So...I have no idea of most productive format. — Amity
It would work if only select members were allowed to discuss with the person directly and involve others by vetting questions a little that could then be offered up to the guest. — I like sushi
1. Why has Stoicism experienced such a revival as of late in the Western world? In your professional opinion, Professor Pigliucci is this due to our lifestyle, and if so, what has Stoicism to offer to better ourselves?
2. How would you differentiate between ancient Stoicism, Victorian Stoicism, and modern-day neo-Stoicism? How has the ethical field of Stoic thought evolved through time?
3. On a more general level, why do you subscribe to virtue ethics that is Stoicism rather than advocate consequentialism or deontological theories?
4. People have a hard time understanding the difference between Stoical apatheia and our modern use of the term is "apathy". How do you disambiguate the two from one another? — Wallows questionnaire.
I want a feminist speaker to make an appearance for a change.
— Wallows
Why ?
Who would you suggest ? — Amity
Underappreciated virtue ethicists of care, such as Nel Noddings (she will make a departure soon to the other world) or Carol Gilligan really make philosophy more than just a matter of commitment to cherished beliefs or dogma intertwined with word play.
This is where I see the future of philosophy gearing towards. — Wallows
The ultimate aim is to see the Quartet achieve recognition as a school in Analytic Philosophy and rewrite the history of 20th Century philosophy in the UK, which has mostly ignored women philosophers.
Dr Clare Mac Cumhaill is from our Department of Philosophy and is the co-director of In Parenthesis with Dr Rachael Wiseman from University of Liverpool. To mark the birth centenary of Iris Murdoch they have organised the #PhilosophybyPostcard initiative - https://www.philosophybypostcard.com/.
what are your thoughts about these questions? If (any) seem too broad or imprecise, they are up for revision.
Thanks, and looking forward to reaching out to Professor Pigliucci on Facebook. — Wallows
At the same time, "celebrity" guests are likely to be professionals or have a professional level of understanding, and that level of gearing simply is not going to mesh with many of us, me included. It's like getting into the ring with a professional boxer, or playing chess against a grandmaster with a 2000+ rating, or acting as your own lawyer. — tim wood
If memory serves, there used to be debates on this or the old forum — tim wood
Ciceronianus the White, and other's what are your thoughts about these questions? If (any) seem too broad or imprecise, they are up for revision. — Wallows
Our columnist has just released a major book on the philosophy of time. Grant Bartley interviews him about Of Time and Lamentation.
Lovely to see you Professor Tallis, to talk about your new magnum opus, Of Time and Lamentation. What were your motivations for writing this book?
Well, it’s part of a much bigger project. As a secular humanist, I feel I’ve managed to liberate myself from supernatural accounts of humanity, but the alternative for many people is a naturalistic account – the idea that we’re just ‘pieces of nature’. One aspect of that is the notion that the natural sciences are ultimately going to give us a complete account, not only of the rest of the universe, but of ourselves in it. It’s this scientism that has been one of my targets over many years, and it’s one of the drivers for writing this book about time. There are other motives. But the scientific reduction of time to ‘little t’ is a very good example of where scientism gets us, and it’s a rather dismal place. — Grant Bartley with Raymond Tallis
what are your thoughts so far ? — Amity
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