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PALMER HOUSE HILTON HOTEL
CHICAGO, ILLINOIS
FEBRUARY 26 – MARCH 1, 2014
The American Philosophical Association
CENTRAL DIVISION
ONE HUNDRE D E L E VE NT H
ANNUAL ME E T I NG
PROGRA M
HUMOR AND THE GOOD LIFE
IN MODERN PHILOSOPHY
Shaftesbury, Hamann, Kierkegaard
Lydia B. Amir
THINKING THE POETIC MEASURE
OF JUSTICE
Hölderlin–Heidegger–Celan
Charles Bambach
GOODBYE, KANT!
What Still Stands of the
Critique of Pure Reason
Maurizio Ferraris
Richard Davies, translator
THINKING THROUGH THOMAS MERTON
Contemplation for Contemporary Times
Robert Inchausti
LISTENING TO OURSELVES
A Multilingual Anthology
of African Philosophy
Chike Jeffers, editor
Foreword by Ngu!gi! wa Thiong’o
HANS JONAS’S ETHIC
OF RESPONSIBILITY
From Ontology to Ecology
Theresa Morris
AFRICA, ASIA, AND THE HISTORY
OF PHILOSOPHY
Racism in the Formation of the
Philosophical Canon, 1780–1830
Peter K. J. Park
MOTHERING QUEERLY,
QUEERING MOTHERHOOD
Resisting Monomaternalism in Adoptive,
Lesbian, Blended, and Polygamous Families
Shelley M. Park
THE WORLD’S GREAT WISDOM
Timeless Teachings from Religions
and Philosophies
Roger Walsh, editor

BINGHAMTON JOURNAL OF PHILOSOPHY
Christopher Morgan-Knapp, editor
philoSOPHIA
A Journal of Continental Feminism
Lynne Huffer and Shannon Winnubst, editors
PALIMPSEST
A Journal on Women, Gender,
and the Black International
T. Denean Sharpley-Whiting and
Tiffany Ruby Patterson-Myers, editors
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1
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 26
PLACEMENT SERVICE
Information: 3:00–10:00 p.m., registration area (sixth floor)
Interview tables: 3:00–10:00 p.m., Monroe Ballroom (sixth floor)
REGISTRATION
3:00–10:00 p.m., registration area (sixth floor)
EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE MEETING
7:00–10:00 p.m.
WEDNESDAY EVENING, 4:00–7:00 P.M.
MAIN PROGRAM SESSIONS
I-A. Invited Symposium: Naturalistic Theories of Propositions
Chair: Jeffrey Speaks (University of Notre Dame)
Speakers: Peter W. Hanks (University of Minnesota–Twin Cities)
Scott Soames (University of Southern California)
Commentator: Friederike Moltmann (CNRS Paris)
I-B. Invited Symposium: Well-Being
Chair: Sean Drysdale Walsh (University of Minnesota
Duluth)
Speakers: Chris Heathwood (University of Colorado–Boulder)
Connie S. Rosati (University of Arizona)
Ben Bradley (Syracuse University)
I-C. Author Meets Critics: Duncan Pritchard, Epistemological
Disjunctivism
Chair: Daniel Gross (Ohio State University)
Critics: Ram Neta (University of North Carolina–Chapel Hill)
Clayton M. Littlejohn (University of Texas–San Antonio)
Sanford Goldberg (Northwestern University)
Author: Duncan Pritchard (University of Edinburgh)
I-D. Submitted Symposium
**Short session: ends at 6:00 p.m.**
Chair: Julie Ward (Loyola University Chicago)
Speaker: Douglass Reed (University of Virginia)
“Aristotle on Degrees and Heroic Virtue”
Commentator: Paula Gottlieb (University of Wisconsin–Madison)
2
Wednesday Evening, February 26: 7:00–9:00 p.m.
WEDNESDAY EVENING, 7:00–9:00 P.M.
GROUP PROGRAM SESSIONS
GI-1. Max Scheler Society
Chair: Eugene Kelly (New York Institute of Technology)
Speakers: Tommaso Peronne (Università del Salento, Italy)
“Husserl’s ‘Logic’ of Valuing and Its Relation to
Scheler’s Intentional Analysis of Affective Perception”
Roberta De Monticelli (Università Vita-Salute San
Raffaele, Milan)
“Wholes, Parts, and Values: A Phenomenological
Argument in Defense of Axiological Realism”
Commentator: Eugene Kelly (New York Institute of Technology)
GI-2. American Society for Value Inquiry
Topic: Non-violence and Values
Chair: G. John M. Abbarno (D’Youville College)
Speakers: Barry Gan (St. Bonaventure University)
“Syria, Violence, and Non-violence”
Patricia Ann Murphy (St. Joseph’s University)
“Arguing for Drones and Other Good News about
Non-violence”
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 27
PLACEMENT SERVICE
Information: 8:30 a.m.–5:30 p.m., registration area (sixth floor)
Interview tables: 8:30 a.m.–5:30 p.m., Monroe Ballroom (sixth floor)
REGISTRATION
8:30 a.m.–5:30 p.m., registration area (sixth floor)
BOOK EXHIBITS
9:00 a.m.–5:00 p.m., Adams Ballroom (sixth floor)
3
Thursday Morning, February 27: 9:00 a.m.–noon
THURSDAY MORNING, 9:00 A.M.–NOON
GROUP PROGRAM SESSIONS
GII-1. Association for Philosophy of Judaism
Speaker: Josef Stern (University of Chicago)
“The Epistemology of Prophecy: The False Prophet, the
Parable of Mount Sinai, and the Maimonidean Circle”
Commentator: Dani Rabinowitz (Oxford University)
Speaker: Shira Weiss (Yeshiva University)
“Can Love Be Reasonless? A Philosophic Analysis of
Divine Love”
Commentator: To be announced
Speaker: Yonatan Brafman (Columbia University)
“Philosophy of Halakha and Moral Theory:
Normativity and Motivation”
Commentator: To be announced
GII-2. American Society for Value Inquiry
Topic: Ethics of Business and Higher Education
Chair: Thomas Magnell (Drew University)
Speakers: George Schedler (Southern Illinois University–
Carbondale)
“Public Higher Education as Business”
Jesse Taylor (Appalachian State University)
“A Moral Critique of Business Models for Higher
Education”
Stephen Kershnar (SUNY Fredonia)
“Shareholder Theory in Academia”
GII-3. Max Scheler Society
Chair: Eric Mohr (Duquesne University)
Speakers: Thomas Ruble (Southern Illinois University–Carbondale)
“Fantastic Love of the World: On the Metaphysics of
Redemption”
Saboura Hajialiorakpour (University of Tehran)
“Scheler’s Phenomenology of Love and the Modern
Crisis of Culture”
Evrim Kutlu (Universität Köln)
“The Significance of the Saint in the Process of God-
Actualization in Max Scheler’s Philosophy”
Susan Gottlöber (National University of Ireland,
Maynooth)
“The Value of Beauty: Scheler on the Importance of
Art”
4
Thursday Morning, February 27: 9:00 a.m.–noon
GII-4. Society for Philosophy in the Contemporary World
Chair: Jack Weir (Morehead State University)
GII-5. Society for the Philosophic Study of the Contemporary Visual Arts
Topic: Philosophy of Art
Chair: Dan Flory (Montana State University)
Speakers: H. Peter Steeves (DePaul University)
“Visualizing the Abstract: Phenomenology and the
Concept of Conceptual Art”
Wesley D. Cray (Grand Valley State University)
“A Philosophical Enfranchisement of Yellowism”
Alexander Robins (Emory University)
“Peirce as Photographer”
GII-6. William James Society
Topic: William James and Habit
Speakers: James Hitt (Saginaw Valley State University)
“Habit and Social Institutions”
Philip Mack (Marquette University)
“In Praise of Habit”
Sarin Marchetti (University College, Dublin)
“Unfamiliar Habits: James and the Ethics and Politics
of Self-Experimentation”
Commentator: Tadd Ruetenik (Saint Ambrose University)
GII-7. Society for Analytical Feminism
Chair: Robin S. Dillon (Lehigh University)
Speaker: Dan Lopez de Sa (ICREA-Universitat de Barcelona)
“Women Can Be People: A Response to Witt’s
Metaphysics of Gender”
Commentator: Julinna Oxley (Coastal Carolina University)
Speaker: Mari Mikkola (Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin)
“Pornographic Artifacts: Maker’s-Intentions Models”
Commentator: Louise Antony (University of Massachusetts Amherst)
Speaker: Zac Cogley (Northern Michigan University)
“Blaming the Victim”
Commentator: Anita Superson (University of Kentucky)
GII-8. Society for the Philosophic Study of Genocide and the Holocaust
Topic: Ethnonationalism, World Spirit, Genocide
Chair: James R. Watson (Loyola University New Orleans)
Speakers: Morgan Rempel (University of Southern Mississippi)
“Posen, Ethnonationalism, and the Morality of
Genocide”
5
Thursday Morning, February 27: 9:00 a.m.–noon
Eric Katz (New Jersey Institute of Technology)
“Technology, Environment, and the Swastika: The
Domination of Nature and Genocide”
André Mineau (University of Quebec at Rimouski)
“American Jewish Responses to German
Ethnonationalism”
GII-9. Society for the Study of the History of Analytical Philosophy
Topic: Kantian Problems in Early Analytic Philosophy
Chair: Sandra Lapointe (McMaster University)
Speakers: Nicholas F. Stang (University of Miami)
“Kant, Russell, and the Unity of the Proposition”
Jack Woods (Princeton University/Bilkent University)
“‘A Judgment Forced upon Us’: Poincaré on Intuition
and Mathematical Induction”
Lydia Patton (Virginia Tech)
“Space and Methodology in Helmholtz, Mach, and
Kant”
Clinton Tolley (University of California–San Diego)
“Geometry and the Possibility of Synthetic A Priori
Cognition in the Early Carnap”
GII-10. American Society for Aesthetics
Topic: Behind Theatrical Performance
Speakers: Susan L. Feagin (Temple University)
“Play Scripts and Dramatic Literature”
James R. Hamilton (Kansas State University)
“Spectating Animated Objects”
David Z. Saltz (Georgia State University)
“Robotic Actors”
Paul Woodruff (University of Texas–Austin)
“The Sacraments of Performance”
GII-11. George Santayana Society
Chair: Jessica Tabor Wahmann (Emory University)
Speakers: Antonio Rionda (University of Miami)
“Santayana’s Philosophic Exile”
William Gahan (Rockford University)
“Santayana on Shakespeare”
Commentator: Matthew Flamm (Rockford College)
6
Thursday Afternoon, February 27: 12:10–2:10 p.m.
THURSDAY AFTERNOON, 12:10–2:10 P.M.
MAIN PROGRAM SESSIONS
II-A. Invited Paper: Matter in Aristotle
Chair: Sean Kelsey (University of Notre Dame)
Speaker: David Ebrey (Northwestern University)
Commentator: Riin Sirkel (University of Vermont)
II-B. Invited Paper: The Province of Human Agency
Chair: Kevin Lepore (Elmhurst College)
Speaker: Anton Ford (University of Chicago)
Commentator: Jennifer Morton (City University of New York)
II-C. Invited Paper: Carnap on Modality
Chair: Edwin Mares (Victoria University of Wellington)
Speaker: M. J. Cresswell (Victoria University of Wellington)
Commentator: Sanford Shieh (Wesleyan University)
II-D. Submitted Symposium
Chair: Timothy Fuller (Yonsei University, Korea)
Speaker: Chris Smith (Wake Forest University)
“The Explanatory Power of High-Level Perceptual
Content”
Commentator: Michael A. Rescorla (University of California–Santa
Barbara)
II-E. Submitted Symposium
Chair: Kevan Edwards (Syracuse University)
Speakers: Ben Caplan (Ohio State University) and Chris Tillman
(University of Manitoba)
“Not the Optimistic Type”
Commentator: Dilip Ninan (Tufts University)
II-F. Submitted Symposium
Chair: Fabrice Pataut (CNRS, FRE Sciences, Normes,
Décision)
Speaker: John A. Keller (Niagara University)
“Paraphrase, Semantics, and Ontology”
Commentator: Michael J. Glanzberg (Northwestern University)
7
Thursday Afternoon, February 27: 12:10–2:10 p.m. (cont.)
II-H. Submitted Symposium
Chair: Mark Hopwood (University of Chicago)
Speaker: Kenneth Silver (University of Southern California)
“The Constitution of Action”
Commentator: Andrei A. Buckareff (Marist College)
II-I. Submitted Symposium
Chair: Brad Weslake (University of Rochester)
Speaker: Nick Kroll (Franklin and Marshall College)
“Temporal Passage and Events in Progress”
Commentator: Natalja Deng (University of Notre Dame)
II-J. Colloquium: Moral Psychology
12:10–1:10 p.m. “A Plague on Both Your Houses: Situationism, Virtue
Ethics, and the Importance of Self-Control and
Perseverance Traits in Moral Psychology”
Chair: Meena Krishnamurthy (University of Manitoba)
Speaker: Matthew C. Haug (College of William & Mary)
Commentator: Nicole Smith (University of Texas–Austin)
1:10–2:10 p.m. “Utilitarianism, Intuitions, Rationality, and
Neuroscience”
Chair: Jason R. Raibley (California State University–Long
Beach)
Speakers: Patricia A. Marino (University of Waterloo)
Rosalind Abdool (University of Waterloo)
Commentator: Preston J. Werner (Syracuse University)
II-K. APA Committee Session: Funding for Philosophy: Institute for
Scholarship in the Liberal Arts, Notre Dame
Arranged by the APA Committee on Lectures, Publications, and
Research
Chair: Rebecca Kukla (Georgetown University)
Speaker: Susanne Mueller-Grote (Philosophy Documentation
Center)
II-L. APA Committee Session: Buddhism as Philosophy in Korea
Arranged by the APA Committee on the Status of Asian and Asian-
American Philosophers and Philosophies
Chair: Halla Kim (University of Nebraska–Omaha)
Speakers: Eunsu Cho (Seoul National University)
“Mind and Reality in Wonhyo’s Philosophy”
Jin Y. Park (American University)
“Envisioning Buddhist Ethics”
8
Thursday Afternoon, February 27: 12:10–2:10 p.m. (cont.)
II-M. APA Committee Session
Arranged by the APA Committee on the Status of Black Philosophers
Topic: William R. Jones
II-N. APA Committee Session: Attracting Women Philosophy Majors
Arranged by the APA Committee on the Status of Women
Speakers: Morgan Thompson (University of Pittsburgh)
“Changing Our Syllabi and Explaining Philosophy’s
Relevance”
Toni Adleberg (University of California–San Diego)
“Providing Role Models for Young Philosophers”
Erin Fitzsimmons (Colby College)
Title to be announced
Najah Magliore (Colby College)
Title to be announced
THURSDAY AFTERNOON, 2:20–5:20 P.M.
MAIN PROGRAM SESSIONS
III-A. Invited Symposium: Appearances
Chair: Claire MacCumhaill (Durham University)
Speakers: Michael Martin (University of California–Berkeley/
University College, London)
Susanna Siegel (Harvard University)
Imogen Dickie (University of Toronto)
III-B. Invited Symposium: Feminist Metaphysics
Chair: Jennifer McKitrick (University of Nebraska–Lincoln)
Speakers: Ásta Sveinsdóttir (San Francisco State University)
“Social Properties”
Natalie Stoljar (McGill University)
“Between Voluntarism and Ascriptivism: A Response
to Charlotte Witt’s Notion of the Social Individual”
Mari Mikkola (Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin)
“Doing Ontology and Doing Justice: Meta-
Metaphysical Lessons from Feminist Philosophy”
III-C. Invited Symposium: Reassessing Innateness
Chair: Richard Samuels (Ohio State University)
Speakers: Edouard Machery (University of Pittsburgh)
Joshua Knobe (Yale University)
Commentator: André Ariew (University of Missouri)
9
Thursday Afternoon, February 27: 2:20–5:20 p.m.
III-D. Invited Symposium: New Directions in Public Reason Liberalism
Chair: Kevin Vallier (Bowling Green State University)
Speakers: Steven P. Wall (University of Arizona)
Andrew Lister (Queen’s University, Ontario)
Gerald Gaus (University of Arizona)
III-E. Author Meets Critics: John F. Horty, Reasons as Defaults
Chair: Peter B. M. Vranas (University of Wisconsin–Madison)
Critics: Krista Lawlor (Stanford University)
Anthony Gillies (Rutgers University)
Mark Lance (Georgetown University)
Author: John F. Horty (University of Maryland)
III-F. Author Meets Critics: Timothy Williamson, Modal Logic as
Metaphysics
Chair: Reina Hayaki (University of Nebraska)
Critics: Robert Stalnaker (Massachusetts Institute of
Technology)
Ted Sider (Cornell University)
Author: Timothy Williamson (Oxford University)
III-G. Submitted Symposium
**Short session: ends at 4:20 p.m.**
Chair: Constance Meinwald (University of Illinois–Chicago)
Speaker: Sarah Jansen (Carleton College)
“Poetry and Metaphysics in Republic X”
Commentator: Elizabeth Asmis (University of Chicago)
III-H. Colloquium: Free Will
2:20–3:20 p.m. “When and How Affective Reactions Impact
Judgments about Free Will and Determinism: A
Meta-Analysis”
Chair: J. Thomas Cook (Rollins College)
Speakers: Adam Feltz (Michigan Technological University)
Florian Cova (University of Geneva)
Commentator: Robyn Waller (Florida State University)
3:20–4:20 p.m. “Free Acts and Counterfactuals of Libertarian Freedom:
Why the Rollback Argument (Conditionally) Fails”
Chair: Joseph Mendola (University of Nebraska–Lincoln)
Speaker: Robert J. Hartman (Saint Louis University)
Graduate student travel stipend recipient
Commentator: Andrew Kissel (Ohio State University)
10
Thursday Afternoon, February 27: 2:20–5:20 p.m. (cont.)
4:20–5:20 p.m. “Molinisim and the Ersatz Thin Red Line”
Chair: Roderick T. Long (Auburn University)
Speaker: Dan Padgett (Baylor University)
Commentator: Kelly Anne McCormick (Washington and Jefferson
College)
III-I. Colloquium: Conditionals and Epistemic Modality (Ifs and Mights)
2:20–3:20 p.m. “A User’s Guide to Epistemic Modals”
Chair: Peter Murphy (University of Indianapolis)
Speaker: Michael Barkasi (Rice University)
Graduate student travel stipend recipient
Commentator: Ezra J. Cook (Northwestern University)
3:20–4:20 p.m. “Whether-Conditionals”
Chair: Griffin Klemick (Northern Illinois University)
Speaker: Theodore Korzukhin (Cornell University)
Commentator: Fabrizio Cariani (Northwestern University)
4:20–5:20 p.m. “A Problem with Thinning”
Chair: To be announced
Speaker: Malte Willer (University of Chicago)
Commentator: David Etlin (Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich)
III-J. Colloquium: Metaethics
2:20–3:20 p.m. “How to Be an Ethical Expressivist”
Chair: Mark van Roojen (University of Nebraska–Lincoln)
Speaker: Alex Silk (University of Birmingham)
Commentator: James Dreier (Brown University)
3:20–4:20 p.m. “The (Anti-)Real(ist) Mill”
Chair: Fernando Teson (Flordia State University Law School)
Speaker: Peter Zuk (Rice University)
Graduate student travel stipend recipient
Commentator: Dale E. Miller (Old Dominion University)
4:20–5:20 p.m. “Is a Transcendental Construction Possible?”
Chair: Jessica Mefford Katz (Bowling Green State University)
Speaker: Andrew Forcehimes (Vanderbilt University)
Commentator: David Sussman (University of Illinois at Urbana-
Champaign)
III-K. Colloquium: Identity and Death
2:20–3:20 p.m. “Persistence, Thought, and Personhood”
Chair: Sarah Robins (University of Kansas)
Speaker: Nicholas Rimell (University of Virginia)
Graduate student travel stipend recipient
Commentator: Neil E. Williams (University at Buffalo)
11
Thursday Afternoon, February 27: 2:20–5:20 p.m. (cont.)
3:20–4:20 p.m. “Bratman on Identity over Time and Identification at
a Time”
Chair: Hannah A. Bondurant (Independent Scholar)
Speaker: Christopher E. Franklin (Marymount University)
Commentator: Mary Clayton Coleman (Illinois Wesleyan University)
4:20–5:20 p.m. “Reviving Concurrentism About Death”
Chair: Dan Werner (State University of New York–New Paltz)
Speaker: Aaron Wolf (Syracuse University)
Commentator: Molly Gardner (University of North Carolina–Chapel
Hill)
III-L. Colloquium: Epistemology
2:20–3:20 p.m. “A New Puzzle about Doubt, Belief, and Confidence”
Chair: Douglas Webb (Lakeland Community College)
Speaker: Andrew Y. Moon (Dalhousie University)
Commentator: Earl Conee (University of Rochester)
3:20–4:20 p.m. “The Flexibility of Epistemic Modals: Creating, Not
Solving, Problems for Fallibilists”
Chair: Brian Montgomery (Eastern Illinois University)
Speakers: Allison Thornton (Baylor University)
Chris Tweedt (Baylor University)
Graduate student travel stipend recipients
Commentator: Jeremy Fantl (University of Calgary)
4:20–5:20 p.m. “Skepticism and Semantic Blindsight”
Chair: Mary Gwin (Oklahoma State University)
Speaker: John Waterman (Johns Hopkins University)
Graduate student travel stipend recipient
Commentator: Joseph H. Shieber (Lafayette College)
III-M. Colloquium: Belief and Content
2:20–3:20 p.m. “Belief and the Normativity of Mental Content”
Chair: Lindsay Rettler (Ohio State University)
Speaker: Derek Green (Northwestern University)
Commentator: Esa Diaz-Leon (University of Manitoba)
3:20–4:20 p.m. “Kripke’s Puzzle about Belief Resolved”
Chair: Aaron R. Champene (St. Louis Community College–
Meramec)
Speaker: Nicholas Georgalis (East Carolina University)
Commentator: Michael McKinsey (Wayne State University)
4:20–5:20 p.m. “Pseudonyms and Superheroes”
Chair: Heidi Savage (State University of New York–Geneseo)
Speaker: David Schwarz (Independent Scholar)
Commentator: Leonard Clapp (Northern Illinois University)
12
Thursday Afternoon, February 27: 2:20–5:20 p.m. (cont.)
III-N. APA Committee Session: The Work of Peter A. French
Arranged by the APA Committee on Philosophy and Law
Chair: Zachary J. Goldberg (Universität Regensburg)
Speakers: Deborah Tollefsen (University of Memphis)
“Epistemic Agency and the Loss of Epistemic
Innocence”
Laurence Thomas (Syracuse University)
“The Art of Responsibility”
Toni Erskine (Aberystwyth University/University of
New South Wales, Canberra)
“Coalitions of the Willing and Responsibilities to
Protect: Informal Associations, Enhanced Capacities,
and Shared Moral Burdens”
Commentator: Peter French (Arizona State University)
III-O. APA Committee Session: Aesthetics, Ethics, and Liberation in Latin
American and Latina/o Philosophy
Arranged by the APA Committee on Hispanics
Chair: Grant J. Silva (Marquette University)
Speakers: Elizabeth Millán-Zaibert (DePaul University)
“Latin American Aesthetics in the 20th Century:
From Arielismo to Calibanismo”
Ernesto Rosen Velasquez (University of Dayton)
“The Education Crisis and Views from the South”
Don Deere (DePaul University)
“Enrique Dussel’s Spatial Philosophy”
THURSDAY EVENING, 5:30–7:30 P.M.
MAIN PROGRAM SESSION
III-AA. Invited Session: The John Dewey Lecture
Chair: Martha Nussbaum (University of Chicago)
Speaker: Elizabeth Secor Anderson (University of Michigan–
Ann Arbor)
“Journeys of a Feminist Pragmatist”
A reception, sponsored by the John Dewey Foundation, will follow
the lecture.
13
Thursday Evening, February 27: 5:30–7:30 p.m.
GROUP PROGRAM SESSIONS
GIII-1. Association for Philosophy of Education
Chair: Harry Brighouse (University of Wisconsin–Madison)
Speakers: Gina Schouten (Illinois State University)
“The Stereotype Threat Hypothesis: An Assessment
from the Philosopher’s Armchair, for the
Philosopher’s Classroom”
Jennifer Morton (City University of New York)
“Online Learning and Noncognitive Skills in Higher
Education: A Question of Justice”
GIII-2. Committee on Institutional Cooperation
GIII-3. Charles S. Peirce Society
Chair: Demetra Sfendoni-Mentzou (Aristotle University of
Thessaloniki)
Speaker: James Liszka (State University of New York at
Plattsburgh)
“Presidential Address: Peirce’s Idea of a Normative
Science”
Winner of the 2013–2014 Peirce Society Essay Contest
GIII-4. Conference of Philosophical Societies
Chair: G. John M. Abbarno (D’Youville College)
Speakers: Brandon Absher (D’Youville College)
“Recognition and Primitive Reactions: Honneth,
Wittgenstein, and the Ethical Foundations of Speech”
William Cornwell (Salem State University)
“Is a Picture Worth a Thousand Words?”
GIII-5. Hume Society
Topic: Hume on Evil
Chair: Tina Baceski (Rockhurst College)
Speakers: Ted Morris (Illinois Wesleyan University)
Charlotte Brown (Illinois Wesleyan University)
GIII-6. North American Nietzsche Society
Topic: Nietzsche on Moral Psychology and Agency
Chair: James Conant (University of Chicago)
Speakers: Allison M. Merrick (University of Arkansas–Little Rock)
“Of Genealogy and Transcendent Critique”
Justin Remhof (Santa Clara University)
“Scientific Fictionalism and the Problem of
Inconsistency in Nietzsche”
14
Thursday Evening, February 27: 5:30–7:30 p.m. (cont.)
GIII-7. Society for Asian and Comparative Philosophy
Topic: Conception of the States and Nature of Consciousness in
Classical Indian Thought
Chair: Bina Gupta (University of Missouri–Columbia)
Speakers: Bina Gupta (University of Missouri–Columbia)
“Moka (Liberating Consciousness) as Ānanda”
Douglas L. Berger (Southern Illinois University–
Carbondale)
“The Buddhist Turn Toward Luminosity:
Transformations in Vijñānavāda Thought”
Dan Arnold (University of Chicago)
“On the Question to Which Vasubandhu’s Proof of
Idealism is the Answer”
GIII-8. North American Kant Society
Topic: The Mary Gregor Lecture
Chair: Robert B. Louden (University of Southern Maine)
Speaker: Bernd Ludwig (Universität Göttingen)
Commentator: Arthur Ripstein (University of Toronto)
GIII-9. Concerned Philosophers for Peace
Topic: Forgiveness, Letting Die, and Species Neutrality
Chair: Greg Moses (Texas State University)
Speakers: Wim Laven (Kennesaw State University)
“The Problem of Identity in Forgiveness”
Court Lewis (Owensboro Community and Technical
College)
“Dangers of Letting Die in Conflict Situations”
Carlo Filice (State University of New York–Geneseo)
“Must Pacifism Be Species Neutral?”
GIII-10. Society for LGBTQ Philosophy
Chair: Raja Halwani (School of the Art Institute of Chicago)
Speakers: Bassam Romaya (University of Massachusetts Lowell)
“He’s Fifty Feet Away: Love and Sex in the Grindr Age”
Richmond Pierce West (University of Montevallo)
“Queer Theory and Sexual Harassment”
Commentator: Dennis R. Cooley (North Dakota State University)
GIII-11. International Association for the Philosophy of Sport
Chair: Shawn Klein (Rockford University)
Speaker: Mary Gwin (Oklahoma State University)
“A Worthy Conception of Virtue for Sport”
Commentator: Craig Carley (Phoenix College)
15
Thursday Evening, February 27: 5:30–7:30 p.m. (cont.)
GIII-12. Philosophy of Religion Group
Topic: God and Abstract Objects
Speaker: William Lane Craig (Talbot School of Theology)
Commentators: Jody Azzouni (Tufts University)
Christopher Menzel (Texas A&M University)
THURSDAY EVENING, 7:40–10:40 P.M.
GROUP PROGRAM SESSIONS
GIV-1. American Association of Philosophy Teachers
Topic: Empirical Work in the Philosophy Classroom
Chair: Andrew P. Mills (Otterbein University)
Speakers: Paul Green (Mount St. Mary’s College)
“Motivating Students: What the Research Shows”
Diana Buccafurni-Huber (Sam Houston State
University)
Gordon Lamb (Sam Houston State University)
Maria Botero (Sam Houston State University)
“Student Entitlement and Student Evaluation of
Teaching: Normative Implications for Undergraduate
Pedagogy in Philosophy and Psychology”
Christina Conroy (Morehead State University)
Gina Blunt Gonzalez (Morehead State University)
“A Preliminary Comparison of Critical Thinking Gains
in First Year Seminars”
GIV-2. Society for the Study of the History of Analytical Philosophy
Topic: Between Analytic Philosophy and American Pragmatism:
C. I. Lewis and Wilfrid Sellars
Chair: James Conant (University of Chicago)
Speakers: Aude Bandini (Université de Montréal/Université du
Québec à Montréal)
“C. I. Lewis: Transcendental Realism with a
Pragmatist Turn”
Steven Levine (University of Massachusetts Boston)
“James and Lewis on the Given”
Peter Olen (University of Central Florida)
“Sellars vs. Lewis, Round 1: The Realist Challenge to
Conceptual Pragmatism”
Carl Sachs (Independent Scholar)
“Is the Given a Myth?: Analytic Pragmatism in C. I.
Lewis and Wilfrid Sellars”
16
Thursday Evening, February 27: 7:40–10:40 p.m.
GIV-3. Josiah Royce Society
Chair: Randall E. Auxier (Southern Illinois University–
Carbondale)
Speaker: Kevin Harrelson (Ball State University)
“‘All This Tale Is One of Disgrace to Our People’:
Royce’s California as an Exercise of Guilty Identity”
Commentator: Kara Barnette (Westminster College, Salt Lake City)
GIV-4. North American Society for Social Philosophy
Topic: Autonomy, Sex, and Objectification
Chair: Jennifer McKitrick (University of Nebraska–Lincoln)
Speakers: Eric M. Cave (Arkansas State University)
“Autonomy, Objectification, and Unsavory Seduction”
Patricia A. Marino (University of Waterloo)
“Patterns of Objectification: Autonomy, Options, and
the Value of Non-conformity”
Joanna Zaslow (McMaster University)
“The Feminist Female Submissive”
GIV-5. Society for the Philosophical Study of Education
Topic: Morality, Life, and Insight
Speakers: Francis Schrag (University of Wisconsin–Madison)
“Altruism, Empathy, and Moral Education”
Erin Kunz (Mayville State University)
“The Crosshair of Feminism and Ethics”
Samuel Rocha (University of North Dakota)
Michael Joseph Brown (Wabash College)
“The Pedagogical Jesus: Parables, Paradox, and
Tricks”
Guillemette Johnston (DePaul University)
“Blindness and Insight in Jonathon Israel’s Radical
Enlightenment”
GIV-6. National Philosophical Counseling Association
Chair: Samuel Zinaich, Jr. (Purdue University Calumet)
Speakers: Nan-Nan Lee (St. Xavier University at Chicago)
“Can Philosophy Address the Issue of Paucity of
Women in Philosophy?”
Amy E. White (Ohio University Zanesville)
“Body Integrity Identity Disorder—Beyond
Amputation: Controversy and Consent”
17
Thursday Evening, February 27: 7:40–10:40 p.m. (cont.)
GIV-7. International Society of Chinese Philosophy
Topic: Nature, Empathy, and Well-Being: Studies on Early
Confucian Ethics
Chair: Dennis Arjo (Johnson County Community College)
Speakers: Richard T. Kim (City University of Hong Kong)
“Well-Being and Confucianism”
Yi Deng (University of North Georgia)
“The Moral Extension of Compassion in Mengzi:
Empathy or Dissonance”
Dennis Arjo (Johnson County Community College)
“Xunzi on What Separates Humans and Other
Animals: Some Mencian Considerations”
GIV-8. Karl Jaspers Society of North America
Topic: Van Gogh with Jaspers, Heidegger, and Bataille
Chair: David P. Nichols (Saginaw Valley State University)
Speakers: Ingvild Torsen (Florida International University)
“Agency and Event in the World of the Artwork”
Rebecca Longtin Hansen (Emory University)
“The Transformation of Experience in Art: Heidegger
and Jaspers on Van Gogh’s Painting”
James Luchte (University of Wales Trinity Saint
David)
“Prometheus Dismembered: Bataille on Van Gogh”
Commentators: Dimitri Constant (Boston University)
Constance Morley (Independent Artist)
Frederic Seyler (DePaul University)
Adrian Switzer (Park University)
GIV-9. Society for the Metaphysics of Science
Topic: Monism, Pluralism, and Beyond
Chair: Carl Gillett (Northern Illinois University)
Speakers: Alyssa Ney (University of Rochester)
Gualtiero Piccinini (University of Missouri–St. Louis)
Jonathan M. Schaffer (Rutgers University)
GIV-10. Society for the Philosophic Study of Genocide and the Holocaust
Co-sponsored by the Bosnian-American Genocide Institute and
Education Center, Chicago, Illinois
Topic: Ethnonationalism and the Persistence of Genocide Denial in
Bosnia and Herzegovina: Obstacles to “Existence”
Chair: Erik Vogt (Trinity College (Hartford) and University of
Vienna)
Panel: Preliminary Statements by Genocide Survivors
18
Thursday Evening, February 27: 7:40–10:40 p.m. (cont.)
Panelists: Mirsad Causevic (Genocide Survivor)
Senada Cvrk Pargan (Genocide Survivor)
Ferid Sefer (Genocide Survivor)
Speakers: Sanja Drnovsek (Bosnian-American Genocide
Institute and Education Center, Chicago)
“Prohibited Memorials and Genocide Denial”
Natalie Nenadic (University of Kentucky)
“Genocide, Sexual Atrocities, and Denial”
David Pettigrew (Southern Connecticut State
University)
“The Role of Religion and Ethnonationalism in
Genocide Denial: Engineering a Zone of Exclusion”
GIV-11. Society for the Philosophy of Agency
Topic: Partial/Mitigated Responsibility
Chair: Zac Cogley (Northern Michigan University)
Speaker: Manuel Vargas (University of San Francisco)
“Less Than Fully Responsible”
Commentators: Carolina Sartorio (University of Arizona)
Michael McKenna (University of Arizona)
GIV-12. Society for the Philosophic Study of the Contemporary Visual Arts
Topic: Philosophy of Film
Chair: Sander H. Lee (Keene State College)
Speakers: Sander H. Lee (Keene State College)
“The Moral Implications of the Film Gettysburg”
Dan Flory (Montana State University)
“Imaginative Resistance and African American
Cinema”
Ian P. Schnee (Western Kentucky University)
“Joint Attention and Spectator Identification”
GIV-13. International Society for Environmental Ethics
Speakers: Lorraine Code (York University)
“Culpable Ignorance?”
J. Michael Scoville (Eastern Michigan University)
“The Welfare Pluralist Account of Sustainability”
Eric Godoy (New School for Social Research and
Pratt Institute)
“Confronting Atomistic Responsibility: Climate
Change and Individual Moral Obligation”
Alix Dietzel (University of Sheffield)
“Who is Responsible for Climate Change Action?”
19
Thursday Evening, February 27: 7:40–10:40 p.m. (cont.)
GIV-14. American Society for Political and Legal Philosophy
Topic: NOMOS Conference: Compromise I
Speaker: Amy Cohen (Ohio State University (Law))
Commentators: Simon May (Florida State University)
Melissa Schwartzberg (New York University (Political
Science))
THURSDAY EVENING, 8:30 P.M.–12:30 A.M.
RECEPTION
8:30 p.m.–12:30 a.m., Red Lacquer Room (fourth floor)
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 28
PLACEMENT SERVICE
Information: 8:30 a.m.–5:00 p.m., registration area (sixth floor)
Interview tables: 8:30 a.m.–5:00 p.m., Monroe Ballroom (sixth floor)
REGISTRATION
8:30 a.m.–5:00 p.m., registration area (sixth floor)
BOOK EXHIBITS
9:00 a.m.–5:00 p.m., Adams Ballroom (sixth floor)
FRIDAY, 9:00 A.M.–NOON
MAIN PROGRAM SESSIONS
IV-A. Invited Symposium: Powers and Qualities in Early Modern
Philosophy
Chair: Lisa Downing (Ohio State University)
Speakers: Robert Pasnau (University of Colorado–Boulder)
“The Domain of Sensory Privilege”
Walter Ott (Virginia Tech)
“Archetypes without Patterns: Locke on Relations
and Mixed Modes”
Samuel C. Rickless (University of California–San Diego)
“Locke’s Qualities Revisited”
20
Friday Morning, February 28: 9:00 a.m.–noon
IV-B. Invited Symposium: Difference-Making, Moral Responsibility and
Free Action
Chair: Sara Bernstein (Duke University)
Speaker: Carolina Sartorio (University of Arizona)
Commentators: Derk Pereboom (Cornell University)
Alfred R. Mele (Florida State University)
IV-C. Invited Symposium: Can Normativity Be Naturalized?
Chair: Micah Lott (Boston College)
Speakers: Hille Paakkunainen (Syracuse University)
Terence Cuneo (University of Vermont)
William FitzPatrick (University of Rochester)
IV-D. Invited Symposium: Recent Work on Grounding
Chair: William Bauer (North Carolina State University)
Speakers: Kathrin Koslicki (University of Alberta)
“The Coarse-Grainedness of Grounding”
Jonathan M. Schaffer (Rutgers University)
Kelly Trogdon (Virginia Tech)
IV-E. Invited Session: The Patrick J. Romanell Lecture
Chair: David Hilbert (University of Illinois–Chicago)
Speaker: John Perry (Stanford University)
“The Self as Subject and Object”
IV-F. Colloquium: Race and Phenomenology
9:00–10:00 a.m. “Towards a Phenomenology of Whiteness”
Chair: Marie Draz (DePaul University)
Speaker: Nathan Eckstrand (Duquesne University)
Commentator: Shaeeda Mensah (Morgan State University)
10:00–11:00 a.m. “An Ethical Analysis of the Emancipation Proclamation”
Chair: Natalie Cisneros (Gettysburg College)
Speaker: Thomas L. Carson (Loyola University Chicago)
Commentator: A. Todd Franklin (Hamilton College)
11:00 a.m.–noon “Un-naturalizing Phenomenology: Making a Case for
Transcendental Phenomenology in the 21st Century”
Chair: Nathan Jun (Midwestern State University)
Speaker: John Janes (Marquette University)
Commentator: Leslie MacAvoy (East Tennessee State University)
IV-G. Colloquium: Philosophy of Psychology
9:00–10:00 a.m. “Phenomenal Blending and the Palette Problem”
Chair: Michael Bishop (Florida State University)
21
Friday Morning, February 28: 9:00 a.m.–noon (cont.)
Speaker: Luke Roelofs (University of Toronto)
Commentator: Daniel Pearlberg (Ohio State University)
10:00–11:00 a.m. “Attention and Cognitive Control in Affective
Perception for Embodied Appraisals”
Chair: J. D. Trout (Loyola University Chicago)
Speaker: William P. Seeley (Bates College)
Commentator: Katherine Rickus (Marquette University)
11:00 a.m.–noon “The Phenomenology of Sensory Affect”
Chair: Ben Caplan (Ohio State University)
Speaker: Murat Aydede (University of British Columbia)
Commentator: Andrew Melnyk (University of Missouri)
IV-H. Colloquium: Ancient Absurdity
9:00–10:00 a.m. “Malice and the Ridiculous as Self-Ignorance: A
Dialectical Argument in Philebus 47d-50e”
Chair: Kirk Sanders (University of Illinois at Urbana-
Champaign)
Speaker: Rebecca Bensen-Cain (Oklahoma State University)
Commentator: Emily A. Austin (Wake Forest University)
10:00–11:00 a.m. “An Absurd Accumulation: Aristotle’s Metaphysics
1076b11-33”
Chair: Dhananjay Jagannathan (University of Chicago)
Speaker: Emily Katz (Michigan State University)
Commentator: Mitzi Lee (University of Colorado)
11:00 a.m.–noon “The Contradictions of Callicles”
Chair: J. P. F. Wynne (Northwestern University)
Speaker: Tushar Irani (Wesleyan University)
Commentator: Franco V. Trivigno (Marquette University)
IV-I. Colloquium: Moral Boundaries
9:00–10:00 a.m. “Rights and Capabilities: Tom Regan and Martha
Nussbaum on Animals”
Chair: Dasha Polzik (University of Chicago)
Speaker: Ramona Cristina Ilea (Pacific University Oregon)
Commentator: T. J. Kasperbauer (Texas A&M University)
10:00–11:00 a.m. “Travel Bans, Asset Freezes and other Targeted
Preventions of Terrorist Acts at the Interface of War
and Peace”
Chair: Perry Zurn (DePaul University)
Speaker: Hadassa Noorda (University of Amsterdam)
Graduate student travel stipend recipient
Commentator: Bassam Romaya (University of Massachusetts Lowell)
22
Friday Morning, February 28: 9:00 a.m.–noon (cont.)
11:00 a.m.–noon “Oaxacan Transborder Communities and the Political
Philosophy of Immigration”
Chair: David McCabe (Colgate University)
Speaker: Amy Reed-Sandoval (University of Washington)
Graduate student travel stipend recipient
Commentator: Grant J. Silva (Marquette University)
IV-J. Colloquium: Practical Reason
9:00–10:00 a.m. “Akratic Action Under the Guise of the Good”
Chair: Shanna K. Slank (University of Wisconsin–Madison)
Speaker: Eugene Chislenko (University of California–Berkeley)
Graduate student travel stipend recipient
Commentator: David Hunter (Ryerson University)
10:00–11:00 a.m. “Intention, Permissibility, and Morally Good Action”
Chair: Nicole Smith (University of Texas–Austin)
Speaker: John Hacker-Wright (University of Guelph)
Commentator: Howard L. M. Nye (University of Alberta)
11:00 a.m.–noon “Two Arguments Against Teleological Accounts of
Practical Reason”
Chair: Kristina Gehrman (Miami University of Ohio)
Speaker: Stephen White (Northwestern University)
Commentator: Andrew Sepielli (University of Toronto)
IV-K. Colloquium: Disagreement and Belief
9:00–10:00 a.m. “The Lack of Belief: Unbelief versus Disregard”
Chair: Joseph Mendola (University of Nebraska–Lincoln)
Speaker: Brian Kim (Ohio State University)
Commentator: Jane Friedman (New York University)
10:00–11:00 a.m. “Non-Peer Disagreement”
Chair: Michael Titelbaum (University of Wisconsin–Madison)
Speaker: Maura Priest (University of California–Irvine)
Commentator: Leon Leontyev (Australian National University)
11:00a.m.–noon “Epistemic Evaluation, Disagreement, and the Total
Evidence View”
Chair: Baron Reed (Northwestern University)
Speaker: Timothy Perrine (Indiana University–Bloomington)
Commentator: Georgina Gardiner (Rutgers University)
IV-L. Colloquium: Frankfurt Themes
9:00–10:00 a.m. “A Frankfurt Example to End All Frankfurt Examples”
Chair: Tomis Kapitan (Northern Illinois University)
Speaker: James Cain (Oklahoma State University)
Commentator: Benjamin J. Bayer (Loyola University New Orleans)
10:00–11:00 a.m. “Frankfurt, Personhood and the Objectivity of Value”
Chair: Alicia Finch (Northern Illinois University)
23
Friday Morning, February 28: 9:00 a.m.–noon (cont.)
Speaker: Anthony J. Rudd (St. Olaf College)
Commentator: Eric R. Kraemer (University of Wisconsin–LaCrosse)
11:00 a.m.–noon “Omissions and the Frankfurt Cases: A Challenge”
Chair: Michael D. Robertson (Independent Scholar)
Speaker: Philip Swenson (University of California–Riverside)
Graduate student travel stipend recipient
Commentator: Adam R. Thompson (University of Nebraska)
IV-M. Colloquium: Philosophy of Science
9:00–10:00 a.m. “A New Account of Scientific Models and
Approximations”
Chair: John Koolage (Eastern Michigan University)
Speaker: Ian McKay (Cornell University)
Graduate student travel stipend recipient
Commentator: Michael Liston (University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee)
10:00–11:00 a.m. “Everettian Quantum Mechanics and the Principal
Principle”
Chair: Kevin McCain (University of Alabama at Birmingham)
Speaker: Chris Howard (University of Arizona)
Graduate student travel stipend recipient
Commentator: Peter J. Lewis (University of Miami)
11:00 a.m.–noon “Newcombian Nuances: An Interventionist Take”
Chair: Christina Conroy (Morehead State University)
Speaker: Reuben Stern (University of Wisconsin–Madison)
Graduate student travel stipend recipient
Commentator: Koji Tanaka (University of Auckland)
IV-N. Group Session sponsored by the American Society for Political
and Legal Philosophy
Topic: NOMOS Conference: Compromise II
Speaker: Eric Beerbohm (Harvard University (Political Science))
Commentators: Anton Ford (University of Chicago)
David Dyzenhaus (University of Toronto (Law))
IV-O. APA Committee Session: Thomas E. Wartenberg, A Sneetch Is a
Sneetch and Other Philosophical Discoveries: Finding Wisdom in
Children’s Literature
Arranged by the APA Committee on Pre-College Instruction in
Philosophy
Chair: Renée Smith (Coastal Carolina University)
Critics: Steven Goldberg (Oak Park and River Forest High
School)
Claudia Mills (University of Colorado–Boulder)
Peter Costello (Providence College)
Author: Thomas E. Wartenberg (Mount Holyoke College)
24
Friday Afternoon, February 28: 12:15–1:15 p.m.
FRIDAY AFTERNOON, 12:15–1:15 P.M.
BUSINESS MEETING
12:15–1:15 p.m., Wabash Parlor (third floor)
FRIDAY AFTERNOON 1:30–4:30 P.M.
MAIN PROGRAM SESSIONS
V-A. Invited Symposium: Formal Decision Theory Meets Substantive
Rationality
Chair: Blake Roeber (University of Notre Dame)
Speakers: Lara Buchak (University of California–Berkeley)
Mark Kaplan (Indiana University–Bloomington)
Commentator: Julia Staffel (University of Southern California)
V-B. Invited Symposium: Resisting the Turn to Reasons
THIS SESSION HAS BEEN CANCELLED.
V-C. Invited Symposium: Fitting Emotions
Chair: Paul Prescott (Syracuse University)
Speakers: Justin D’Arms (Ohio State University)
Daniel Jacobson (University of Michigan)
Macalester C. Bell (Columbia University)
Julien Deonna (University of Geneva)
Fabrice Teroni (University of Bern)
V-D. Author Meets Critics: Bill Brewer, Perception and Its Objects
Chair: Louise Antony (University of Massachusetts Amherst)
Critics: Adam Paultz (University of Texas–Austin)
Berit Brogaard (University of Missouri–St. Louis)
Author: Bill Brewer (Kings College London)
V-E. Author Meets Critics: Richard Kraut, Against Absolute Goodness
Chair: Jennifer Frey (University of South Carolina)
Critics: Nomy Arpaly (Brown University)
Talbot Brewer (University of Virginia)
Author: Richard Kraut (Northwestern University)
25
Friday Afternoon, February 28: 1:30–4:30 p.m.
V-F. Authors Meet Critics: Marko Malink, Aristotle’s Modal Proofs, and
Adriane Rini, Aristotle’s Modal Syllogistic
Chair: Robin Smith (Texas A&M University)
Critics: Gisela Striker (Harvard University)
Ulrich Nortmann (University of Saarland)
Authors: Marko Malink (University of Chicago)
Adriane Rini (Massey University)
V-G. Author Meets Critics: Sally Sedgwick, Hegel’s Critique of Kant:
From Dichotomy to Identity
Chair: Karl Ameriks (University of Notre Dame)
Critics: Christopher L. Yeomans (Purdue University)
Dean F. Moyar (Johns Hopkins University)
Author: Sally Sedgwick (University of Illinois–Chicago)
V-H. Colloquium: Public Reason and Political Authority
1:30–2:30 p.m. “Justice and Political Authority in Left-Libertarianism”
Chair: Robert B. Talisse (Vanderbilt University)
Speaker: Fabian Wendt (University of Hamburg)
Commentator: Susan M. Purviance (University of Toledo)
2:30–3:30 p.m. “The Rawls-Harsanyi Dispute: A Moral Point of View”
Chair: Todd Hedrick (Michigan State University)
Speaker: Michael Moehler (Virginia Tech)
Commentator: Walter E. Schaller (Texas Tech University)
3:30–4:30 p.m. “Public Reason’s Failure to Provide Reasons to
Overcome Oppression”
Chair: John Rudisill (The College of Wooster)
Speaker: Gary A. Jaeger (Vanderbilt University)
Commentator: Bryan Pilkington (University of Notre Dame)
V-I. Colloquium: Medieval Philosophy
1:30–2:30 p.m. “Henry of Ghent and Godfrey of Fontaines on Sine
Qua Non Causes and Causation”
Chair: Andrew Arlig (Brooklyn College, CUNY)
Speaker: Simona Vucu (Centre for Medieval Studies,
University of Toronto)
Graduate student travel stipend recipient
Commentator: David Sanson (Illinois State University)
2:30–3:30 p.m. “Walter Burley on Mental Language”
Chair: Susan Brower-Toland (Saint Louis University)
Speaker: Nathaniel Bulthuis (Cornell University)
Graduate student travel stipend recipient
Commentator: Peter Hartman (Loyola University Chicago)
26
Friday Afternoon, February 28: 1:30–4:30 p.m. (cont.)
3:30–4:30 p.m. “What Makes It Ockham’s Razor? The Pessimistic
Consequence of Ockham’s Theological Metaontology”
Chair: Richard Cross (University of Notre Dame)
Speaker: Eric W. Hagedorn (St. Norbert College)
Commentator: Caleb Cohoe (Metropolitan State University of
Denver)
V-J. Colloquium: Ignorance and Deception
1:30–2:30 p.m. “Against Radical Credal Imprecision”
Chair: Irena Cronin (University of California–Los Angeles)
Speaker: Susanna Rinard (University of Missouri–Kansas City)
Commentator: James Joyce (University of Michigan)
2:30–3:30 p.m. “A Defense of Intentional Self-Deception”
Chair: Sara Rachel Chant (University of Missouri–Columbia)
Speaker: Jason Lopez (Wisconsin University)
Commentator: Dion Scott-Kakures (Scripps College)
3:30–4:30 p.m. “Are Bald-Faced Lies Deceptive After All?”
Chair: Ben Kilbarger (Independent Scholar)
Speaker: Don T. Fallis (University of Arizona)
Commentator: Jessica Keiser (Yale University)
V-K. Colloquium: Knowledge and Memory
1:30–2:30 p.m. “Blocking the Strengthened Case for Knowledge
from Falsehood”
Chair: Jennifer Lackey (Northwestern University)
Speaker: Ian P. Schnee (Western Kentucky University)
Commentator: Branden Fitelson (Rutgers University)
2:30–3:30 p.m. “Remembering and Knowing”
Chair: Amy Flowerree (Northwestern University)
Speaker: Steven James (University of Texas–Austin)
Commentator: Sven Bernecker (University of California–Irvine)
3:30–4:30 p.m. “Preservationism Destroyed”
Chair: William McBride (Purdue University)
Speaker: Matthew J. Frise (University of Rochester)
Graduate student travel stipend recipient
Commentator: Thomas D. Senor (University of Arkansas)
V-L. Colloquium: Sex and Gender
1:30–2:30 p.m. “Sex, Vagueness, and the Olympics”
Chair: Patricia A. Marino (University of Waterloo)
Speaker: Helen Daly (Colorado College)
Commentator: Elizabeth Victor (Grand Valley State University)
27
Friday Afternoon, February 28: 1:30–4:30 p.m. (cont.)
2:30–3:30 p.m. “Failing to Count”
Chair: Susanne Sreedhar (Boston University)
Speaker: Casey Johnson (University of Connecticut)
Graduate student travel stipend recipient
Commentator: Raja Halwani (School of the Art Institute of Chicago)
3:30–4:30 p.m. “Climate Change and the Epistemic Exploitation of
Women”
Chair: Adriel Trott (Wabash College)
Speaker: Rebecca Tuvel (Vanderbilt University)
Commentator: Jason R. Kawall (Colgate University)
V-M. Colloquium: Ancient Virtue
1:30–2:30 p.m. “Does Aristotle’s Vicious Person Wish to Be
Otherwise?”
Chair: Lorraine L. Besser-Jones (Middlebury College)
Speaker: Erica Holberg (Utah State University)
Commentator: Jozef Muller (University of California–Riverside)
2:30–3:30 p.m. “If Justice Really Matters, It’s Not Just a Matter of
Degree: The Significance of Gyges’ Ring in Republic 2”
Chair: Ruth Groff (Saint Louis University)
Speaker: Tyler Paytas (Washington University in St. Louis)
Graduate student travel stipend recipient
Commentator: Daniel Hagen (Mount Holyoke College)
3:30–4:30 p.m. “Virtue and Self-Mastery in Plato’s Laws”
Chair: Vanessa de Harven (University of Massachusetts
Amherst)
Speaker: Susan Sauvé Meyer (University of Pennsylvania)
Commentator: Joshua Wilburn (Wayne State University)
V-N. APA Committee Session: How to Obtain a Position at the
Community College
Arranged by the APA Committee on Philosophy in Two-Year Colleges
Chair: Bill Hartmann (St. Louis Community College–Forest
Park)
Panelists: Kristen Zbikowski (Hibbing Community College)
Basil Edward Smith (Saddleback College)
Anthony E. Thomas (Kiswaukee Community College)
Alexandra Perry-Polise (Marietta College)
Aaron R. Champene (St. Louis Community College–
Meramec)
Thomas Urban (Houston Community College)
28
Friday Afternoon, February 28: 1:30–4:30 p.m. (cont.)
V-O. Group Session: American Society for Political and Legal
Philosophy
Speaker: Michele Moody-Adams (Columbia University)
Commentators: Amy Sepinwall (University of Pennsylvania (Law))
Andrew Sabl (University of California–Los Angeles
(Political Science))
FRIDAY AFTERNOON, 4:45–6:00 P.M.
PRESIDENTIAL ADDRESS
4:45–6:00 p.m., Red Lacquer Room (fourth floor)
Introduction: Elizabeth Anderson, APA Central Division vice president
Address: “History of Modern Philosophy: What Is It Good For?”
Steven Nadler, APA Central Division president
FRIDAY EVENING, 7:00–10:00 P.M.
GROUP AND COMMITTEE SESSIONS
GV-1. Committee on the Status of Black Philosophers
Topic: Marx and Critical Race Theory
GV-2. International Society of Chinese Philosophy
Topic: Harmony Index
Chair: Jinmei Yuan (Creighton University)
Speakers: Chenyang Li (Nanyang Technological University)
“Confucian Philosophy of Harmony”
Hong Xiao (Nanyang Technological University,
Singapore)
“Harmony in the Family”
Daniel Bell (Tsinghua University, Beijing)
“Harmony Index”
Commentators: Brook Ziporyn (Northwestern University)
Peimin Ni (Grand Valley State University)
GV-3. Karl Jaspers Society of North America
Topic: Van Gogh with Jaspers, Heidegger, and Derrida
Chair: Gregory J. Walters (Saint Paul University, Ottawa)
Speakers: Christian Lotz (Michigan State University)
“Sensuality, Materiality, Painting: What Is Wrong
with Jaspers’ and Heidegger’s Van Gogh
Interpretations?”
29
Friday Evening, February 28: 7:00–10:00 p.m.
Alina N. Feld (Long Island University)
“The Reign of Matter and the Task of the Times: Van
Gogh’s Illuminations”
Kevin M. Richards (Pennsylvania Academy of the
Fine Arts)
“Pointure Mal or ‘If the Shoe Doesn’t Fit…’”
Commentators: Colby Dickinson (Loyola University)
David P. Nichols (Saginaw Valley State University)
Debra Riley Parr (Columbia College)
Adrian Switzer (Park University)
GV-4. Max Scheler Society
Chair: Zachary Davis (St. Johns University)
Speakers: Roberta Guccinelli (Università Vita-Salute San
Raffaele, Milan)
“Illusory Experiences: A Phenomenological
Clarification of the `Quasi-lie’”
Li Jing (Chinese University of Hong Kong)
“Max Scheler’s Christian Democracy and Its
Religious Phenomenology Basis”
Olivier Agard (Université Paris-Sorbonne)
“Plurality and Unity in Max Scheler and Carl Schmitt”
Michael Gabel (Universität Erfuhrt)
“Scheler and the First World War”
GV-5. Society for Ancient Greek Philosophy
Chair: Elizabeth Asmis (University of Chicago)
Speakers: Caleb Cohoe (Metropolitan State University of Denver)
“Aristotle on the Truth of Perception (Aio0qoiç) and
Understanding (Nóqoiç)”
Samuel Murray (Saint Louis University)
“Intellect in the Soul: Aristotle’s De Anima III.5”
Audrey L. Anton (Western Kentucky University)
“Fixed and Flexible Characters: Aristotle on the
Permanence and Mutability of Distinct Types of
Character”
GV-6. Society of Christian Philosophers
Topic: Freedom and Salvation
Chair: Amy Seymour (University of Notre Dame)
“Freedom as the End of Salvation”
Speaker: Marilyn McCord Adams (Rutgers University)
Commentator: Robin Dembroff (University of Notre Dame)
“An Argument from (Among Other Things) Free Will
to the Need for Limbo”
30
Friday Evening, February 28: 7:00–10:00 p.m. (cont.)
Speaker: Kevin Timpe (Northwest Nazarene University)
“Moral Responsibility, Heaven, and Hell”
Speaker: Alicia Finch (Northern Illinois University)
GV-7. Society for the Philosophical Study of Education
Topic: Continental Philosophy and Education
Speakers: Allan Johnston (Columbia College and DePaul
University)
“Redefining the Educator: Nietzsche’s Untimely
Meditations”
David Moseley (Bellarmine University)
“Teaching and Tragedy”
James Magrini (College of DuPage)
“Phenomenology as Curriculum Inquiry: Understanding
the Methods of Willis, van Manen, and Heidegger”
Eduardo Duarte (Hofstra University)
“Hearing the Dionysian Truth: Further Reflections on
the Philosophical Education Offered by Music”
GV-8. Bertrand Russell Society
Topic: Russell’s Sets and Wittgenstein’s “World Soul”
Speakers: James Connelly (Trent University)
“On Wittgenstein’s ‘World Soul’: Unlocking the
Secret inside the Tractatus”
Sean Morris (Metropolitan State University of Denver)
“Russell, Cantor, and Zermelo on the Pragmatic
Conception of Set”
GV-9. Society for Business Ethics
Topic: The Basic Liberties—in Economic Life and Beyond
Chair: Jeffrey Moriarty (Bentley University)
Speakers: Jason F. Brennan (Georgetown University)
“Capitalism in Utopia”
Samuel Arnold (Texas Christian University)
“Putting Liberty in Its Place: High Liberalism Without
the Liberalism”
Jeppe Platz (Suffolk University)
“The Basic Liberties Revisited”
GV-10. Radical Philosophy Association
Topic: Anarchism Across the Disciplines: Film, Literary Theory,
Psychiatry
Speakers: Michelle M. Campbell (Purdue University)
“Toward a Pragmatic Approach of Anarchist Literary
Theory”
31
Friday Evening, February 28: 7:00–10:00 p.m. (cont.)
Nathan Jun (Midwestern State University)
“Toward an Anarchist Film Theory”
Perry Miller (Ohio State University)
“Reading Subalternity in Alternative Psychiatry”
GV-11. Society for the History of Political Philosophy
Topic: Political Philosophy in the Modern World
Chair: Stuart Warner (Roosevelt University)
Speakers: Alex Limanowski (Tulane University)
“Lucretius on the Way to the Moderns”
Svetozar Minkov (Roosevelt University)
“Machiavelli and the Psychology of Faith: A Reading
of The Prince X”
Stuart Warner (Roosevelt University)
“Descartes’s Prudence: Writing and Reading in the
Discourse on Method”
Sam Stoner (Carthage College)
“On the Poetry of Kant’s Universal Natural History
and Theory of the Heavens”
Dereck Coatney (Tulane University)
“Nietzsche’s New Law of Ebb and Flood”
GV-12. Association for the Development of Philosophy Teaching
Topic: Reflections on Careers in Teaching Philosophy
Speakers: Michael M. Kazanjian (Triton College)
“Changes I Have Noticed in My Career of Teaching
Philosophy”
Robert Lichtenbert (Editor, The Meaning of Life)
“The Adventures of a Roads Scholar”
Louis Silverstein (Columbia College Chicago)
“Reason and Emotion: A Pedagogical Journal”
GV-13. Association for Informal Logic and Critical Thinking
Topic: Critical Thinking Across the Curriculum—If So, How?
Chair: Weston Jorde (Dakota County Technical College)
Speakers: Donald L. Hatcher (Baker University)
“Is Critical Thinking across the Curriculum a Plausible
Goal?”
Linda S. Behar-Horenstein (University of Florida)
“Teaching and Researching the Development of CT
Skills: An Imperative for Professional Colleges”
Paul Green (Mount St. Mary’s College)
“CT Pedagogy as a Problem of Far Transfer”
Commentator: Frank Fair (Sam Houston State University)
32
Friday Evening, February 28: 7:00–10:00 p.m. (cont.)
GV-14. Society for the Advancement of American Philosophy
Speakers: James Campbell (University of Toledo)
“James and Our Animal Friends: What Is Their Role
in His Ethics?”
Marilyn Fischer (University of Dayton)
“The Role of Sympathy in Pragmatist Ethics”
Tadd Ruetenik (Saint Ambrose University)
“Conformity, Consistency, and the Ethics of
Emerson’s Self-Reliance”
FRIDAY EVENING, 8:30 P.M.–12:30 A.M.
PRESIDENTIAL RECEPTION
8:30 p.m.–12:30 a.m., Red Lacquer Room (fourth floor)
SATURDAY, MARCH 1
PLACEMENT SERVICE
Information: 8:30 a.m.–noon, registration area (sixth floor)
Interview tables: 8:30 a.m.–noon, Monroe Ballroom (sixth floor)
REGISTRATION
8:30 a.m.–noon, registration area (sixth floor)
BOOK EXHIBITS
9:00 a.m.–noon, Adams Ballroom (sixth floor)
SATURDAY MORNING, 9:00 A.M.–NOON
MAIN PROGRAM SESSIONS
VI-A. Invited Symposium: Ancients on Animals and Ethics
Chair: Kathleen Cook (University of Pittsburgh)
Speakers: G. Fay Edwards (Washington University in St. Louis)
“The Puzzle of Porphyry’s Rational Animals: A New
Interpretation of On Abstinence from Animal Food”
Jessica Gelber (Syracuse University)
Casey Perin (University of California–Irvine)
“Genuine Wanting and Animal Desires in Plato’s
Gorgias”
33
Saturday Morning, March 1: 9:00 a.m.–noon
VI-B. Invited Symposium: Parfit’s Reasons and Persons, Thirty Years Later
Chair: Meghan Sullivan (University of Notre Dame)
Speakers: Elizabeth Harman (Princeton University)
Eric T. Olson (University of Sheffield)
Caspar Hare (Massachusetts Institute of Technology)
VI-C. Invited Symposium: Intuitions in Philosophy
Chair: Geoffrey Pynn (Northern Illinois University)
Speaker: Jennifer Nagel (University of Toronto)
“Distinctively Intuitive Judgments”
Commentators: Herman Cappelen (University of St Andrews)
Elijah Chudnoff (University of Miami)
VI-D. Invited Symposium: Practical Reason and the Structure of Actions
Chair: Margaret Bowman (University of Toronto)
Speakers: Matthew Hanser (University of California–Santa
Barbara)
Tamar Schapiro (Stanford University)
Candace Vogler (University of Chicago)
VI-E. Author Meets Critics: Matthew Stuart, Locke’s Metaphysics
Chair: Edwin McCann (University of Southern California)
Critics: Antonia LoLordo (University of Virginia)
Michael Jacovides (Purdue University)
Author: Matthew Stuart (Bowdoin College)
VI-F. Author Meets Critics: Daniel R. Kelly, Yuck! The Nature and Moral
Significance of Disgust
Chair: Katrina Sifferd (Elmhurst College)
Critics: Timothy Schroeder (Ohio State University)
Nina Strohminger (Duke University)
Author: Daniel R. Kelly (Purdue University)
VI-G. Colloquium: Mereology and Identity
9:00–10:00 a.m. “Locating Gunky Water and Wine”
Chair: Brian Carlson (University of Kentucky)
Speaker: Matthew Leonard (University of Southern California)
Graduate student travel stipend recipient
Commentator: David H. Sanford (Duke University)
10:00–11:00 a.m. “A Defense of Five-Dimensionalism”
Chair: Kate Finley (University of Notre Dame)
Speaker: Andrew Graham (University of Missouri–Kansas City)
Commentator: Meg Wallace (University of Kentucky)
34
Saturday Morning, March 1: 9:00 a.m.–noon (cont.)
11:00 a.m.–noon “What Is a Theory of Persistence?”
Chair: Dan Lopez de Sa (ICREA-Universitat de Barcelona)
Speaker: Bradford Skow (Massachusetts Institute of
Technology)
Commentator: Mark Heller (Syracuse University)
VI-H. Colloquium: Semantics and Philosophy of Logic
9:00–10:00 a.m. “The Invariance Criterion for Logical Pluralism”
Chair: M. J. Cresswell (Victoria University of Wellington)
Speaker: Tomoya Sato (University of California–San Diego)
Commentator: Edwin Mares (Victoria University of Wellington)
10:00–11:00 a.m. “The Structure of Propositions and Cross-Linguistic
Syntactic Variability”
Chair: Aidan Gray (University of Illinois–Chicago)
Speaker: Vasileios Tsompanidis (Institut Jean Nicod–École
Normale Supérieure)
Commentator: Alexandru Radulescu (University of Missouri)
11:00 a.m.–noon “The Metaphysics of Propositional Constituency”
Chair: Maegan Fairchild (University of Southern California)
Speaker: Lorraine Keller (Niagara University)
Commentator: Devin Frank (University of Missouri)
VI-I. Colloquium: Kant
9:00–10:00 a.m. “Kant on the Blind Justice of Aesthetic Verdicts”
Chair: Rachel E. Zuckert (Northwestern University)
Speaker: Rocio Zambrana (University of Oregon)
Commentator: Hans Lottenbach (Kenyon College)
10:00–11:00 a.m. “Synthesis in Kant and Hegel”
Chair: Brent Kalar (University of New Mexico)
Speaker: Susan Hahn (Wesleyan University)
Commentator: Alexandra Newton (University of Illinois at Urbana-
Champaign)
11:00 a.m.–noon “Affinity and Systematicity in the First Critique”
Chair: James Messina (University of Wisconsin–Madison)
Speaker: Michael Rohlf (The Catholic University of America)
Commentator: Dai Heide (Simon Fraser University)
VI-J. Colloquium: Fiction and Ontology
9:00–10:00 a.m. “Object Constructivism and Unconstructed Objects”
Chair: Erica H. Shumener (New York University)
Speaker: Justin Remhof (Santa Clara University)
Commentator: T. Parent (Virginia Tech)
35
Saturday Morning, March 1: 9:00 a.m.–noon (cont.)
10:00–11:00 a.m. “The Vagueness Argument against Abstract Artifacts”
Chair: Robin Dembroff (University of Notre Dame)
Speaker: Daniel Z. Korman (University of Illinois at Urbana-
Champaign)
Commentator: Anne M. Baril (University of New Mexico)
11:00 a.m.–noon “‘I’m a Real Boy!’: Predication and Fictional Characters”
Chair: Elijah Hess (University of Arkansas)
Speaker: Cathleen Muller (Marist College)
Commentator: Christina Van Dyke (Calvin College)
VI-K. Colloquium: Desire and Emotions
9:00–10:00 a.m. “Spinoza’s Symptomatic Theory of Emotions”
Chair: Christopher Martin (University of Wisconsin–Green
Bay)
Speaker: Andrew D. Youpa (Southern Illinois University–
Carbondale)
Commentator: Daniel J. Selcer (Duquesne University)
10:00–11:00 a.m. “Assessing Nonstandard Emotions: Nostalgia’s
Formal Object and the Limits of Fittingness”
Chair: Michelle Mason (University of Minnesota–Twin Cities)
Speaker: Scott Howard (Harvard University)
Commentator: Saam Trivedi (Brooklyn College, CUNY)
11:00 a.m.–noon “Rationality and Desire in Fiction”
Chair: Daniel Pearlberg (Ohio State University)
Speaker: Shannon Spaulding (Oklahoma State University)
Commentator: Amy Kind (Claremont McKenna College)
VI-L. APA Committee Session: Ethics in Reproductive Technology
Arranged by the APA Committee on Philosophy and Medicine
Chair: Leonard A. Kahn (Loyola University New Orleans)
Speakers: Leslie Pickering Francis (University of Utah)
“Reproductive Technologies in Contexts of Injustice”
Glenn Cohen (Harvard University)
“Conditions under Which the Law May Legitimately
Regulate Reproductive Behavior”
Matthew Liao (New York University)
“Is There a Duty to Adopt over Having IVF Treatments?”
Françoise Baylis (Dalhousie University)
“Aganist Mitochondrial Replacement”
VI-M. APA Committee Session: Advocacy and Leadership in Community
College Philosophy Programs: Credentialing, Curriculum, and
Faculty Support
Arranged by the APA Committee on Philosophy in Two-Year Colleges
Chair: Thomas Urban (Houston Community College)
36
Saturday Morning, March 1: 9:00 a.m.–noon (cont.)
Speakers: Basil Edward Smith (Saddleback College)
Anthony E. Thomas (Kiswaukee Community College)
Alexandra Perry-Polise (Marietta College)
Bill Hartmann (St. Louis Community College–Forest
Park)
Panelist: Kristen Zbikowski (Hibbing Community College)
VI-N. APA Committee Session: History of Philosophy as Philosophy of Law
Arranged by the APA Committee on Philosophy and Law
Chair: Maria A. Sanders (Plymouth State University)
Speakers: Brian Leiter (University of Chicago)
“Marx, Law, Ideology”
Ekow Yankah (Cardozo Law School)
“Franchise: Ancient and Modern”
David Brink (University of California–San Diego)
“A Closer Look at Mill’s Harm Principle”
VI-O. APA Committee Session: Promoting Religious Tolerance in the
21st Century: Practical Perspectives from Philosophers of the Past
and the Present
Arranged by the Committee on Public Philosophy
Chair: Jeanine A. Diller (University of Toledo)
Panelists: Edwin Curley (University of Michigan)
Nicholas Wolterstorff (Yale University Divinity School)
Robert Audi (University of Notre Dame)
M. Cathleen Kaveny (University of Notre Dame Law
School)
SATURDAY AFTERNOON, 12:15–2:15 P.M.
GROUP PROGRAM SESSIONS
GVI-1. Association for Philosophy of Education
Chair: Gina Schouten (Illinois State University)
Speakers: Jaime Ahlberg (University of Florida)
“Justice, Education, and Disability”
Paula McAvoy (Spencer Foundation)
Diana Hess (Spencer Foundation)
“Should Teachers of Controversial Issues Disclose
Their Views?”
GVI-2. North American Division of the Schopenhauer Society
Chair: David E. Cartwright (University of Wisconsin–
Whitewater)
37
Saturday Afternoon, March 1: 12:15–2:15 p.m.
Speaker: Frederick Beiser (Syracuse University)
“Re-Examining the Schopenhauer Legacy”
GVI-3. Marxism and Philosophy Association
Topic: The Next American Revolution: Mainstream Hopes and
Radical Alternatives
Chair: Peter Amato (Drexel University)
Speakers: David Schweickart (Loyola University Chicago)
“The Next American Revolution: Radical Alternatives”
Tony Smith (Iowa State University)
“The Next American Revolution: Mainstream Hopes”
GVI-4. Joint Session Sponsored by Personalist Discussion Group, Society
for the Philosophy of Creativity
Topic: Schelling on Creativity
Chair: Corey McCall (Elmira College)
Speaker: Jason Wirth (Seattle University)
“Schelling and the Life of the Imagination”
Commentator: Myron Jackson (Southern Illinois University–
Carbondale)
GVI-5. Radical Philosophy Association
Topic: Hobbes Reconsidered: The Ordering of the Political in the
Twenty-first Century
Chair: Carolyn Cusick (Fresno State University)
Speakers: Patrick Ahern (Vanderbilt University)
“Hobbesian Felicity and the Physics of Desire”
Adam Burgos (Vanderbilt University)
“The Sovereignty of Language and the Threat of
Revolution in Leviathan”
Jeff Epstein (State University of New York at Stony
Brook)
“The Conceptualization of Foreignness in Hobbes’s
Analysis of Sovereignty”
GVI-6. North American Nietzsche Society
Topic: Nietzsche on Critical Philosophical Method
Chair: Richard Schacht (University of Illinois at Urbana-
Champaign)
Speakers: Guy Elgat (Northwestern University)
“How Smart (and Just) is Ressentiment?”
Donovan T. Miyasaki (Wright State University)
“Feeling, Not Freedom: Nietzsche Against Agency”
38
Saturday Afternoon, March 1: 12:15–2:15 p.m. (cont.)
GVI-7. Society for Asian and Comparative Philosophy
Chair: Eric S. Nelson (University of Massachusetts Lowell)
Speakers: Bongrae Seok (Alvernia University)
“Confucian Self-Cultivation and Meta-Virtue”
Eric S. Nelson (University of Massachusetts Lowell)
“The Question of Confucius in German Philosophy”
Chien-Hsing Ho (Graduate Institute of Religious
Studies, Nanhua University, Taiwan)
“Emptiness as Subject-Object Unity: Sengzhao on
the Way Things Truly Are”
Stephen Harris (University of New Mexico)
“Demandingness, Well-Being, and the Bodhisattva
Path”
GVI-8. International Society for Environmental Ethics
Speakers: Eric Katz (New Jersey Institute of Technology)
“Geoengineering, Restoration, and the Construction
of Nature”
Alex Lenferna (University of Washington)
“Betting on Climate Failure: The Ethics and
Economics of Fossil Fuel Divestment”
Mark Cladis (Brown University)
“Religion, Democracy, and the Environmental
Imagination”
GVI-9. Philosophy of Time Society
Chair: V. Alan White (University of Wisconsin–Manitowoc)
Speaker: Eric Rubenstein (Indiana University of Pennsylvania)
“Relations and the Essence of Time”
Commentator: L. Nathan Oaklander (University of Michigan–Flint)
Speaker: Melissa MacAulay (University of Western Ontario)
“Oaklander on Characterizing the Debate about
Time”
Commentator: L. Nathan Oaklander (University of Michigan–Flint)
39
Saturday Afternoon, March 1: 2:30–5:30 p.m.
SATURDAY AFTERNOON, 2:30–5:30 P.M.
MAIN PROGRAM SESSIONS
VII-A. Invited Symposium: The Cognitive Neuroscience Revolution
Chair: William Wimsatt (University of Chicago and
University of Minnesota)
Speakers: Gualtiero Piccinini (University of Missouri–St. Louis)
and Trey Boone (University of Pittsburgh)
Title to be announced
Carrie Figdor (University of Iowa)
“The Unfinished Revolution in Cognitive Science”
Commentator: Robert D. Rupert (University of Colorado–Boulder)
VII-B. Invited Symposium: Plato’s Philebus
Chair: Christopher Frey (University of South Carolina)
Speakers: Matthew Evans (University of Michigan–Ann Arbor)
Emily Fletcher (University of Toronto)
J. Clerk Shaw (University of Tennessee)
VII-C. Invited Symposium: Reasons in Epistemology
Chair: Lauren Leydon-Hardy (Northwestern University)
Speakers: Stewart Cohen (University of Arizona)
John Hawthorne (Oxford University)
Commentator: Mark Schroeder (University of Southern California)
VII-D. Invited Symposium: The Politics of Reproduction
Chair: Candace Vogler (University of Chicago)
Speakers: Penelope Deutscher (Northwestern University)
Catherine Mills (Monash University)
Commentator: Samir Haddad (Fordham University)
VII-E. Author Meets Critics: Robert N. Johnson, Self-Improvement
Chair: Christina Dietz (Kings College London)
Critics: Anne Margaret Baxley (Washington University in St.
Louis)
Jeanine M. Grenberg (St. Olaf College)
Author: Robert N. Johnson (University of Missouri–Columbia)
VII-F. Submitted Symposium
Chair: To be announced
Speaker: Caleb Perl (University of Southern California)
“Russellians Can Get Donkeys and Bishops Just Right”
Commentator: Hsiang-Yun Chen (Centenary College of Louisiana)
40
Saturday Afternoon, March 1: 2:30–5:30 p.m. (cont.)
VII-G. Colloquium: Social Convention and Interpretation
2:30–3:30 p.m. “Radical Interpretation and the Problem of Asymmetry”
Chair: Rod Bertolet (Purdue University)
Speaker: Greg Lynch (Fordham University)
Commentator: Samuel C. Wheeler III (University of Connecticut)
3:30–4:30 p.m. “Social Conventions and Associative Duties”
Chair: Robert F. Card (State University of New York–Oswego)
Speaker: Erin Taylor (Cornell University)
Commentator: Zac Cogley (Northern Michigan University)
4:30–5:30 p.m. “How to Modify Lewisian Social Conventions to
Account for Difference, Dissent, and Evolution”
Chair: Daniel A. Krasner (Metropolitan State University
Denver)
Speaker: Sarah Braasch (San Francisco State University)
Commentator: Gary Mar (Stony Brook University)
VII-H. Colloquium: Philosophy of Mind
2:30–3:30 p.m. “Re-Cognizing Perception and Cognition”
Chair: Kelly Trogdon (Virginia Tech)
Speaker: Daniel Burnston (University of California–San Diego)
Graduate student travel stipend recipient
Commentator: Wayne Wu (Carnegie Mellon University)
3:30–4:30 p.m. “What If Conscious Experience Entails Change?”
Chair: Timothy Schroeder (Ohio State University)
Speaker: Gary Bartlett (Central Washington University)
Commentator: Justin C. Fisher (Southern Methodist University)
4:30–5:30 p.m. “Status of Psychê in Plato’s Phaedo”
Chair: Andrew Black (University of Missouri–St. Louis)
Speaker: Sophia A. Stone (Purdue University)
Commentator: Scott Berman (Saint Louis University)
VII-I. Colloquium: Continental and Political Philosophy
2:30–3:30 p.m. “Levinasian Responsibility and Liberal Politics:
Rethinking Freedom and Rights”
Chair: Michael L. Morgan (Indiana University–Bloomington)
Speaker: Cheryl Hughes (Wabash College)
Commentator: Katherine Kirby (St. Michael’s College)
3:30–4:30 p.m. “The Strategies of Biopower and Normalization
Present in the Controversial Administration of the
HPV Vaccine to Adolescents: A Foucaultian Analysis”
Chair: Danielle Wylie (University of Illinois–Chicago)
Speaker: Kimberly Engels (Marquette University)
Commentator: Tuomo Tiisala (University of Chicago)
41
Saturday Afternoon, March 1: 2:30–5:30 p.m. (cont.)
VII-J. Colloquium: Grounding and Monism
2:30–3:30 p.m. “Against the Necessity of Monism”
Chair: Andrew Cortens (Boise State University)
Speaker: Shruta Swarup (Cornell University)
Graduate student travel stipend recipient
Commentator: Alexander Jackson (Boise State University)
3:30–4:30 p.m. “Philosophical Definitions: The Grounding View”
Chair: Alyssa Ney (University of Rochester)
Speaker: Joachim Horvath (University of Cologne)
Commentator: Bryan Pickel (University of Edinburgh)
4:30–5:30 p.m. “Permissivism without Grounding”
Chair: Jon M. Cogburn (Louisiana State University)
Speaker: Jonah Goldwater (University of South Florida)
Commentator: Troy W. Cross (Reed College)
VII-K. Colloquium: Seventeenth Century Philosophy
2:30–3:30 p.m. “Retributivism in Hobbes’s Theory of Punishment”
Chair: Lewis Powell (University at Buffalo, SUNY)
Speaker: Arthur Yates (School of Law, University of California–
Berkeley)
Commentator: Sarah Meier (Emory University)
3:30–4:30 p.m. “Sensitive Knowledge as Natural Knowledge”
Chair: Michael Jacovides (Purdue University)
Speaker: Aaron Wilson (University of Miami)
Commentator: Shelley Weinberg (University of Illinois at Urbana-
Champaign)
4:30–5:30 p.m. “Descartes on Innateness and Triggering Causation”
Chair: Geoffrey A. Gorham (Macalester College)
Speaker: Raffaella De Rosa (Rutgers University)
Commentator: Elliot Samuel Paul (Barnard College, Columbia
University)
VII-L. Colloquium: Modality
2:30–3:30 p.m. “Truth Gaps and Impossible Worlds”
Chair: Nicholas F. Stang (University of Miami)
Speaker: Cameron Gibbs (University of Massachusetts
Amherst)
Graduate student travel stipend recipient
Commentator: Joe R. Salerno (Saint Louis University)
3:30–4:30 p.m. “Unnecessary Existents”
Chair: Peter Hylton (University of Illinois–Chicago)
Speaker: Joshua Spencer (University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee)
Commentator: Michael Nelson (University of California–Riverside)
42
Saturday Afternoon, March 1: 2:30–5:30 p.m. (cont.)
4:30–5:30 p.m. “The Way of Actuality”
Chair: Jack Woods (Princeton University/Bilkent University)
Speaker: Sam Cowling (Denison University)
Commentator: Kris N. McDaniel (Syracuse University)
VII-M. APA Committee Session: Coming to a School Near You! Philosophy
Delivers on the Common Core State Standards
Arranged by the APA Committee on Pre-College Instruction in
Philosophy
Chair: Renée Smith (Coastal Carolina University)
Speakers: Andrew Pessin (Connecticut College)
Dan Fouts (Maine West High School, Des Plaines, IL)
“Living the Questions: Conquering Common Core
with the 60-Second Philosopher”
Lisa Donnelly (Science and Arts Academy, Des
Plaines, IL)
“What’s Your Philosophy? Integrating CCSS in
Philosophy Instruction Grades 1-8”
Steven Goldberg (Oak Park and River Forest High
School)
“Common Core for an Uncommon Course: Applying
Standards to High School Philosophy”
43
Main and Group Program
Participants
(Group sessions begin with the letter G; all others are main sessions.)
A
ABBARNO, G. John M. (D’Youville College) ........................................... GI-2, GIII-4
ABDOOL, Rosalind (University of Waterloo) ........................................................II-J
ABSHER, Brandon (D’Youville College) ............................................................ GIII-4
ADLEBERG, Toni (University of California–San Diego) .......................................II-N
AGARD, Olivier (Université Paris-Sorbonne) .................................................... GV-4
AHERN, Patrick (Vanderbilt University) ............................................................ GVI-5
AHLBERG, Jaime (University of Florida) .......................................................... GVI-1
AMATO, Peter (Drexel University) ..................................................................... GVI-3
AMERIKS, Karl (University of Notre Dame)..........................................................V-G
ANDERSON, Elizabeth Secor (University of Michigan–Ann Arbor) ...............III-AA
ANTON, Audrey L. (Western Kentucky University) .......................................... GV-5
ANTONY, Louise (University of Massachusetts Amherst) ...................... V-D, GII-7
ARIEW, André (University of Missouri) ............................................................... III-C
ARJO, Dennis (Johnson County Community College) .................................. GIV-7
ARLIG, Andrew (Brooklyn College, CUNY) ........................................................... V-I
ARNOLD, Dan (University of Chicago)............................................................. GIII-7
ARNOLD, Samuel (Texas Christian University) ................................................. GV-9
ARPALY, Nomy (Brown University) ....................................................................... V-E
ASMIS, Elizabeth (University of Chicago) ................................................ III-G, GV-5
AUDI, Robert (University of Notre Dame) ......................................................... VI-O
AUSTIN, Emily A. (Wake Forest University) ........................................................IV-H
AUXIER, Randall E. (Southern Illinois University–Carbondale) ..................... GIV-3
AYDEDE, Murat (University of British Columbia) ............................................... IV-G
AZZOUNI, Jody (Tufts University) .................................................................. GIII-12
B
BACESKI, Tina (Rockhurst College) .................................................................. GIII-5
BANDINI, Aude (Université de Montréal/Université du Québec
à Montréal) .................................................................................................. GIV-2
BARIL, Anne M. (University of New Mexico) ...................................................... VI-J
BARKASI, Michael (Rice University)...................................................................... III-I
BARNETTE, Kara (Westminster College, Salt Lake City) ................................. GIV-3
BARTLETT, Gary (Central Washington University) ............................................VII-H
BAUER, William (North Carolina State University) .............................................IV-D
BAXLEY, Anne Margaret (Washington University in St. Louis) ........................ VII-E
44
Main and Group Program Participants
BAYER, Benjamin J. (Loyola University New Orleans) ...................................... IV-L
BAYLIS, Françoise (Dalhousie University) ........................................................... VI-L
BEERBOHM, Eric (Harvard University (Political Science)) .................................IV-N
BEHAR-HORENSTEIN, Linda S. (University of Florida)................................... GV-13
BEISER, Frederick (Syracuse University) .......................................................... GVI-2
BELL, Daniel (Tsinghua University, Beijing) ..................................................... GV-2
BELL, Macalester C. (Columbia University) ......................................................... V-C
BENSEN-CAIN, Rebecca (Oklahoma State University) .....................................IV-H
BERGER, Douglas L. (Southern Illinois University–Carbondale) ................... GIII-7
BERMAN, Scott (Saint Louis University) ............................................................VII-H
BERNECKER, Sven (University of California–Irvine) ............................................ V-K
BERNSTEIN, Sara (Duke University) ..................................................................... IV-B
BERTOLET, Rod (Purdue University).................................................................. VII-G
BESSER-JONES, Lorraine L. (Middlebury College) ............................................ V-M
BISHOP, Michael (Florida State University) ....................................................... IV-G
BLACK, Andrew (University of Missouri–St. Louis) ..........................................VII-H
BONDURANT, Hannah A. (Independent Scholar) ............................................. III-K
BOONE, Trey (University of Pittsburgh)............................................................. VII-A
BOTERO, Maria (Sam Houston State University) ............................................ GIV-1
BOWMAN, Margaret (University of Toronto) .....................................................VI-D
BRAASCH, Sarah (San Francisco State University) .......................................... VII-G
BRADLEY, Ben (Syracuse University) .................................................................... I-B
BRAFMAN, Yonatan (Columbia University) ....................................................... GII-1
BRENNAN, Jason F. (Georgetown University) ................................................. GV-9
BREWER, Bill (Kings College London) .................................................................V-D
BREWER, Talbot (University of Virginia) ............................................................... V-E
BRIGHOUSE, Harry (University of Wisconsin–Madison) ................................ GIII-1
BRINK, David (University of California–San Diego) .......................................... VI-N
BROGAARD, Berit (University of Missouri–St. Louis) .........................................V-D
BROWER-TOLAND, Susan (Saint Louis University) .............................................. V-I
BROWN, Charlotte (Illinois Wesleyan University) ........................................... GIII-5
BROWN, Michael Joseph (Wabash College) .................................................. GIV-5
BUCCAFURNI-HUBER, Diana (Sam Houston State University) ...................... GIV-1
BUCHAK, Lara (University of California–Berkeley).............................................. V-A
BUCKAREFF, Andrei A. (Marist College) .............................................................. II-H
BULTHUIS, Nathaniel (Cornell University) ............................................................ V-I
BURGOS, Adam (Vanderbilt University) .......................................................... GVI-5
BURNSTON, Daniel (University of California–San Diego) ................................VII-H
C
CAIN, James (Oklahoma State University) ......................................................... IV-L
CAMPBELL, James (University of Toledo) ...................................................... GV-14
CAMPBELL, Michelle M. (Purdue University) ................................................. GV-10
CAPLAN, Ben (Ohio State University) ......................................................... II-E, IV-G
45
Main and Group Program Participants
CAPPELEN, Herman (University of St Andrews) ................................................VI-C
CARD, Robert F. (State University of New York–Oswego) .............................. VII-G
CARIANI, Fabrizio (Northwestern University) ...................................................... III-I
CARLEY, Craig (Phoenix College) ................................................................... GIII-11
CARLSON, Brian (University of Kentucky) ......................................................... VI-G
CARSON, Thomas L. (Loyola University Chicago) ............................................. IV-F
CARTWRIGHT, David E. (University of Wisconsin–Whitewater) .................... GVI-2
CAUSEVIC, Mirsad (Genocide Survivor) ........................................................ GIV-10
CAVE, Eric M. (Arkansas State University) ....................................................... GIV-4
CHAMPENE, Aaron R. (St. Louis Community College–Meramec) ..........III-M, V-N
CHANT, Sara Rachel (University of Missouri–Columbia) ....................................V-J
CHEN, Hsiang-Yun (Centenary College of Louisiana) ..................................... VII-F
CHISLENKO, Eugene (University of California–Berkeley) ..................................IV-J
CHO, Eunsu (Seoul National University) ..............................................................II-L
CHUDNOFF, Elijah (University of Miami) ............................................................VI-C
CISNEROS, Natalie (Gettysburg College) .......................................................... IV-F
CLADIS, Mark (Brown University) ..................................................................... GVI-8
CLAPP, Leonard (Northern Illinois University) .................................................. III-M
COATNEY, Dereck (Tulane University) ............................................................ GV-11
CODE, Lorraine (York University) .................................................................... GIV-13
COGBURN, Jon M. (Louisiana State University) ............................................... VII-J
COGLEY, Zac (Northern Michigan University) ......................... VII-G, GII-7, GIV-11
COHEN, Amy (Ohio State University (Law)) .................................................. GIV-14
COHEN, Glenn (Harvard University).................................................................... VI-L
COHEN, Stewart (University of Arizona) ............................................................VII-C
COHOE, Caleb (Metropolitan State University of Denver) .......................V-I, GV-5
COLEMAN, Mary Clayton (Illinois Wesleyan University) ................................... III-K
CONANT, James (University of Chicago) .............................................GIII-6, GIV-2
CONEE, Earl (University of Rochester) ................................................................III-L
CONNELLY, James (Trent University) ................................................................ GV-8
CONROY, Christina (Morehead State University) ................................. IV-M, GIV-1
CONSTANT, Dimitri (Boston University) ............................................................ GV-3
COOK, Ezra J. (Northwestern University) ............................................................ III-I
COOK, J. Thomas (Rollins College) ..................................................................... III-H
COOK, Kathleen (University of Pittsburgh) ........................................................ VI-A
COOLEY, Dennis R. (North Dakota State University) .................................... GIII-10
CORNWELL, William (Salem State University) ................................................ GIII-4
CORTENS, Andrew (Boise State University) ...................................................... VII-J
COSTELLO, Peter (Providence College) ............................................................ IV-O
COVA, Florian (University of Geneva) ................................................................. III-H
COWLING, Sam (Denison University) ................................................................ VII-L
CRAIG, William Lane (Talbot School of Theology) ....................................... GIII-12
CRAY, Wesley D. (Grand Valley State University) ............................................ GII-5
CRESSWELL, M. J. (Victoria University of Wellington) ..............................II-C, VI-H
46
Main and Group Program Participants
CRONIN, Irena (University of California–Los Angeles) .......................................V-J
CROSS, Richard (University of Notre Dame) ....................................................... V-I
CROSS, Troy W. (Reed College) .......................................................................... VII-J
CUNEO, Terence (University of Vermont) .......................................................... IV-C
CURLEY, Edwin (University of Michigan) .......................................................... VI-O
CUSICK, Carolyn (Fresno State University) ..................................................... GVI-5
D
D’ARMS, Justin (Ohio State University) ............................................................... V-C
DALY, Helen (Colorado College) .......................................................................... V-L
DAVIS, Zachary (St. Johns University) ............................................................... GV-4
DE HARVEN, Vanessa (University of Massachusetts Amherst) ....................... V-M
DE MONTICELLI, Roberta (Università Vita-Salute San Raffaele, Milan) ......... GI-1
DE ROSA, Raffaella (Rutgers University) ........................................................... VII-K
DEERE, Don (DePaul University) ..........................................................................III-O
DEMBROFF, Robin (University of Notre Dame) .......................................VI-J, GV-6
DENG, Natalja (University of Notre Dame) ...........................................................II-I
DENG, Yi (University of North Georgia) .......................................................... GIV-7
DEONNA, Julien (University of Geneva) ............................................................. V-C
DEUTSCHER, Penelope (Northwestern University) ..........................................VII-D
DIAZ-LEON, Esa (University of Manitoba) ......................................................... III-M
DICKIE, Imogen (University of Toronto) ............................................................. III-A
DICKINSON, Colby (Loyola University) ............................................................ GIV-8
DIETZ, Christina (Kings College London) .......................................................... VII-E
DIETZEL, Alix (University of Sheffield) ........................................................... GIV-13
DILLER, Jeanine A. (University of Toledo) ......................................................... VI-O
DILLON, Robin S. (Lehigh University) ............................................................... GII-7
DONNELLY, Lisa (Science and Arts Academy, Des Plaines) .......................... VII-M
DOWNING, Lisa (Ohio State University) ............................................................. IV-A
DRAZ, Marie (DePaul University) ......................................................................... IV-F
DREIER, James (Brown University) .......................................................................III-J
DRNOVSEK, Sanja (Bosnian-American Genocide Institute and Education
Center, Chicago)....................................................................................... GIV-10
DUARTE, Eduardo (Hofstra University) ............................................................. GV-7
DYZENHAUS, David (University of Toronto—Law) ............................................IV-N
E
EBREY, David (Northwestern University) ............................................................. II-A
ECKSTRAND, Nathan (Duquesne University) ..................................................... IV-F
EDWARDS, G. Fay (Washington University in St. Louis) .................................... VI-A
EDWARDS, Kevan (Syracuse University) .............................................................. II-E
ELGAT, Guy (Northwestern University) ........................................................... GVI-6
ENGELS, Kimberly (Marquette University) ......................................................... VII-I
EPSTEIN, Jeff (State University of New York at Stony Brook) ....................... GVI-5
47
Main and Group Program Participants
ERSKINE, Toni (Aberystwyth University/University of New South Wales,
Canberra) ........................................................................................................III-N
ETLIN, David (Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich) .................................. III-I
EVANS, Matthew (University of Michigan–Ann Arbor) .................................... VII-B
F
FAIR, Frank (Sam Houston State University) .................................................. GV-13
FAIRCHILD, Maegan (University of Southern California) ..................................VI-H
FALLIS, Don T. (University of Arizona) ...................................................................V-J
FANTL, Jeremy (University of Calgary) ................................................................III-L
FEAGIN, Susan L. (Temple University) ............................................................ GII-10
FELD, Alina N. (Long Island University) ........................................................... GIV-8
FELTZ, Adam (Michigan Technological University) ........................................... III-H
FIGDOR, Carrie (University of Iowa) ..................................................................VII-A
FILICE, Carlo (State University of New York–Geneseo) ................................. GIII-9
FINCH, Alicia (Northern Illinois University)...............................................IV-L, GV-6
FINLEY, Kate (University of Notre Dame) .......................................................... VI-G
FISCHER, Marilyn (University of Dayton) ........................................................ GV-14
FISHER, Justin C. (Southern Methodist University)..........................................VII-H
FITELSON, Branden (Rutgers University) ............................................................ V-K
FITZPATRICK, William (University of Rochester) ................................................ IV-C
FITZSIMMONS, Erin (Colby College) ....................................................................II-N
FLAMM, Matthew (Rockford College) ............................................................ GII-11
FLETCHER, Emily (University of Toronto) ........................................................... VII-B
FLORY, Dan (Montana State University) ..............................................GII-5, GIV-12
FLOWERREE, Amy (Northwestern University) ..................................................... V-K
FORCEHIMES, Andrew (Vanderbilt University) ...................................................III-J
FORD, Anton (University of Chicago) ......................................................... II-B, IV-N
FOUTS, Dan (Maine West High School, Des Plaines, IL) ................................ VII-M
FRANCIS, Leslie Pickering (University of Utah) ................................................. VI-L
FRANK, Devin (University of Missouri) ...............................................................VI-H
FRANKLIN, A. Todd (Hamilton College) .............................................................. IV-F
FRANKLIN, Christopher E. (Marymount University) .......................................... III-K
FRENCH, Peter (Arizona State University) ..........................................................III-N
FREY, Christopher (University of South Carolina) ............................................ VII-B
FREY, Jennifer (University of South Carolina) ..................................................... V-E
FRIEDMAN, Jane (New York University) ............................................................. IV-K
FRISE, Matthew J. (University of Rochester) ...................................................... V-K
FULLER, Timothy (Yonsei University (Korea)) ...................................................... II-D
G
GABEL, Michael (Universität Erfuhrt) ................................................................ GV-4
GAHAN, William (Rockford University) ........................................................... GII-11
GAN, Barry (St. Bonaventure University) ........................................................... GI-2
48
Main and Group Program Participants
GARDINER, Georgina (Rutgers University) ........................................................ IV-K
GARDNER, Molly (University of North Carolina–Chapel Hill) ........................... III-K
GAUS, Gerald (University of Arizona) ................................................................. III-D
GEHRMAN, Kristina (Miami University of Ohio) .................................................IV-J
GELBER, Jessica (Syracuse University) .............................................................. VI-A
GEORGALIS, Nicholas (East Carolina University) ............................................. III-M
GIBBS, Cameron (University of Massachusetts Amherst) .............................. VII-L
GILLETT, Carl (Northern Illinois University) ..................................................... GIV-9
GILLIES, Anthony (Rutgers University) ............................................................... III-E
GLANZBERG, Michael J. (Northwestern University) .......................................... II-F
GODOY, Eric (New School for Social Research and Pratt Institute) .......... GIV-13
GOLDBERG, Sanford (Northwestern University) ................................................. I-C
GOLDBERG, Steven (Oak Park and River Forest High School) ............ IV-O, VII-M
GOLDBERG, Zachary J. (Universität Regensburg) ............................................III-N
GOLDWATER, Jonah (University of South Florida) ........................................... VII-J
GONZALEZ, Gina Blunt (Morehead State University) .................................... GIV-1
GORHAM, Geoffrey A. (Macalester College) ................................................... VII-K
GOTTLIEB, Paula (University of Wisconsin–Madison) ......................................... I-D
GOTTLÖBER, Susan (National University of Ireland, Maynooth) ................... GII-3
GRAHAM, Andrew (University of Missouri–Kansas City) ................................. VI-G
GRAY, Aidan (University of Illinois–Chicago) .....................................................VI-H
GREEN, Derek (Northwestern University) ......................................................... III-M
GREEN, Paul (Mount St. Mary’s College) ............................................GIV-1, GV-13
GRENBERG, Jeanine M. (St. Olaf College) ........................................................ VII-E
GROFF, Ruth (Saint Louis University) ................................................................. V-M
GROSS, Daniel (Ohio State University) ................................................................. I-C
GUCCINELLI, Roberta (Università Vita-Salute San Raffaele, Milan) .............. GV-4
GUPTA, Bina (University of Missouri–Columbia) ............................................ GIII-7
GWIN, Mary (Oklahoma State University) .............................................III-L, GIII-11
H
HACKER-WRIGHT, John (University of Guelph) ..................................................IV-J
HADDAD, Samir (Fordham University) ...............................................................VII-D
HAGEDORN, Eric W. (St. Norbert College) ........................................................... V-I
HAGEN, Daniel (Mount Holyoke College) .......................................................... V-M
HAHN, Susan (Wesleyan University) .................................................................... VI-I
HAJIALIORAKPOUR, Saboura (University of Tehran) ...................................... GII-3
HALWANI, Raja (School of the Art Institute of Chicago) ......................V-L, GIII-10
HAMILTON, James R. (Kansas State University) ............................................ GII-10
HANKS, Peter W. (University of Minnesota–Twin Cities) .................................... I-A
HANSEN, Rebecca Longtin (Emory University) ............................................... GV-3
HANSER, Matthew (University of California–Santa Barbara) ............................VI-D
HARE, Caspar (Massachusetts Institute of Technology) .................................. VI-B
HARMAN, Elizabeth (Princeton University) ........................................................ VI-B
49
Main and Group Program Participants
HARRELSON, Kevin (Ball State University) ...................................................... GIV-3
HARRIS, Stephen (University of New Mexico) ................................................ GVI-7
HARTMAN, Peter (Loyola University Chicago) ..................................................... V-I
HARTMAN, Robert J. (Saint Louis University) .................................................... III-H
HARTMANN, Bill (St. Louis Community College–Forest Park) .................V-N, VI-M
HATCHER, Donald L. (Baker University) .......................................................... GV-13
HAUG, Matthew C. (College of William & Mary) .................................................II-J
HAWTHORNE, John (Oxford University) ............................................................VII-C
HAYAKI, Reina (University of Nebraska) .............................................................. III-F
HEATHWOOD, Chris (University of Colorado–Boulder) ...................................... I-B
HEDRICK, Todd (Michigan State University) .......................................................V-H
HEIDE, Dai (Simon Fraser University) ................................................................... VI-I
HELLER, Mark (Syracuse University) .................................................................. VI-G
HESS, Diana (Spencer Foundation) ................................................................. GVI-1
HESS, Elijah (University of Arkansas) .................................................................. VI-J
HILBERT, David (University of Illinois–Chicago) ................................................ IV-E
HITT, James (Saginaw Valley State University) ................................................ GII-6
HO, Chien-Hsing (Nanhua University, Taiwan) ............................................... GVI-7
HOLBERG, Erica (Utah State University) ............................................................. V-M
HOPWOOD, Mark (University of Chicago) .......................................................... II-H
HORTY, John F. (University of Maryland) ........................................................... III-E
HORVATH, Joachim (University of Cologne) .................................................... VII-J
HOWARD, Chris (University of Arizona) ............................................................. IV-M
HOWARD, Scott (Harvard University) .................................................................. VI-K
HUGHES, Cheryl (Wabash College) .................................................................... VII-I
HUNTER, David (Ryerson University) ...................................................................IV-J
HYLTON, Peter (University of Illinois–Chicago) ................................................. VII-L
I
ILEA, Ramona Cristina (Pacific University Oregon) ............................................ IV-I
IRANI, Tushar (Wesleyan University) ...................................................................IV-H
J
JACKSON, Alexander (Boise State University) .................................................. VII-J
JACKSON, Myron (Southern Illinois University–Carbondale) ....................... GVI-4
JACOBSON, Daniel (University of Michigan) ...................................................... V-C
JACOVIDES, Michael (Purdue University) ................................................ VI-E, VII-K
JAEGER, Gary A. (Vanderbilt University) .............................................................V-H
JAGANNATHAN, Dhananjay (University of Chicago) ........................................IV-H
JAMES, Steven (University of Texas–Austin) ....................................................... V-K
JANES, John (Marquette University) .................................................................. IV-F
JANSEN, Sarah (Carleton College) ......................................................................III-G
JING, Li (Chinese University of Hong Kong) ................................................... GV-4
JOHNSON, Casey (University of Connecticut) ................................................... V-L
50
Main and Group Program Participants
JOHNSON, Robert N. (University of Missouri–Columbia) ............................... VII-E
JOHNSTON, Allan (Columbia College and DePaul University) ...................... GV-7
JOHNSTON, Guillemette (DePaul University) ................................................. GIV-5
JORDE, Weston (Dakota County Technical College) .................................... GV-13
JOYCE, James (University of Michigan) ...............................................................V-J
JUN, Nathan (Midwestern State University) ..........................................IV-F, GV-10
K
KAHN, Leonard A. (Loyola University New Orleans) ........................................ VI-L
KALAR, Brent (University of New Mexico) .......................................................... VI-I
KAPITAN, Tomis (Northern Illinois University) .................................................... IV-L
KAPLAN, Mark (Indiana University–Bloomington) ............................................. V-A
KASPERBAUER, T. J. (Texas A&M University) ....................................................... IV-I
KATZ, Emily (Michigan State University).............................................................IV-H
KATZ, Eric (New Jersey Institute of Technology) .................................GII-8, GVI-8
KATZ, Jessica Mefford (Bowling Green State University) .................................III-J
KAVENY, M. Cathleen (University of Notre Dame Law School) ...................... VI-O
KAWALL, Jason R. (Colgate University) ............................................................... V-L
KAZANJIAN, Michael M. (Triton College) ....................................................... GV-12
KEISER, Jessica (Yale University) ...........................................................................V-J
KELLER, John A. (Niagara University) .................................................................. II-F
KELLER, Lorraine (Niagara University) ................................................................VI-H
KELLY, Daniel R. (Purdue University) ................................................................... VI-F
KELLY, Eugene (New York Institute of Technology) ......................................... GI-1
KELSEY, Sean (University of Notre Dame) .......................................................... II-A
KERSHNAR, Stephen (SUNY Fredonia) ............................................................. GII-2
KILBARGER, Ben (Independent Scholar) ..............................................................V-J
KIM, Brian (Ohio State University) ....................................................................... IV-K
KIM, Halla (University of Nebraska–Omaha) ........................................................II-L
KIM, Richard T. (City University of Hong Kong) .............................................. GIV-7
KIND, Amy (Claremont McKenna College) ........................................................ VI-K
KIRBY, Katherine (St. Michael’s College) ............................................................ VII-I
KISSEL, Andrew (Ohio State University) ............................................................. III-H
KLEIN, Shawn (Rockford University) .............................................................. GIII-11
KLEMICK, Griffin (Northern Illinois University) .................................................. III-I
KNOBE, Joshua (Yale University) ......................................................................... III-C
KOOLAGE, John (Eastern Michigan University) ............................................... IV-M
KORMAN, Daniel Z. (University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign) .................. VI-J
KORZUKHIN, Theodore (Cornell University) ....................................................... III-I
KOSLICKI, Kathrin (University of Alberta) ...........................................................IV-D
KRAEMER, Eric R. (University of Wisconsin–LaCrosse) ..................................... IV-L
KRASNER, Daniel A. (Metropolitan State University Denver) ......................... VII-G
KRAUT, Richard (Northwestern University) ......................................................... V-E
KRISHNAMURTHY, Meena (University of Manitoba) ...........................................II-J
51
Main and Group Program Participants
KROLL, Nick (Franklin and Marshall College) .......................................................II-I
KUKLA, Rebecca (Georgetown University) ........................................................ II-K
KUNZ, Erin (Mayville State University) ............................................................. GIV-5
KUTLU, Evrim (Universität Köln)......................................................................... GII-3
L
LACKEY, Jennifer (Northwestern University) ...................................................... V-K
LAMB, Gordon (Sam Houston State University) ............................................ GIV-1
LANCE, Mark (Georgetown University) .............................................................. III-E
LAPOINTE, Sandra (McMaster University) ....................................................... GII-9
LAVEN, Wim (Kennesaw State University) ...................................................... GIII-9
LAWLOR, Krista (Stanford University) ................................................................. III-E
LEE, Mitzi (University of Colorado)......................................................................IV-H
LEE, Nan-Nan (St. Xavier University at Chicago) ............................................ GIV-6
LEE, Sander H. (Keene State College) ........................................................... GIV-12
LEITER, Brian (University of Chicago) ................................................................ VI-N
LENFERNA, Alex (University of Washington) .................................................. GVI-8
LEONARD, Matthew (University of Southern California) ................................. VI-G
LEONTYEV, Leon (Australian National University) ............................................. IV-K
LEPORE, Kevin (Elmhurst College) ....................................................................... II-B
LEVINE, Steven (University of Massachusetts Boston) ................................. GIV-2
LEWIS, Court (Owensboro Community and Technical College) .................. GIII-9
LEWIS, Peter J. (University of Miami) ................................................................. IV-M
LEYDON-HARDY, Lauren (Northwestern University) ........................................VII-C
LI, Chenyang (Nanyang Technological University) ......................................... GV-2
LIAO, Matthew (New York University) ................................................................ VI-L
LICHTENBERT, Robert (Editor, The Meaning of Life) .................................... GV-12
LIMANOWSKI, Alex (Tulane University) .......................................................... GV-11
LISTER, Andrew (Queen’s University (Ontario)) ................................................ III-D
LISTON, Michael (University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee) .................................. IV-M
LISZKA, James (State University of New York at Plattsburgh) ...................... GIII-3
LITTLEJOHN, Clayton M. (University of Texas–San Antonio) ............................. I-C
LOLORDO, Antonia (University of Virginia) ........................................................ VI-E
LONG, Roderick T. (Auburn University) .............................................................. III-H
LOPEZ DE SA, Dan (ICREA-Universitat de Barcelona) ............................VI-G, GII-7
LOPEZ, Jason (Wisconsin University) ...................................................................V-J
LOTT, Micah (Boston College) ............................................................................. IV-C
LOTTENBACH, Hans (Kenyon College) ................................................................ VI-I
LOTZ, Christian (Michigan State University) ................................................... GIV-8
LOUDEN, Robert B. (University of Southern Maine) ...................................... GIII-8
LUCHTE, James (University of Wales Trinity Saint David) .............................. GV-3
LUDWIG, Bernd (Universität Göttingen) ......................................................... GIII-8
LYNCH, Greg (Fordham University) .................................................................. VII-G
52
Main and Group Program Participants
M
MACAULAY, Melissa (University of Western Ontario) .................................... GVI-9
MACAVOY, Leslie (East Tennessee State University) ....................................... IV-F
MACCUMHAILL, Claire (Durham University) ...................................................... III-A
MACHERY, Edouard (University of Pittsburgh) .................................................. III-C
MACK, Philip (Marquette University) ................................................................ GII-6
MAGLIORE, Najah (Colby College) ......................................................................II-N
MAGNELL, Thomas (Drew University) .............................................................. GII-2
MAGRINI, James (College of DuPage) ............................................................. GV-7
MALINK, Marko (University of Chicago) .............................................................. V-F
MAR, Gary (Stony Brook University) ................................................................. VII-G
MARCHETTI, Sarin (University College, Dublin) ............................................... GII-6
MARES, Edwin (Victoria University of Wellington) ....................................II-C, VI-H
MARINO, Patricia A. (University of Waterloo) ................................... II-J, V-L, GIV-4
MARTIN, Christopher (University of Wisconsin–Green Bay) ............................ VI-K
MARTIN, Michael (University of California–Berkeley/University
College, London) ........................................................................................... III-A
MASON, Michelle (University of Minnesota–Twin Cities) ................................ VI-K
MAY, Simon (Florida State University) ........................................................... GIV-14
MCAVOY, Paula (Spencer Foundation) ............................................................ GVI-1
MCBRIDE, William (Purdue University) ............................................................... V-K
MCCABE, David (Colgate University) ................................................................... IV-I
MCCAIN, Kevin (University of Alabama at Birmingham) ................................. IV-M
MCCALL, Corey (Elmira College) ...................................................................... GVI-4
MCCANN, Edwin (University of Southern California)........................................ VI-E
MCCORD ADAMS, Marilyn (Rutgers University) .............................................. GV-6
MCCORMICK, Kelly Anne (Washington and Jefferson College) ..................... III-H
MCDANIEL, Kris N. (Syracuse University) .......................................................... VII-L
MCKAY, Ian (Cornell University) .......................................................................... IV-M
MCKENNA, Michael (University of Arizona) .................................................. GIV-11
MCKINSEY, Michael (Wayne State University) .................................................. III-M
MCKITRICK, Jennifer (University of Nebraska–Lincoln) .........................III-B, GIV-4
MEIER, Sarah (Emory University) ........................................................................ VII-K
MEINWALD, Constance (University of Illinois–Chicago) ..................................III-G
MELE, Alfred R. (Florida State University) .......................................................... IV-B
MELNYK, Andrew (University of Missouri) ........................................................ IV-G
MENDOLA, Joseph (University of Nebraska–Lincoln) ............................. III-H, IV-K
MENSAH, Shaeeda (Morgan State University) .................................................. IV-F
MENZEL, Christopher (Texas A&M University) ............................................. GIII-12
MERRICK, Allison M. (University of Arkansas–Little Rock) ............................. GIII-6
MESSINA, James (University of Wisconsin–Madison) ....................................... VI-I
MEYER, Susan Sauvé (University of Pennsylvania) ........................................... V-M
MIKKOLA, Mari (Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin) ....................................III-B, GII-7
MILLER, Dale E. (Old Dominion University) ........................................................III-J
53
Main and Group Program Participants
MILLER, Perry (Ohio State University) ............................................................. GV-10
MILLS, Andrew P. (Otterbein University) ......................................................... GIV-1
MILLS, Catherine (Monash University) ..............................................................VII-D
MILLS, Claudia (University of Colorado–Boulder) ............................................ IV-O
MILLÁN-ZAIBERT, Elizabeth (DePaul University) ...............................................III-O
MINEAU, André (University of Quebec at Rimouski) ...................................... GII-8
MINKOV, Svetozar (Roosevelt University) ...................................................... GV-11
MIYASAKI, Donovan T. (Wright State University) ............................................ GVI-6
MOEHLER, Michael (Virginia Tech) ......................................................................V-H
MOHR, Eric (Duquesne University) ................................................................... GII-3
MOLTMANN, Friederike (CNRS Paris) ................................................................... I-A
MONTGOMERY, Brian (Eastern Illinois University) .............................................III-L
MOODY-ADAMS, Michele (Columbia University) .............................................. V-O
MOON, Andrew Y. (Dalhousie University) ...........................................................III-L
MORGAN, Michael L. (Indiana University–Bloomington) ................................. VII-I
MORIARTY, Jeffrey (Bentley University) ........................................................... GV-9
MORLEY, Constance (Independent Artist) ...................................................... GV-3
MORRIS, Sean (Metropolitan State University of Denver) ............................. GV-8
MORRIS, Ted (Illinois Wesleyan University) .................................................... GIII-5
MORTON, Jennifer (City University of New York) ...................................II-B, GIII-1
MOSELEY, David (Bellarmine University) ......................................................... GV-7
MOSES, Greg (Texas State University) ............................................................. GIII-9
MOYAR, Dean F. (Johns Hopkins University) ......................................................V-G
MUELLER-GROTE, Susanne (Philosophy Documentation Center) ................... II-K
MULLER, Cathleen (Marist College) ................................................................... VI-J
MULLER, Jozef (University of California–Riverside) .......................................... V-M
MURPHY, Patricia Ann (St. Joseph’s University) ............................................... GI-2
MURPHY, Peter (University of Indianapolis) ....................................................... III-I
MURRAY, Samuel (Saint Louis University) ........................................................ GV-5
N
NAGEL, Jennifer (University of Toronto) ............................................................VI-C
NELSON, Eric S. (University of Massachusetts Lowell) ................................. GVI-7
NELSON, Michael (University of California–Riverside) .................................... VII-L
NENADIC, Natalie (University of Kentucky) ................................................... GIV-10
NETA, Ram (University of North Carolina–Chapel Hill) ....................................... I-C
NEWTON, Alexandra (University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign) ................. VI-I
NEY, Alyssa (University of Rochester) ....................................................VII-J, GIV-9
NI, Peimin (Grand Valley State University) ....................................................... GV-2
NICHOLS, David P. (Saginaw Valley State University) ..........................GIV-8, GV-3
NINAN, Dilip (Tufts University).............................................................................. II-E
NOORDA, Hadassa (University of Amsterdam) .................................................. IV-I
NORTMANN, Ulrich (University of Saarland)....................................................... V-F
NUSSBAUM, Martha (University of Chicago) ..................................................III-AA
54
Main and Group Program Participants
NYE, Howard L. M. (University of Alberta) ..........................................................IV-J
O
OAKLANDER, L. Nathan (University of Michigan–Flint) ................................. GVI-9
OLEN, Peter (University of Central Florida) ..................................................... GIV-2
OLSON, Eric T. (University of Sheffield) ............................................................. VI-B
OTT, Walter (Virginia Tech) ................................................................................... IV-A
OXLEY, Julinna (Coastal Carolina University) ................................................... GII-7
P
PAAKKUNAINEN, Hille (Syracuse University)...................................................... IV-C
PADGETT, Dan (Baylor University) ....................................................................... III-H
PARENT, T. (Virginia Tech) ..................................................................................... VI-J
PARGAN, Senada Cvrk (Genocide Survivor) ................................................. GIV-10
PARK, Jin Y. (American University) .........................................................................II-L
PARR, Debra Riley (Columbia College) ............................................................ GIV-8
PASNAU, Robert (University of Colorado–Boulder) .......................................... IV-A
PATAUT, Fabrice (CNRS, FRE Sciences, Normes, Décision) .............................. II-F
PATTON, Lydia (Virginia Tech) ............................................................................ GII-9
PAUL, Elliot Samuel (Barnard College, Columbia University) ......................... VII-K
PAULTZ, Adam (University of Texas–Austin) ........................................................V-D
PAYTAS, Tyler (Washington University in St. Louis) ........................................... V-M
PEARLBERG, Daniel (Ohio State University) ............................................. IV-G, VI-K
PEREBOOM, Derk (Cornell University) ................................................................ IV-B
PERIN, Casey (University of California–Irvine) ................................................... VI-A
PERL, Caleb (University of Southern California) ............................................... VII-F
PERONNE, Tommaso (Università del Salento, Italy) ........................................ GI-1
PERRINE, Timothy (Indiana University–Bloomington) ...................................... IV-K
PERRY, John (Stanford University) ...................................................................... IV-E
PERRY-POLISE, Alexandra (Marietta College) ...........................................V-N, VI-M
PESSIN, Andrew (Connecticut College) ........................................................... VII-M
PETTIGREW, David (Southern Connecticut State University) ...................... GIV-10
PICCININI, Gualtiero (University of Missouri–St. Louis) ....................... VII-A, GIV-9
PICKEL, Bryan (University of Edinburgh) ........................................................... VII-J
PILKINGTON, Bryan (University of Notre Dame) ................................................V-H
PLATZ, Jeppe (Suffolk University) ..................................................................... GV-9
POLZIK, Dasha (University of Chicago) ............................................................... IV-I
POWELL, Lewis (University at Buffalo, SUNY) ................................................... VII-K
PRESCOTT, Paul (Syracuse University) ................................................................. V-C
PRIEST, Maura (University of California–Irvine) ................................................. IV-K
PRITCHARD, Duncan (University of Edinburgh) .................................................. I-C
PURVIANCE, Susan M. (University of Toledo) .....................................................V-H
PYNN, Geoffrey (Northern Illinois University) ...................................................VI-C
55
Main and Group Program Participants
R
RABINOWITZ, Dani (Oxford University) ............................................................ GII-1
RADULESCU, Alexandru (University of Missouri) ..............................................VI-H
RAIBLEY, Jason R. (California State University–Long Beach) .............................II-J
REED, Baron (Northwestern University) ............................................................. IV-K
REED, Douglass (University of Virginia) ............................................................... I-D
REED-SANDOVAL, Amy (University of Washington) .......................................... IV-I
REMHOF, Justin (Santa Clara University) ................................................VI-J, GIII-6
REMPEL, Morgan (University of Southern Mississippi) .................................. GII-8
RESCORLA, Michael A. (University of California–Santa Barbara) ...................... II-D
RETTLER, Lindsay (Ohio State University) ......................................................... III-M
RICHARDS, Kevin M. (Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts) ................... GIV-8
RICKLESS, Samuel C. (University of California–San Diego) .............................. IV-A
RICKUS, Katherine (Marquette University) ........................................................ IV-G
RIMELL, Nicholas (University of Virginia) ........................................................... III-K
RINARD, Susanna (University of Missouri–Kansas City) .....................................V-J
RINI, Adriane (Massey University)........................................................................ V-F
RIONDA, Antonio (University of Miami) ......................................................... GII-11
RIPSTEIN, Arthur (University of Toronto) ......................................................... GIII-8
ROBERTSON, Michael D. (Independent Scholar) .............................................. IV-L
ROBINS, Alexander (Emory University) ............................................................. GII-5
ROBINS, Sarah (University of Kansas) ................................................................ III-K
ROCHA, Samuel (University of North Dakota) ................................................ GIV-5
ROEBER, Blake (University of Notre Dame) ........................................................ V-A
ROELOFS, Luke (University of Toronto) ............................................................. IV-G
ROHLF, Michael (The Catholic University of America) ...................................... VI-I
ROMAYA, Bassam (University of Massachusetts Lowell) .....................IV-I, GIII-10
ROSATI, Connie S. (University of Arizona) ............................................................ I-B
RUBENSTEIN, Eric (Indiana University of Pennsylvania) ................................ GVI-9
RUBLE, Thomas (Southern Illinois University–Carbondale) ........................... GII-3
RUDD, Anthony J. (St. Olaf College) ................................................................... IV-L
RUDISILL, John (The College of Wooster) ..........................................................V-H
RUETENIK, Tadd (Saint Ambrose University) .......................................GII-6, GV-14
RUPERT, Robert D. (University of Colorado–Boulder)...................................... VII-A
S
SABL, Andrew (University of California–Los Angeles) ...................................... V-O
SACHS, Carl (Independent Scholar) ................................................................ GIV-2
SALERNO, Joe R. (Saint Louis University) ......................................................... VII-L
SALTZ, David Z. (Georgia State University) .................................................... GII-10
SAMUELS, Richard (Ohio State University) ........................................................ III-C
SANDERS, Kirk (University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign) ..........................IV-H
SANDERS, Maria A. (Plymouth State University) .............................................. VI-N
56
Main and Group Program Participants
SANFORD, David H. (Duke University) ............................................................... VI-G
SANSON, David (Illinois State University) ............................................................ V-I
SARTORIO, Carolina (University of Arizona) ......................................... IV-B, GIV-11
SATO, Tomoya (University of California–San Diego) .........................................VI-H
SAVAGE, Heidi (State University of New York–Geneseo) ................................ III-M
SCHACHT, Richard (University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign) ................ GVI-6
SCHAFFER, Jonathan M. (Rutgers University) ....................................... IV-D, GIV-9
SCHALLER, Walter E. (Texas Tech University) ......................................................V-H
SCHAPIRO, Tamar (Stanford University) .............................................................VI-D
SCHEDLER, George (Southern Illinois University–Carbondale) .................... GII-2
SCHNEE, Ian P. (Western Kentucky University) ..................................... V-K, GIV-12
SCHOUTEN, Gina (Illinois State University) ..........................................GIII-1, GVI-1
SCHRAG, Francis (University of Wisconsin–Madison) ................................... GIV-5
SCHROEDER, Mark (University of Southern California) ...................................VII-C
SCHROEDER, Timothy (Ohio State University).........................................VI-F, VII-H
SCHWARTZBERG, Melissa (New York University) ......................................... GIV-14
SCHWARZ, David (Independent Scholar) .......................................................... III-M
SCHWEICKART, David (Loyola University Chicago) ........................................ GVI-3
SCOTT-KAKURES, Dion (Scripps College) .............................................................V-J
SCOVILLE, J. Michael (Eastern Michigan University) ................................... GIV-13
SEDGWICK, Sally (University of Illinois–Chicago) ...............................................V-G
SEELEY, William P. (Bates College) ..................................................................... IV-G
SEFER, Ferid (Genocide Survivor) .................................................................. GIV-10
SELCER, Daniel J. (Duquesne University) ........................................................... VI-K
SENOR, Thomas D. (University of Arkansas) ....................................................... V-K
SEOK, Bongrae (Alvernia University) ............................................................... GVI-7
SEPIELLI, Andrew (University of Toronto)............................................................IV-J
SEPINWALL, Amy (University of Pennsylvania (Law)) ....................................... V-O
SEYLER, Frederic (DePaul University) ............................................................... GV-3
SEYMOUR, Amy (University of Notre Dame) ................................................... GV-6
SFENDONI-MENTZOU, Demetra (Aristotle University, Thessaloniki) ........... GIII-3
SHAW, J. Clerk (University of Tennessee) ......................................................... VII-B
SHIEBER, Joseph H. (Lafayette College) .............................................................III-L
SHIEH, Sanford (Wesleyan University) ................................................................. II-C
SHUMENER, Erica H. (New York University) ....................................................... VI-J
SIDER, Ted (Cornell University) ............................................................................ III-F
SIEGEL, Susanna (Harvard University) ................................................................ III-A
SIFFERD, Katrina (Elmhurst College) ................................................................... VI-F
SILK, Alex (University of Birmingham) .................................................................III-J
SILVA, Grant J. (Marquette University) ....................................................... III-O, IV-I
SILVER, Kenneth (University of Southern California) ......................................... II-H
SILVERSTEIN, Louis (Columbia College Chicago) ......................................... GV-12
SIRKEL, Riin (University of Vermont) .................................................................... II-A
SKOW, Bradford (Massachusetts Institute of Technology)............................. VI-G
57
Main and Group Program Participants
SLANK, Shanna K. (University of Wisconsin–Madison) .....................................IV-J
SMITH, Basil Edward (Saddleback College) .............................................V-N, VI-M
SMITH, Chris (Wake Forest University) ................................................................ II-D
SMITH, Nicole (University of Texas–Austin) ................................................ II-J, IV-J
SMITH, Renée (Coastal Carolina University) .......................................... IV-O, VII-M
SMITH, Robin (Texas A&M University) ................................................................. V-F
SMITH, Tony (Iowa State University) ................................................................ GVI-3
SOAMES, Scott (University of Southern California) ............................................ I-A
SPAULDING, Shannon (Oklahoma State University) ......................................... VI-K
SPEAKS, Jeffrey (University of Notre Dame) ....................................................... I-A
SPENCER, Joshua (University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee) ................................ VII-L
SREEDHAR, Susanne (Boston University) ............................................................ V-L
STAFFEL, Julia (University of Southern California) ............................................. V-A
STALNAKER, Robert (Massachusetts Institute of Technology) ........................ III-F
STANG, Nicholas F. (University of Miami) ...............................................VII-L, GII-9
STEEVES, H. Peter (DePaul University) .............................................................. GII-5
STERN, Josef (University of Chicago) ............................................................... GII-1
STERN, Reuben (University of Wisconsin–Madison) ....................................... IV-M
STOLJAR, Natalie (McGill University) .................................................................. III-B
STONE, Sophia A. (Purdue University) ...............................................................VII-H
STONER, Sam (Carthage College) ................................................................... GV-11
STRIKER, Gisela (Harvard University) ................................................................... V-F
STROHMINGER, Nina (Duke University) ............................................................. VI-F
STUART, Matthew (Bowdoin College) ................................................................ VI-E
SULLIVAN, Meghan (University of Notre Dame) ............................................... VI-B
SUPERSON, Anita (University of Kentucky) ...................................................... GII-7
SUSSMAN, David (University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign) .......................III-J
SVEINSDÓTTIR, Ásta (San Francisco State University) ...................................... III-B
SWARUP, Shruta (Cornell University) ................................................................. VII-J
SWENSON, Philip (University of California–Riverside) ...................................... IV-L
SWITZER, Adrian (Park University) ..........................................................GIV-8, GV-3
T
TALISSE, Robert B. (Vanderbilt University) ..........................................................V-H
TANAKA, Koji (University of Auckland) ............................................................... IV-M
TAYLOR, Erin (Cornell University) ....................................................................... VII-G
TAYLOR, Jesse (Appalachian State University) ................................................ GII-2
TERONI, Fabrice (University of Bern) ................................................................... V-C
TESON, Fernando (Flordia State University Law School) ..................................III-J
THOMAS, Anthony E. (Kiswaukee Community College) .........................V-N, VI-M
THOMAS, Laurence (Syracuse University) .........................................................III-N
THOMPSON, Adam R. (University of Nebraska) ................................................ IV-L
THOMPSON, Morgan (University of Pittsburgh) ................................................II-N
THORNTON, Allison (Baylor University) ...............................................................III-L
58
Main and Group Program Participants
TIISALA, Tuomo (University of Chicago) ............................................................ VII-I
TILLMAN, Chris (University of Manitoba) ............................................................ II-E
TIMPE, Kevin (Northwest Nazarene University) ............................................... GV-6
TITELBAUM, Michael (University of Wisconsin–Madison) ................................ IV-K
TOLLEFSEN, Deborah (University of Memphis) ................................................III-N
TOLLEY, Clinton (University of California–San Diego) .................................... GII-9
TORSEN, Ingvild (Florida International University) .......................................... GV-3
TRIVEDI, Saam (Brooklyn College, CUNY) .......................................................... VI-K
TRIVIGNO, Franco V. (Marquette University) .....................................................IV-H
TROGDON, Kelly (Virginia Tech) ............................................................... IV-D, VII-H
TROTT, Adriel (Wabash College) .......................................................................... V-L
TROUT, J. D. (Loyola University Chicago) ......................................................... IV-G
TSOMPANIDIS, Vasileios (Institut Jean Nicod–École Normale Supérieure) ...VI-H
TUVEL, Rebecca (Vanderbilt University) ............................................................. V-L
TWEEDT, Chris (Baylor University) ........................................................................III-L
U
URBAN, Thomas (Houston Community College) .....................................V-N, VI-M
V
VALLIER, Kevin (Bowling Green State University) ............................................. III-D
VAN DYKE, Christina (Calvin College) ................................................................. VI-J
VAN ROOJEN, Mark (University of Nebraska–Lincoln) ......................................III-J
VARGAS, Manuel (University of San Francisco) ........................................... GIV-11
VELASQUEZ, Ernesto Rosen (University of Dayton) .........................................III-O
VICTOR, Elizabeth (Grand Valley State University) ............................................. V-L
VOGLER, Candace (University of Chicago) ............................................ VI-D, VII-D
VOGT, Erik (Trinity College (Hartford) and University of Vienna) ............... GIV-10
VRANAS, Peter B. M. (University of Wisconsin–Madison) ................................ III-E
VUCU, Simona (University of Toronto) ................................................................. V-I
W
WAHMANN, Jessica Tabor (Emory University) .............................................. GII-11
WALL, Steven P. (University of Arizona) .............................................................. III-D
WALLACE, Meg (University of Kentucky) .......................................................... VI-G
WALLER, Robyn (Florida State University) .......................................................... III-H
WALSH, Sean Drysdale (University of Minnesota Duluth) ................................. I-B
WALTERS, Gregory J. (Saint Paul University, Ottawa) .................................... GIV-8
WARD, Julie (Loyola University Chicago) ............................................................. I-D
WARNER, Stuart (Roosevelt University) .......................................................... GV-11
WARTENBERG, Thomas E. (Mount Holyoke College) ...................................... IV-O
WATERMAN, John (Johns Hopkins University) ...................................................III-L
WATSON, James R. (Loyola University New Orleans) .................................... GII-8
WEBB, Douglas (Lakeland Community College) ................................................III-L
59
Main and Group Program Participants
WEINBERG, Shelley (University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign) ................. VII-K
WEIR, Jack (Morehead State University) .......................................................... GII-4
WEISS, Shira (Yeshiva University) ...................................................................... GII-1
WENDT, Fabian (University of Hamburg) ............................................................V-H
WERNER, Dan (State University of New York–New Paltz) ................................. III-K
WERNER, Preston J. (Syracuse University) ...........................................................II-J
WESLAKE, Brad (University of Rochester) .............................................................II-I
WEST, Richmond Pierce (University of Montevallo) .................................... GIII-10
WHEELER III, Samuel C. (University of Connecticut) ...................................... VII-G
WHITE, Amy E. (Ohio University Zanesville) ................................................... GIV-6
WHITE, Stephen (Northwestern University) ........................................................IV-J
WHITE, V. Alan (University of Wisconsin–Manitowoc) ................................... GVI-9
WILBURN, Joshua (Wayne State University) ...................................................... V-M
WILLER, Malte (University of Chicago) ................................................................ III-I
WILLIAMS, Neil E. (University at Buffalo) ........................................................... III-K
WILLIAMSON, Timothy (Oxford University) ....................................................... III-F
WILSON, Aaron (University of Miami) ................................................................ VII-K
WIMSATT, William (University of Chicago/University of Minnesota) ............. VII-A
WIRTH, Jason (Seattle University) .................................................................... GVI-4
WOLF, Aaron (Syracuse University) .................................................................... III-K
WOLTERSTORFF, Nicholas (Yale University) ...................................................... VI-O
WOODRUFF, Paul (University of Texas–Austin) ............................................. GII-10
WOODS, Jack (Princeton University/Bilkent University) ........................VII-L, GII-9
WU, Wayne (Carnegie Mellon University) .........................................................VII-H
WYLIE, Danielle (University of Illinois–Chicago) ................................................ VII-I
WYNNE, J. P. F. (Northwestern University) .........................................................IV-H
X
XIAO, Hong (Nanyang Technological University, Singapore) ....................... GV-2
Y
YANKAH, Ekow (Cardozo Law School) ............................................................... VI-N
YATES, Arthur (School of Law, University of California–Berkeley) .................. VII-K
YEOMANS, Christopher L. (Purdue University) ...................................................V-G
YOUPA, Andrew D. (Southern Illinois University–Carbondale) ........................ VI-K
YUAN, Jinmei (Creighton University) ................................................................ GV-2
Z
ZAMBRANA, Rocio (University of Oregon) ......................................................... VI-I
ZASLOW, Joanna (McMaster University) ........................................................ GIV-4
ZBIKOWSKI, Kristen (Hibbing Community College) .................................V-N, VI-M
ZINAICH, JR., Samuel (Purdue University Calumet) ....................................... GIV-6
ZIPORYN, Brook (Northwestern University) ..................................................... GV-2
ZUCKERT, Rachel E. (Northwestern University) .................................................. VI-I
60
Main and Group Program Participants
ZUK, Peter (Rice University) ..................................................................................III-J
ZURN, Perry (DePaul University) ........................................................................... IV-I
61
Sessions Sponsored by
APA Committees
COMMITTEE ON HISPANICS
Aesthetics, Ethics, and Liberation in Latin American and Latina/o
Philosophy (III-O)
Thursday, February 27, 2:20–5:20 p.m.
COMMITTEE ON LECTURES, PUBLICATIONS, AND RESEARCH
Funding for Philosophy: Institute for Scholarship in the Liberal Arts, Notre
Dame (II-K)
Thursday, February 27, 12:10–2:10 p.m.
COMMITTEE ON PHILOSOPHY AND LAW
The Work of Peter A. French (III-N)
Thursday, February 27, 2:20–5:20 p.m.
History of Philosophy as Philosophy of Law (VI-N)
Saturday, March 1, 9:00 a.m.–noon
COMMITTEE ON PHILOSOPHY AND MEDICINE
Ethics in Reproductive Technology (VI-L)
Saturday, March 1, 9:00 a.m.–noon
COMMITTEE ON PHILOSOPHY IN TWO-YEAR COLLEGES
How to Obtain a Position at the Community College (V-N)
Friday, February 28, 1:30–4:30 p.m.
Advocacy and Leadership in Community College Philosophy Programs:
Credentialing, Curriculum, and Faculty Support (VI-M)
Saturday, March 1, 9:00 a.m.–noon
62
Sessions Sponsored by APA Committees
COMMITTEE ON PRE-COLLEGE INSTRUCTION IN PHILOSOPHY
Coming to a School Near You! Philosophy Delivers on the Common Core
State Standards (VII-M)
Saturday, March 1, 2:30–5:30 p.m.
Author Meets Critics: Thomas E. Wartenberg, A Sneetch Is a Sneetch and
Other Philosophical Discoveries: Finding Wisdom in Children’s Literature
(IV-O)
Friday, February 28, 9:00 a.m.–noon
COMMITTEE ON PUBLIC PHILOSOPHY
Promoting Religious Tolerance in the 21st Century: Practical
Perspectives from Philosophers of the Past and the Present (VI-O)
Saturday, March 1, 9:00 a.m.–noon
COMMITTEE ON THE STATUS OF ASIAN AND ASIAN-AMERICAN
PHILOSOPHERS AND PHILOSOPHIES
Buddhism as Philosophy in Korea (II-L)
Thursday, February 27, 12:10–2:10 p.m.
COMMITTEE ON THE STATUS OF BLACK PHILOSOPHERS
Marx and Critical Race Theory (II-M)
Thursday, February 27, 12:10–2:10 p.m.
William R. Jones (GV-1)
Friday, February 28, 7:00–10:00 p.m.
COMMITTEE ON THE STATUS OF WOMEN
Attracting Women Philosophy Majors (II-N)
Thursday, February 27, 12:10–2:10 p.m.
63
Group Sessions
Sessions sponsored by affiliated groups are listed below in alphabetical order
of sponsoring group. Sessions sponsored jointly by more than one group are
listed once for each sponsor.
A
American Association of Philosophy Teachers: GIV-1, Thursday, 7:40–10:40 p.m.
American Society for Aesthetics: GII-10, Thursday, 9:00 a.m.–noon
American Society for Political and Legal Philosophy: GIV-14, Thursday, 7:40–
10:40 p.m.; IV-N, Friday, 9:00 a.m.–noon; V-O, Friday, 1:30–4:30 p.m.; GIV-14,
Thursday, 7:40–10:40 p.m.
American Society for Value Inquiry: GI-2, Wednesday, 7:00–9:00 p.m.; GII-2,
Thursday, 9:00 a.m.–noon
Association for Informal Logic and Critical Thinking: GV-13, Friday, 7:00–10:00 p.m.
Association for Philosophy of Education: GIII-1, Thursday, 5:30–7:30 p.m.;
GVI-1, Saturday, 12:15–2:15 p.m.
Association for Philosophy of Judaism: GII-1, Thursday, 9:00 a.m.–noon
Association for the Development of Philosophy Teaching: GV-12, Friday,
7:00–10:00 p.m.
B
Bertrand Russell Society: GV-8, Friday, 7:00–10:00 p.m.
C
Charles S. Peirce Society: GIII-3, Thursday, 5:30–7:30 p.m.
Committee on Institutional Cooperation: GIII-2, Thursday, 5:30–7:30 p.m.
Concerned Philosophers for Peace: GIII-9, Thursday, 5:30–7:30 p.m.
Conference of Philosophical Societies: GIII-4, Thursday, 5:30–7:30 p.m.
G
George Santayana Society: GII-11, Thursday, 9:00 a.m.–noon
H
Hume Society: GIII-5, Thursday, 5:30–7:30 p.m.
I
International Association for the Philosophy of Sport: GIII-11, Thursday,
5:30–7:30 p.m.
International Society for Environmental Ethics: GIV-13, Thursday, 7:40–10:40
p.m.; GVI-8, Saturday, 12:15–2:15 p.m.
64
Group Sessions
International Society of Chinese Philosophy: GIV-7, Thursday, 7:40–10:40
p.m.; GV-2, Friday, 7:00–10:00 p.m.
J
Josiah Royce Society: GIV-3, Thursday, 7:40–10:40 p.m.
K
Karl Jaspers Society of North America: GIV-8, Thursday, 7:40–10:40 p.m.; GV-3,
Friday, 7:00–10:00 p.m.
M
Marxism and Philosophy Association: GVI-3, Saturday, 12:15–2:15 p.m.
Max Scheler Society: GI-1, Wednesday, 7:00–9:00 p.m.; GII-3, Thursday, 9:00
a.m.–noon; GV-4, Friday, 7:00–10:00 p.m.
N
National Philosophical Counseling Association: GIV-6, Thursday, 7:40–10:40 p.m.
North American Division of the Schopenhauer Society: GVI-2, Saturday,
12:15–2:15 p.m.
North American Kant Society: GIII-8, Thursday, 5:30–7:30 p.m.
North American Nietzsche Society: GIII-6, Thursday, 5:30–7:30 p.m.; GVI-6,
Saturday, 12:15–2:15 p.m.
North American Society for Social Philosophy: GIV-4, Thursday, 7:40–10:40 p.m.
P
Personalist Discussion Group: GVI-4, Saturday, 12:15–2:15 p.m.
Philosophy of Religion Group: GIII-12, Thursday, 5:30–7:30 p.m.
Philosophy of Time Society: GVI-9, Saturday, 12:15–2:15 p.m.
R
Radical Philosophy Association: GV-10, Friday, 7:00–10:00 p.m.; GVI-5,
Saturday, 12:15–2:15 p.m.
S
Society for Analytical Feminism: GII-7, Thursday, 9:00 a.m.–noon
Society for Ancient Greek Philosophy: GV-5, Friday, 7:00–10:00 p.m.
Society for Asian and Comparative Philosophy: GIII-7, Thursday, 5:30–7:30 p.m.;
GVI-7, Saturday, 12:15–2:15 p.m.
Society for Business Ethics: GV-9, Friday, 7:00–10:00 p.m.
Society for LGBTQ Philosophy: GIII-10, Thursday, 5:30–7:30 p.m.
Society for Philosophy in the Contemporary World: GII-4, Thursday, 9:00 a.m.–
noon
Society for the Advancement of American Philosophy: GV-14, Friday, 7:00–
10:00 p.m.
65
Group Sessions
Society for the History of Political Philosophy: GV-11, Friday, 7:00–10:00 p.m.
Society for the Metaphysics of Science: GIV-9, Thursday, 7:40–10:40 p.m.
Society for the Philosophic Study of Genocide and the Holocaust: GII-8,
Thursday, 9:00 a.m.–noon; GIV-10, Thursday, 7:40–10:40 p.m.
Society for the Philosophic Study of Genocide and the Holocaust: GII-8,
Thursday, 9:00 a.m.–noon
Society for the Philosophic Study of the Contemporary Visual Arts: GIV-12,
Thursday, 7:40–10:40 p.m.; GII-5, Thursday, 9:00 a.m.–noon
Society for the Philosophical Study of Education: GIV-5, Thursday, 7:40–10:40
p.m.; GV-7, Friday, 7:00–10:00 p.m.
Society for the Philosophical Study of Education: GIV-5, Thursday, 7:40–10:40
p.m.; GV-7, Friday, 7:00–10:00 p.m.
Society for the Philosophy of Agency: GIV-11, Thursday, 7:40–10:40 p.m.
Society for the Philosophy of Creativity: GVI-4, Saturday, 12:15–2:15 p.m.
Society for the Study of the History of Analytical Philosophy: GII-9, Thursday,
9:00 a.m.–noon; GIV-2, Thursday, 7:40–10:40 p.m.
Society of Christian Philosophers: GV-6, Friday, 7:00–10:00 p.m.
W
William James Society: GII-6, Thursday, 9:00 a.m.–noon
66
List of Advertisers and Book
Exhibitors
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Routledge
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The Scholar’s Choice
University of Chicago Press
University of Notre Dame Press
Williams College, The Miller Fund
The Journal of Moral Education provides a unique
interdisciplinary forum for the discussion and analysis of
moral education and development throughout the lifespan.
The journal encourages submissions across the human
sciences and humanities that use a range of methodological
approaches and address aspects of moral education.
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF:
Darcia Narvaez,
University of Notre
Dame, USA
The Journal of Moral Education provides a unique
interdisciplinary forum for the discussion and analysis of
moral education and development throughout the lifespan.
The journal encourages submissions across the human
sciences and humanities that use a range of methodological
approaches and address aspects of moral education.
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF:
Darcia Narvaez,
University of Notre
Dame, USA
Visit the website to read more, or to submit your paper online today:
www.tandfonline.com/cjme
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Philosophical Review
Edited by the faculty of
the Sage School of Philosophy at Cornell University
dukeupress.edu/philreview
Common Knowledge
Where peace and mind meet
Jefrey M. Perl, editor
dukeupress.edu/ck
Notre Dame
Journal of Formal Logic
Michael Detlefsen and Peter Cholak, editors
dukeupress.edu/ndjf
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To heal, repair, and transform the world
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69

70
The International Journal
of the Platonic Tradition
This is a full Open Access
journal. For more
information,
please visit
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Journal of
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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.
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Candidates working on a book-length project addressing Miller’s philosophy
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Complete information on essay prizes and fellowships, as well as the basic texts
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Website for the Fellowship Fund: http://sites.williams.edu/miller/
Send inquiries to: Librarian, Williams College, Williamstown MA 01267.
Applications can also be sent electronically courtesy of Sue Galli
([email protected]).


Williams College, in conjunction with the John William
Miller Fellowship Fund, announces essay prizes and research
fellowships to advance the study of the philosophy of
John William Miller.

71
Moral Problems
in Higher Education
EDITED BY Steven M. Cahn
“Moral Problems in Higher Education
brings together essays on a wide
range of central ethical issues in higher
education and organizes them in a way
that clearly presents the various aspects
of the on-going philosophical analysis
and debate of each issue. Some of the
essays are classics. Others are superb
examples of the power of philosophical
analysis to elucidate complex topics.
All are excellent.”—PETER J. MARKIE,
Professor/Curators Teaching Professor, Department of Philosophy at the University of Missouri
www.temple.edu/tempress
A reader on the key ethical dilemmas confronting higher education
$41.95 paper 978-1-4399-0659-0
Digital Examination copies available:
[email protected]
Preface • Steven M. Cahn
I. TENURE
1. The Justification of
Academic Tenure
• Richard T. De George
2. The Tenure Decision:
Two Hard Cases
• Paul J. Olscamp
II. FREE SPEECH
ON CAMPUS
3. Regulating Racist
Speech on Campus
• Charles R. Lawrence III
4. Campus Speech Restric-
tions • Martin P. Golding
III. SEXUAL HARASSMENT
5. Sexual Harassment:
Offers and Coercion
• Nancy Tuana
6. Consensual Sex on
Campus • Leslie
Pickering Francis
IV. PREFERENTIAL
STUDENT ADMISSIONS
7. The Meaning of “Merit”
• William G. Bowen and
Derek Bok
8. Does Your “Merit” Depend
on Your Race? A Rejoinder
to Bowen and Bok
• Stephan Thernstrom
and Abigail Thernstrom
V. PREFERENTIAL
FACULTY APPOINTMENTS
9. Two Concepts of
Affirmative Action
• Steven M. Cahn
10. What Good Am I?
• Laurence Thomas
VI. INSTITUTIONAL
NEUTRALITY
11. Neutrality and Its Critics
• Robert Paul Wolff
12. A Defense of the
Neutral University
• Robert L. Simon
VII. RESTRICTING
RESEARCH
13. Constraints on Free
Inquiry • Philip Kitcher
14. On the Ethics of Inquiry
• Robert B. Talisse and
Scott F. Aikin
VIII. ADVANCING
KNOWLEDGE
15. Academic Appointments
• David Lewis
16. Peer Review and the
Marketplace of Ideas
• David Shatz
IX. TELLING THE TRUTH
17. The Truth, The Whole
Truth, and Nothing
But the Truth
• Paul D. Eisenberg
18. The Letter Writer’s
Dilemma • George Sher
X. INTERCOLLEGIATE
ATHLETICS
19. The Role and Value
of Intercollegiate
Athletics in Universities
• Myles Brand
20. Intercollegiate Athletics
and Educational Values
• Robert L. Simon

❖The editor has provided
study questions to
accompany each reading.
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