keyvan (Georgetown University) ..................................G7E, G8M, 16JShah, Nishi (Amherst College) .......................................................................5FShalkowski, Scott (University of Leeds) ................................................1B, 12LShapshay, Sandra (Hunter College, CUNY) ................................................ 17KShepard, Jason (Life University) ................................................................. G5FSheth, Falguni (Emory University) ............................................................G12DShieber, Joseph (Lafayette College) ..............................................................1IShields, Christopher (Notre Dame University) ........................................... 11DShin, Sun-Joo (Yale University) ...................................................................G6KShorter-Bourhanou, Jameliah (College of the Holy Cross, Georgia College) ..............................................................................................................G2CSiderits, Mark (Seoul National University) ...................................................15FSifferd, Katrina (Elmhurst College) ............................................................. 17GSilver, Kenneth (Trinity College Dublin) ..................................................... 10HSimchen, Ori (University of British Columbia) .............................................. 2DSimpson, David (Marc Sanders Scholar) ................................................... G8NSingh, Keshav (University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill) ...................... 12CSkiles, Alexander (Rutgers University–New Brunswick) ............................... 5ASkocz, Dennis (Independent Scholar) ........................................................G5HSliwowski, Adam (Boston College) .............................................................G9ASmith, Colin C. (University of Colorado) .....................................................15MSmith, Julia (University of Toronto) .............................................................11JSmith, Sheldon (University of California, Los Angeles) ................................2ESnedegar, Justin (University of St Andrews) ................................................ 7GSolomon, Miriam (Temple University) ............................................................5ISong, Bin (Washington College) ...............................................................G15BSongster, Kempis Ghani (The Redemption Project) .................................... 2GSouthgate, Elizabeth (Cornell University) ...................................................G1BSoysal, Zeynep (University of Rochester)....................................................10JSpencer, Jack (Massachusetts Institute of Technology)............................ 15GSpener, Maja (University of Birmingham) .....................................................3BSpigt, Joris (Institute of Philosophy, Katholieke Universiteit Leuven) .......15LSpringle, Alison (University of Pittsburgh) .................................................G5DStaats, Marian (Oakton Community College) .............................................G8BStaffel, Julia (University of Colorado) .......................................................G10AStangl, Rebecca (University of Virginia) ......................................................15J
109
Program Participants
Starkey, Charles (Clemson University) .......................................................G7BSteers-McCrum, Alex R. (The Graduate Center, CUNY) ................................16ISteinberg, Justin (The Graduate Center, CUNY) .........................................15EStephano, Oli (Vasser College) ......................................................................7BStern, Alexander W. (University of Notre Dame) ........................................ G3FStewart, Andrew (University of Southern California) ..................................15JStewart, Heather (University of Western Ontario) .............. G4B, M2, 11N, 16LStilz, Anna (Princeton University) ................................................................G4DStippa, Bronwyn (University of Texas at Austin) ......................................... 16NStoll, Timothy (Franklin and Marshall College) ......................................... G3GStoneman, Betty (Emory University) ...........................................................10OStorey, David (Boston College) ........................................................... M8, M11Stratman, Christopher Michael (University of Nebraska–Lincoln) .............................................................................................Poster SessionStrawson, Galen (University of Texas at Austin) ..................................M10, 17IStriker, Gisela (Harvard University) ............................................................. 12AStrohl, Mathew (University of Montana)....................................................... 5GStruhl, Karsten J. (John Jay College of Criminal Justice) .................G2A, G8CStudd, James (University of Oxford) .............................................................1BStump, Jacob (Northeastern University) ............................................ M8, M11Sud, Rohan (Ryerson University) .................................................................. 7DSullivan, Laura Specker (College of Charleston) ...........................................5ESullivan, Mack (University of Notre Dame) ................................................ 12CSullivan, Michael (Emory University) .......................................................... 16KSullivan-Clarke, Andrea (University of Windsor) .........................................17BSundstrom, Ronald (University of San Francisco) .......................................12BSusser, Daniel (Pennsylvania State University) .......................................... 10ASussman, David (University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign) ..................G9KSwartzer, Steve (University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill) ....................15QSwiderski, Jan (Syracuse University) ............................................................ 5ASyedullah, Jasmine (Vassar College)..........................................................G9D
TTabb, Kathryn (Bard College) .........................................................5I, G6L, 12KTáíwò, Olúfémi (Georgetown University) .......................................................7ITal, Eyal (University of Cologne) ....................................................................2LTarsney, Christian (University of Oxford) .......................................................1JTavor, Ori (University of Pennsylvania) .....................................................G12BTaylor, Philip (West Chester University of Pennsylvania) ...........................G3DTaylor, Elanor (Johns Hopkins University) .................................................. 15NTerezakis, Katie (Rochester Institute of Technology) ...................... 12D, G17HTessman, Lisa (Binghamton University) ........................................................ 8AThakkar, Jonny (Swarthmore College).........................................................12EThiem, Yannik (Columbia University) ......................................................... G8G
110
Thomas, Bailey (Pennsylvania State University) ......................................... G6EThomas, Evan (Ohio State University) ......................................................G10CTiisala, Tuomo (New York University)............................................................ 7HTiller, Glenn (Texas A&M University–Corpus Christi) ................................ G16ETimmons, Mark (University of Arizona) ........................................................ 7GTimpe, Kevin (Calvin College) ....................................................................... 8ATomalty, Jesse (University of Bergen) ........................................................G2BTomaszewski, Christopher (Baylor University) ............................................. 5ATomlinson, Davey (Villanova University) ..................................................... G7FTorrey, John (Buffalo State University) .................................................. 5H, M6Torsen, Ingvild (University of Oslo) .......................................................... G17FTownsend, Mary (St. John’s University, New York) ....................................G4CTracz, Brian (University of California, San Diego) ..................................... G14ETrees, Hannah (University of Texas at Austin) ...............................................3ETrogdon, Kelly (Virginia Tech University) ...................................................... 5ATrott, Adriel M. (Wabash College) ..............................................................G8MTugushev, Nikolay (New School for Social Research) ................................G5HTulodziecki, Dana (Purdue University) ........................................................ 17HTurgeon, Wendy C. (St. Joseph’s College, New York) ..................G3B, M1, M6Turkewitz, Joshua (Florida State University) .............................Poster SessionTutt, Daniel (Columbian College of Arts and Sciences) .............................G8DTyson, Sarah (University of Colorado Denver) .............................................. 2G
UUdell, Larry (West Chester University) .........................................................17EUhuru, Anwar (Monmouth University) ........................................................G2CUlatowski, Joseph (University of Connecticut) ................................. 3D, G11BUrban, Thomas (Houston Community College) ........................................... 6CUrquidez, Alberto (Bowdoin College) ........................................................ 12H
VVallegas, Alejandro (University of Oregon) ................................................ 10KVan Norden, Bryan (Wuhan University China, Yale-NUS Singapore, and Vassar College) .....................................................................G9C, 10LVasanthakumar, Ashwini (Queen’s Law School) ........................................G2BVatansever, Saniye (Bilkent University) ........................................................ 2HVazquez, Michael (University of Pennsylvania) ..........................................G3BVer Eecke (Georgetown University) ...........................................................G8DVictor, Elizabeth (William Paterson University)..............................................7BVigani, Denise (Seton Hall University) .......................................................... 5K
WWagner, Steven (University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign) ....................12FWaithe, Mary Ellen (Cleveland State University) ........................................G6B
Program Participants
111
Walsh, Sean (University of California, Los Angeles) .................................. 16AWang, Kuizhi (University of Oxford) ..........................................Poster SessionWapeemukwa, Wayne (Pennsylvania State University) ................................16IWard, Caleb (Stony Brook University) ........................................................... 2KWarmack, Andrea (Emory University) .....................................G6E, G9D, G14DWastvedt, Bjorn (University of Arizona) ................................................... G14GWatkins, Aja (Boston University) ................................................................. 11GWatkins, Margaret (St. Vincent College) ......................................................11EWatson, Gary (University of Southern California) ....................................... 11AWautischer, Helmut (Sonoma State University) ......................................... G3FWawrytko, Sandra (San Diego State University) ...................................... G17GWaxman, Daniel (Lingnan University) ......................................................... 16AWay, Wendy (Bethpage High School) ...........................................................M6Webster, Dustin (University of Pennsylvania Graduate School of Education) ..............................................................................................M5Wedgwood, Ralph (University of Southern California) .............................. 15CWeed, Laura E. (The College of Saint Rose) .....................................G6J, G10BWeinstein, Scott (University of Pennsylvania) ............................................G4HWeiss, Roslyn (Lehigh University) .....................................................G4C, G7HWeiss, Penny (St. Louis University) .............................................................G9HWells, Clarisse (Harvard University) ..............................................................1MWellwood, Alexis (University of Southern California) ....................................2EWeng, Ruoyang (University of Toronto) ....................................................G12BWesson, Stephanie (University of Pennsylvania) .......................................G9HWesterhoff, Jan (University of Oxford) ........................................................15FWestfall, Mason (University of Toronto) ........................................................3EWestmoreland, Mark William (Villanova University) ..................................M11Whalen, Nicole (The Graduate Center, CUNY) .............................................1MWhite, David (St. John Fisher College) .....................................................G10BWhiting, Jennifer (University of Pittsburgh) ............................................... 12AWicks, Peter (Elm Institute) .........................................................................10OWiens, David (University of California, San Diego) ..................................G10AWieseler, Christine (Skidmore College) ....................................................... 8AWigglesworth, Logan (Rice University) ........................................................ 1KWiggletonlittle, Jada (University of California, San Diego) ...........................2JWilhelm, Isaac (Rutgers University) ............................................................ 15GWilliams, Larry (Columbia University) ........................................................ G8NWilson, Mark (University of Pittsburgh) .........................................................2EWilson, Matthew (Harvard University) ........................................................ 17DWilson, Richard (Towson University) ..........................................................15OWinokur, Benjamin (York University) .............................................................3EWirts, Amelia M. (Boston College) ..................................................... 2K, G12DWittkower, Dylan (Old Dominion University) .............................................. 10AWodak, Daniel (University of Pennsylvania) ................................................16B
Program Participants
112
Wolf-Devine, Celia (Stonehill College) ...........................................................7FWolfe, Katharine (St. Lawrence University) ................................................ 11NWoodard, Elise (University of Michigan) .............................................. 2L, G7EWoodman, Zachary (Western Michigan University) ................................... G5EWoodruff, Martha K. (Middlebury College) ................................................M11Wooten, Zachary (West Chester University) ...............................................M11Worsnip, Alex (University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill) ....................... 15CWright, Kathleen (Haverford College) .........................................................10LWrisley, George (University of North Georgia) ......................................... G7GWu, Jingyi (University of California, Irvine) ................................................ G7EWu, Yi (New School for Social Research) .................................................G17H
YYates, Melissa (Smith College) ................................................................... 10NYaure, Philip (Columbia University) ...............................................................5BYenter, Timothy (University of Mississippi) ................................................G9HYonek, Rachael (Vanderbilt University)....................................................... 16KYoung, Miranda (New School for Social Research) .......................................5LYumusak, Ege (Harvard University) .......................................................3A, 16F
ZZack, Naomi (Lehman College, CUNY) ......................................................... 2KZhang, Longxi (City University of Hong Kong) ..............................................5JZheng, Robin (Yale-NUS College) ............................................................... 11NZimmer, Tyler (Northeastern Illinois University) .........................................12BZimmerman, Aaron (University of California, Santa Barbara) ............7A, G17AZimmerman, Annette (Princeton University) .............................................. 10AZimmerman, Dean (Rutgers University) .............................................. 2A, M10Zumba, Usochi (Pan-Atlantic University) ....................................................G4BZurn, Perry (American University) ................................................... 2G, 6B, 17J
Program Participants
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Sessions Sponsored by APA Committees
APA GRADUATE STUDENT COUNCIL
Outsiders Within: Reflections on Being a Low-Income and/or First-Generation Philosopher (16L)Saturday, 11:15 a.m.–1:15 p.m.
COMMITTEE ON ACADEMIC CAREER OPPORTUNITIES AND PLACEMENT
Jobs and Careers Teaching Philosophy at a Two-Year College: Find and Keep a Position (6C)Thursday, 12:15–2:15 p.m.
COMMITTEE ON ASIAN AND ASIAN-AMERICAN PHILOSOPHERS AND PHILOSOPHIES
Early Chinese and Anglo-Analytic Philosophy of Language in Dialogue (3D)Wednesday, 3:15–6:15 p.m.
Author Meets Critics: Martin Powers, China and England: The Preindustrial Struggle for Justice in Word and Image (5J)Thursday, 9:00 a.m.–Noon
COMMITTEE ON PHILOSOPHY AND COMPUTERS
Philosophical Approaches to Data Justice (10A)Friday, 9:00–11:00 a.m.
COMMITTEE ON PHILOSOPHY AND LAW
Punishment (3C)Wednesday, 3:15-6:15 p.m.
Author Meets Critics: Alexander Sarch, Criminally Ignorant: Why the Law Pretends We Know What We Don’t (17G)Saturday, 1:30–4:30 p.m.
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Sessions Sponsored by APA Committees
COMMITTEE ON LECTURES, PUBLICATIONS, AND RESEARCH
Danto/ASA Prize Lecture (6A)Thursday, 12:15–2:15 p.m.
De Gruyter Kant Lecture (7A)Thursday, 2:30–5:30 p.m.
COMMITTEE ON PHILOSOPHY AND MEDICINE
Revisiting Philosophy of Abortion in a Time of Crisis (7J)Thursday, 2:30-5:30 p.m.
COMMITTEE ON PHILOSOPHY IN TWO-YEAR COLLEGES
Jobs and Careers Teaching Philosophy at a Two-Year College: Find and Keep a Position (6C)Thursday, 12:15–2:15 p.m.
COMMITTEE ON PRE-COLLEGE INSTRUCTION IN PHILOSOPHY
The National High School Ethics Bowl: How (and Why You Might Want) to Get Involved (15Q)Saturday, 9:00–11:00 a.m.
COMMITTEE ON PUBLIC PHILOSOPHY
Civility (7I)Thursday, 2:30–5:30 p.m.
Gentrification, Displacement, and the City (12B)Friday, 1:30–4:30 p.m.
COMMITTEE ON TEACHING PHILOSOPHY
Jobs and Careers Teaching Philosophy at a Two-Year College: Find and Keep a Position (6C)Thursday, 12:15–2:15 p.m.
COMMITTEE ON THE STATUS OF BLACK PHILOSOPHERS
Directions in Africana Phenomenology (3G)Wednesday, 3:15–6:15 p.m.
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Sessions Sponsored by APA Committees
COMMITTEE ON THE STATUS OF WOMEN
Author Meets Critics: Eva Feder Kittay, Learning from My Daughter (8A)Thursday, 5:30–7:30 p.m.
SESSIONS SPONSORED BY THE APA BOARD
APA Strategic Planning Focus Group (6D)Thursday, 12:15–2:15 p.m.
Department Chairs Network: Building Support for Philosophy on Campus (10I)Friday, 9:00–11:00 a.m.
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Group Sessions
AAmerican Society for Aesthetics: G16D, Saturday, 11:15 a.m.–1:15 p.m.American Society for Value Inquiry: G1C, Wednesday, 10:45 a.m.–12:45 p.m.; G3D, Wednesday, 3:15–6:15 p.m.Association for Informal Logica and Critical Thinking: G12E, Friday, 1:30–4:30 p.m.Association for Philosophy of the Unconscious: G8D, Thursday, 5:30–7:30 p.m.Association for the Advancement of Philosophy and Psychiatry: G6L, Thursday, 12:15–2:15 p.m.Association for the Philosophy of Education: G1B, Wednesday, 10:45 a.m.–12:45 p.m.Association of Chinese Philosophers in America: G12B, Friday, 1:30–4:30 p.m.; G17G, Saturday, 1:30–4:30 p.m.Association of Philosophy Journal Editors: G12F, Friday, 1:30–4:30 p.m.
CCenter for New Narratives in Philosophy: G5G, Thursday, 9:00 a.m.–12:00 p.m.Concerned Philosophers for Peace: G6D, Thursday, 12:15–2:15 p.m.
DDescartes Society: G10C, Friday, 9:00–11:00 a.m.
EEvangelical Philosophical Society: G6M, Thursday, 12:15–2:15 p.m.Experimental Philosophy Society: G5F, Thursday, 9:00 a.m.–12:00 p.m.
FFriends of Mary Astell: G9H, Thursday, 7:30–10:30 p.m.
GGandhi–King–Chavez–Addams Society: G16A, Saturday, 11:15 a.m.–1:15 p.m.George Santayana Society: G16E, Saturday, 11:15 a.m.–1:15 p.m.
HHeidegger Circle: G5H, Thursday, 9:00 a.m.–12:00 p.m.
IInternational Association for Environmental Philosophy (IAEP): G8B/G9F, Thursday, 5:30–7:30 p.m.; G9F, Thursday, 7:30–10:30 p.m.
117
Group Sessions
Indian Philosophy Association: G9L, Thursday, 7:30–10:30 p.m.; G17H, Saturday, 1:30–4:30 p.m.Institute for the Advancement of Philosophy for Children: G4I, Wednesday, 6:30–9:30 p.m.International Association for the Philosophy of Death and Dying: G3C, Wednesday, 3:15–6:15 p.m.; G11B, Friday, 11:15 a.m.–1:15 p.m.International Berkeley Society: G8E, Thursday, 5:30–7:30 p.m.International Hobbes Association: G9G, Thursday, 7:30–10:30 p.m.; G14F, Friday, 7:00–10:00 p.m.International Plato Society: G4C, Wednesday, 6:30–9:30 p.m.International Society for Buddhist Philosophy: G4E, Wednesday, 6:30–9:30 p.m.; G7F, Thursday, 2:30–5:30 p.m.International Society for Chinese Philosophy: G1A, Wednesday, 10:45 a.m.–12:45 p.m.; G6I, Thursday, 12:15–2:15 p.m.International Society for Comparative Studies of Chinese and Western Philosophy: G9J, Thursday, 7:30–10:30 p.m.; G15B, Saturday, 9:00–11:00 a.m.International Society for Environmental Ethics: G10D, Friday, 9:00–11:00 a.m.; G16C, Saturday, 11:15 a.m.–1:15 p.m.
JJohn Dewey Society: G8K, Thursday, 5:30–7:30 p.m.Josiah Royce Society: G6H, Thursday, 12:15–2:15 p.m.
KKarl Jaspers Society of North America: G3F, Wednesday, 3:15–6:15 p.m.; G9I, Thursday, 7:30–10:30 p.m.
LLeibniz Society of North America: G8J, Thursday, 5:30–7:30 p.m.
MMarxism and Philosophy Association: G17E, Saturday, 1:30–4:30 p.m.Minorities and Philosophy (MAP): G7E, Thursday, 2:30–5:30 p.m.Molinari Society: G5E, Thursday, 9:00 a.m.–12:00 p.m.
NNational Philosophical Counseling Association: G6G, Thursday, 12:15–2:15 p.m.; G7D, Thursday, 2:30–5:30 p.m.North American Kant Society: G9K, Thursday, 7:30–10:30 p.m.; G14E, Friday, 7:00–10:00 p.m.North American Korean Philosophy Association: G6C, Thursday, 12:15–2:15 p.m.; G8I, Thursday, 5:30–7:30 p.m.North American Nietzsche Society: G11A, Friday, 11:15 a.m.–1:15 p.m.
118
Group Sessions
North American Society for Social Philosophy (NASSP): G4D, Wednesday, 6:30–9:30 p.m.North American Spinoza Society: G17D, Saturday, 1:30–4:30 p.m.
PPenn Project for Philosophy for the Young: G3B, Wednesday, 3:15–6:15 p.m.Philosophy and Religion Conference in Africana Traditions (PRAT): G2C, Wednesday, 1:00–3:00 p.m.Philosophy of Mathematics Association (PMA): G4H, Wednesday, 6:30–9:30 p.m.Philosophy of the City Research Group: G4G, Wednesday, 6:30–9:30 p.m.; G9E, Thursday, 7:30–10:30 p.m.Philosophy of Time Society: G5D, Thursday, 9:00 a.m.–12:00 p.m.Philosophy, Politics, and Economics Society: G8N, Thursday, 5:30–7:30 p.m.; G10A, Friday, 9:00–11:00 a.m.Political Epistemology Network: G15A, Saturday, 9:00–11:00 a.m.Political Theology Group: G9D, Thursday, 7:30–10:30 p.m.; G14D, Friday, 7:00–10:00 p.m.Public Philosophy Network: G6F, Thursday, 12:15–2:15 p.m.Publishing Workshop: G6N, Thursday, 12:15–2:15 p.m.
RRadical Philosophy Association: G12D, Friday, 1:30–4:30 p.m.Radical Philosophy Association: G17C, Saturday, 1:30–4:30 p.m.
SSociety for Analytical Feminism: G3A, Wednesday, 3:15–6:15 p.m.; G4B, Wednesday, 6:30–9:30 p.m.Society for Ancient Greek Philosophy: G14G, Friday, 7:00–10:00 p.m.Society for Asian and Comparative Philosophy: G7G, Thursday, 2:30–5:30 p.m.; G9C, Thursday, 7:30–10:30 p.m.Society for German Idealism and Romanticism: G3G, Wednesday, 3:15–6:15 p.m.; G17F, Saturday, 1:30–4:30 p.m.Society for LGBTQ Philosophy: G4A, Wednesday, 6:30–9:30 p.m.Society for Mexican American Philosophy: G14B, Friday, 7:00–10:00 p.m.; G16B, Saturday, 11:15 a.m.–1:15 p.m.Society for Phenomenology and Existential Philosophy (SPEP): G8G, Thursday, 5:30–7:30 p.m.Society for Philosophy and Public Affairs: G7C, Thursday, 2:30–5:30 p.m.Society for Philosophy in the Contemporary World: G8M, Thursday, 5:30–7:30 p.m.Society for Philosophy of Agency: G5C, Thursday, 9:00 a.m.–12:00 p.m.Society for Philosophy of Emotion: G5A, Thursday, 9:00 a.m.–12:00 p.m.; G7B, Thursday, 2:30–5:30 p.m.
119
Group Sessions
Society for Skeptical Studies: G7A, Thursday, 2:30–5:30 p.m.Society for Teaching Comparative Philosophy: G12C, Friday, 1:30–4:30 p.m.Society for the Advancement of American Philosophy: G9B, Thursday, 7:30–10:30 p.m.; G14C, Friday, 7:00–10:00 p.m.Society for the Philosophy of Creativity: G5B, Thursday, 9:00 a.m.–12:00 p.m.Society for the Philosophy of Human Rights: G2B, Wednesday, 1:00–3:00 p.m.Society for the Philosophy of Sex and Love: G6E, Thursday, 12:15–2:15 p.m.; G8F, Thursday, 5:30–7:30 p.m.Society for the Study of Indian and Tibetan Buddhist Philosophy: G2A, Wednesday, 1:00–3:00 p.m.Society for the Study of Women Philosophers: G6B, Thursday, 12:15–2:15 p.m.Society of Christian Philosophers: G8A, Thursday, 5:30–7:30 p.m.Society of Study of Process Philosophy: G2D, Wednesday, 1:00–3:00 p.m.; G7I, Thursday, 2:30–5:30 p.m.Søren Kierkegaard Society: G17B, Saturday, 1:30–4:30 p.m.
TThe Ayn Rand Society: G14A, Friday, 7:00–10:00 p.m.The Charles S. Peirce Society: G4F, Wednesday, 6:30–9:30 p.m.; G6K, Thursday, 12:15–2:15 p.m.The Gandhi-King-Adams-Chavez Society: G8C, Thursday, 5:30–7:30 p.m.The International Institute for Field Being: G6J, Thursday, 12:15–2:15 p.m.; G10B, Friday, 9:00–11:00 a.m.The Society for Medieval and Renaissance Philosophy: G7H, Thursday, 2:30–5:30 p.m.; G8H, Thursday, 5:30–7:30 p.m.The Society for the History of Political Philosophy: G8L, Thursday, 5:30–7:30 p.m.; G9A, Thursday, 7:30–10:30 p.m.The Society of Philosophers in America (SOPHIA): G3E, Wednesday, 3:15–6:15 p.m.; G11C, Friday, 11:15 a.m.–1:15 p.m.The Wilfrid Sellars Society: G6A, Thursday, 12:15–2:15 p.m.
WWilliam James Society: G12A, Friday, 1:30–4:30 p.m.; G17A, Saturday, 1:30–4:30 p.m.
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121
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Philosophy Journalsfrom Duke University Press
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The Philosophical Review publishes original scholarly work in all areas of analytic philosophy, with an emphasis on material of general interest to academic philosophers.
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Common KnowledgeJeffrey M. Perl, editordukeupress.edu/ck
Notre Dame Journal of Formal LogicMichael Detlefsen and Anand Pillay, editorsdukeupress.edu/ndjfl
123
Creation and AnarchyThe Work of Art and the Religion of CapitalismGiorgio Agamben, Translated by Adam KotskoMERIDIAN: CROSSING AESTHETICS
The Political Theory of NeoliberalismThomas BiebricherCURRENCIES: NEW THINKING FOR FINANCIAL TIMES
Giving WayThoughts on Unappreciated DispositionsSteven Connor
Love DrugsThe Chemical Future of RelationshipsBrian D. Earp and Julian SavulescuREDWOOD PRESS
LimitsWhy Malthus Was Wrong and Why Environmentalists Should CareGiorgos KallisSTANFORD BRIEFS
Photography and Its ShadowHagi Kenaan
Heidegger’s Fascist AffinitiesA Politics of SilenceAdam Knowles
Neoliberalism’s DemonsOn the Political Theology of Late CapitalAdam Kotsko
What Would Be DifferentFigures of Possibility in AdornoIain Macdonald
Unpublished Fragments (Spring 1885–Spring 1886)Volume 16Friedrich Nietzsche, Translated, with an Afterword, by Adrian Del Caro
Unpublished Fragments from the Period of Thus Spoke Zarathustra (Summer 1882–Winter 1883/84)Volume 14Friedrich Nietzsche, Translated, with an Afterword, by Paul S. Loeb and David F. Tinsley
Being with the DeadBurial, Ancestral Politics, and the Roots of Historical ConsciousnessHans RuinCULTURAL MEMORY IN THE PRESENT
History in Financial TimesAmin SammanCURRENCIES: NEW THINKING FOR FINANCIAL TIMES
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UtopophobiaOn the Limits (If Any) of Political PhilosophyDavid EstlundHardback $35.00
Private GovernmentHow Employers Rule Our Lives (and Why We Don’t Talk about It) Elizabeth AndersonPaperback $19.95
In Search of the SoulA Philosophical EssayJohn CottinghamHardback $22.95
Ten Great Ideas about ChancePersi Diaconis & Brian SkyrmsPaperback $17.95
In the Shadow of JusticePostwar Liberalism and the Remaking of Political PhilosophyKatrina ForresterHardback $35.00
Artificial YouAI and the Future of Your MindSusan SchneiderHardback $24.95
Philosophy of PhysicsQuantum TheoryTim MaudlinPrinceton Foundations of Contemporary PhilosophyHardback $24.95
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Moving Up without Losing Your WayThe Ethical Costs of Upward MobilityJennifer M. MortonHardback $26.95
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Williams College, in conjunction with the
JOHN WILLIAM MILLER FELLOWSHIP FUND,announces essay prizes, research fellowships, and travel
stipends to advance the study of the philosophy of John William Miller.
z ESSAY PRIZES
An annual prize of $5,000 is offered for the best essay— already published in or under review with a recognized journal— on some aspect of Miller’s philosophy. Authors are welcome to
send a letter of application with the manuscript of the essay to the Miller Fund.
TRAVEL STIPENDS
Scholars researching in the Miller Papers in Williamstown, MA, doing related research in other archives, and traveling to present papers on Miller may apply for financial support up to $500.
RESEARCH FELLOWSHIPS
Candidates working on a book-length project addressing Miller’s philosophy are encouraged to send applications (including a
proposal, CV, writing samples, and no fewer than two letters of recommendation) to the Miller Fund for awards up to $45,000.
zComplete information on essay prizes and fellowships, as well as the basic texts of and secondary commentary on Miller’s philosophy, can be found at the Website for the Fellowship Fund: http://sites.williams.edu/miller/
Send inquiries to: Director of Libraries, 26 Hopkins Hall Drive, Williamstown MA 01267.
Applications can also be sent electronically courtesy of Director of Libraries, Jonathan Miller
aaa
a
126
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A Workbook for Arguments (3rd Edition): A Complete Course in Critical ThinkingDavid R. Morrow & Anthony Weston$32.00 pb ❘ $23.95 ebook ❘ $4.00 exam
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