I am pleased to announce the German Philosophy Workshop Schedule for the 2018-2019 academic year:
Autumn 2018
November 30: Josh Eisenthal (Pittsburgh), “Hertz’s dynamical models in Wittgenstein’s Tractatus”
Winter 2019
January 11: Melina Garibovic (Chicago), “Fichte’s Conscience”
January 18, James Messina (Wisconsin, Madison), “Kant’s Spinozism Charge”
January 25, Laura Davis (Pittsburgh), “Rethinking Kant’s Logical Hylomorphism”
February 1, Till Hoeppner (Postsdam), “Kantian Thoughts”
February 8, Martijn Wallage (Leipzig), “Lost in Representation: On Solipsism”
February 15, Mathis Koschel (Chicago), “Objectivity in Hegel’s Science of Logic”
February 22, Jonas Held (Leipzig), “Logic as the Science of the Spontaneous Mind: Kant on the Laws of Pure General Logic”
March 1-March 3, Conference: Thinking and Being
https://centerforgermanphilosophy.uchicago.edu/conferences/thinking-and-being/
March 7, Maria Van der Schaar (Leiden), “Modification in Husserl.” Departmental Colloquium.
March 8-March 10, Conference: Thought and Judgment
https://centerforgermanphilosophy.uchicago.edu/conferences/thought-and-judgment/
March 15, Anastasia Berg (Cambridge), “Free Falling: Kant and the Freedom to do Evil”
March 22, Avner Steinmetz (Chicago), “Are Emotions Transparent?”
Spring Quarter
April 5, Matthew Boyle (Chicago), “Armchair Psychology Defended”
April 12, Michael Kolodziej (Chicago), “Kant’s Functions of Relation as Ways of Subordinating”
April 19, Andrew Pitel (Chicago), “Kant (and some predecessors) on the substantial”
April 26, Sasha Newton (Illinois, Urbana-Champaign) , “The Moral Law is not the Law of a Species: Kant against Speciesism”
May 3, Yoon Choi (Wisconsin, Milwaukee), “Kant on Inner Sense”
May 10, Ryan Simonelli (Chicago), “Frege and the Logical Act of Judgment”
May 17, Sarah Ryckmans (Louvain), “Kant and the Question of Enlightenment”
May 24, Wolfram Gobsch (Leipzig), “Dusk: Hegel’s Conception of Philosophy’s Relation to Ordinary Life”
May 31, Rory O’Connell (Chicago), “Productive Knowledge”
June 7, Warren Wilson (Chicago), “Kant’s Paradox of Autonomy”