Departmental Colloquium: Renée Jorgensen (Michigan & Harvard)

Date

Thursday October 28, 2021
4:00 pm - 6:00 pm

Location

Queen's University, Zoom

The Department of Philosophy is pleased to invite you to join, over Zoom, the upcoming meeting of its regular colloquium series, which will welcome RenĂ©e Jorgensen (Michigan & Harvard), whose talk is titled, "Moral and Political Obligations Under Normative Opacity". The talk's abstract can be found on the poster linked below.

Zoom details will be distributed to the colloquium mailing list the day of the event. If you are not on the mailing list but wish to receive Zoom or other details, please contact philug@queensu.ca.

Departmental Colloquium: RenĂ©e Jorgensen (Michigan & Harvard) | Poster (PNG 152 KB)

Departmental Colloquium: Colin Chamberlain (Temple)

Date

Thursday October 7, 2021
12:00 pm - 2:00 pm

Location

Queen's University, Kingston Hall 201

The Department of Philosophy is pleased to invite you to the upcoming meeting of its regular colloquium series, which will welcome Colin Chamberlain (Temple). The colloquium will be held in Kingston Hall, Room 201. Those who cannot join in person are invited to tune in via Zoom. Zoom details will be distributed to the colloquium mailing list the day of the event. If you are not on the mailing list but wish to receive Zoom or other details, please contact philug@queensu.ca.

Talk title: â€śPears, Witches and Werewolves: Malebranche on the Imagination”

Abstract: Malebranche holds that the proper function of the senses is to help us preserve our bodies. The senses tell us what we need to do to survive, and they represent the world in such a way that we can easily do it. But Malebranche also holds that the senses share this function with the imagination and passions. This combination of views generates a puzzle about the division of labor between these mental faculties. If the senses tell us virtually everything we need to know to survive, nothing seemingly remains for the imagination and passions to contribute to the preservation of the body. In this paper, I focus on Malebranche’s account of the imagination’s contributions to self-preservation. I argue that the imagination’s contributions are threefold. First, the imagination allows us to adapt to different circumstances through a process of associative learning. Second, it allows us to form reliable expectations about what the future holds for us, e.g. that if we touch the fire, it will hurt. Third, the imagination underwrites our capacity for sympathy, which is a prerequisite for surviving in the distinctively social world we inhabit.

Departmental Colloquium: Colin Chamberlain (Temple) | Poster (PNG 135 KB)

Ruwe, Dalitso

Dr. Dalitso Ruwe

Dalitso Ruwe

Assistant Professor of Black Political Thought

Philosophy, Political Studies

Arts and Science

Education

Ph.D., Texas A&M

Specializations / Research Interests

Intellectual History of Africana Philosophy, Anti-Colonial Theory, Africana Legal History, Black Male Studies, Hip Hop Philosophy, Black Philosophies of Education

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Dr. Dalitso Ruwe holds a Cross Appointment in Philosophy and Black Studies. Previously he was a 2020-2021 post-Doc fellow under the Extending New Narratives in the History of Philosophy at University of Guelph. His post-doc research focused on the Black Abolitionists debates on American slavery that emerged from the National Negro Conventions of 1830-1864 and the role the Fugitive Slave Law of 1850 and migration to Canada afforded Black thinkers’ grounds to develop socio-political and legal critiques of American Slavery. This research is central to the manuscript Dr. Ruwe is currently working on tentatively titled Ontological Sovereignty: The Quest of Black Freedom in the Age of Slavery. His recent publications appear in APA Newsletter: The Black Experience, Theory & Event, Teachers College Record and The Blackwell Companion to Public Philosophy. Dr. Ruwe enjoys playing pool, basketball, and watching anime, plays, and movies full of dark humor.

Tam, Agnes

Tam, Agnes

Agnes Tam

Ph.D., 2020

Philosophy

Arts and Science

Research Interests

Social and Political Philosophy, Ethics (especially practical reason)

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  • PhD, Philosophy, Queen’s University
    • Dissertation: “Norms, Reasons, and Moral Progress”
    • Committee: Will Kymlicka (Chair), Jackie Davis, Colin Farrelly, Margaret Moore, Joseph Heath 
  • MSc, Political Theory, London School of Economics and Political Science
  • LLB, Law, University of Hong Kong
  • Exchange JD, Law, Tulane University

I am an incoming Assistant Professor in the  at the University of Calgary beginning July 2022. I am currently a Banting Postdoctoral Researcher of the  at McGill University. Before that, I was a Postdoctoral Fellow at the  of Concordia University. For more information about my research, .

Publications
  • (2020) “Why Moral Reasoning is Insufficient for Moral Progress”, Journal of Political Philosophy 28(1): 73-96.
  • (2021) “The Legitimacy of Groups: Toward a We-Reasoning View”, Analyse & Kritik 42(2): 343-68.
  • (2021) “A Case for Political Epistemic Trust”, in K. Vallier and M. Weber (eds.), Social Trust, Routledge, 220-41.
  • (forthcoming) “Being Popular and Being Just: How Animal Protection Organizations Can be Both”, in V. Giroux, A. Pepper, and K. Voigt (eds.), Ethics of Animal Shelters, Oxford University Press (with Will Kymlicka).

Colloquium in Legal and Political Philosophy: Miriam Ronzoni (University of Manchester)

Date

Monday November 29, 2021
3:30 pm - 5:30 pm

Location

Queen's University, Zoom

Members of the Queen’s community are invited to join, over Zoom, the sixth and final workshop of the 2021 , which will welcome Miriam Ronzoni (University of Manchester), whose paper is titled, "Rescuing Justice from Perfect Duties".

If you are interested in joining the session, please write to Grégoire Webber (gregoire.webber@queensu.ca), joint convenor of the Colloquium, to request the Zoom link. The convenors will be using the Waiting Room feature and will only admit participants who have received the Zoom link from them.

Note that the Colloquium in Legal and Political Philosophy is a “pre-read” event: guests’ papers are circulated beforehand, and participants who wish to ask questions and contribute to the discussion are expected to have read them. The papers, once available, can be found on . The convenors will share the password to access the papers via email.

Colloquium in Legal and Political Philosophy: Ekow Yankah (Yeshiva University)

Date

Monday November 15, 2021
3:30 pm - 5:30 pm

Location

Queen's University, Zoom

Members of the Queen’s community are invited to join, over Zoom, the fifth and penultimate workshop of the 2021 , which will welcome Ekow Yankah (Yeshiva University), whose paper is titled, “Compulsory Voting and Black Citizenship".

If you are interested in joining the session, please write to Grégoire Webber (gregoire.webber@queensu.ca), joint convenor of the Colloquium, to request the Zoom link. The convenors will be using the Waiting Room feature and will only admit participants who have received the Zoom link from them.

Note that the Colloquium in Legal and Political Philosophy is a “pre-read” event: guests’ papers are circulated beforehand, and participants who wish to ask questions and contribute to the discussion are expected to have read them. The papers, once available, can be found on . The convenors will share the password to access the papers via email.

Colloquium in Legal and Political Philosophy: Kim Ferzan (University of Pennsylvania)

Date

Monday November 8, 2021
3:30 pm - 5:30 pm

Location

Queen's University

Members of the Queen’s community are invited to join, over Zoom, the fourth workshop of the 2021 , which will welcome Kim Ferzan (University of Pennsylvania), whose paper is titled, “Why Credit Time Served?".

If you are interested in joining the session, please write to Grégoire Webber (gregoire.webber@queensu.ca), joint convenor of the Colloquium, to request the Zoom link. The convenors will be using the Waiting Room feature and will only admit participants who have received the Zoom link from them.

Note that the Colloquium in Legal and Political Philosophy is a “pre-read” event: guests’ papers are circulated beforehand, and participants who wish to ask questions and contribute to the discussion are expected to have read them. The papers, once available, can be found on . The convenors will share the password to access the papers via email.

Colloquium in Legal and Political Philosophy: Pamela Hieronymi (UCLA)

Date

Monday October 18, 2021
3:30 pm - 5:30 pm

Location

Queen's University

Members of the Queen’s community are invited to join, over Zoom, the third workshop of the 2021 , which will welcome Pamela Hieronymi (UCLA), whose paper is titled, “Fairness, Sanction, and Condemnation". 

If you are interested in joining the session, please write to Grégoire Webber (gregoire.webber@queensu.ca), joint convenor of the Colloquium, to request the Zoom link. The convenors will be using the Waiting Room feature and will only admit participants who have received the Zoom link from them.

Note that the Colloquium in Legal and Political Philosophy is a “pre-read” event: guests’ papers are circulated beforehand, and participants who wish to ask questions and contribute to the discussion are expected to have read them. The papers, once available, can be found on . The convenors will share the password to access the papers via email.

Political Philosophy Reading Group: Omar Bachour (Queen's)

Date

Tuesday September 28, 2021
10:30 am - 12:00 pm

Location

Queen's University, Zoom

Faculty and graduate students are welcome to join, over Zoom, the upcoming meeting of the Political Philosophy Reading Group, to discuss a paper by Omar Bachour (ľĹĐăÖ±˛Ą), titled, "Four Proposals for a Post-work Society".

Further details, as well as Omar's paper, will be circulated via email. For more information, contact Christine Sypnowich (christine.sypnowich@queensu.ca).