Department of Philosophy

Research seminar archive


 

For upcoming research seminars see the Research seminars and conferences page.

Philosophy research seminars

Spring 2023

Adina Preda - Philosophy research seminar

Date
Wednesday 17 May 2023
Location:
Humanities A01
Description
Adina Preda is the speaker in this seminar.
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Autumn 2022

Teresa Baron- Philosophy Autumn research seminar

Date
Wednesday 5 October 2022
Location:
Humanities A01
Description
Teresa Baron is the speaker in this seminar

Jessie Munton- Philosophy Autumn research seminar

Date
Wednesday 12 October 2022
Location:
Humanities A01
Description
Jessie Munton is the speaker in this seminar

Jade Fletcher- Philosophy Autumn research seminar

Date
Wednesday 19 October 2022
Location:
Humanities A01
Description
Jade Fletcher is the speaker in this seminar

Karl Egerton- Philosophy Autumn research seminar

Date
Wednesday 26 October 2022
Location:
Humanities A01
Description
Karl Egerton is the speaker in this seminar
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Spring 2022

Laura Gow- Philosophy spring research seminar

Laura Gow- Philosophy spring research seminar
Date
Wednesday 6 April 2022
Location:
Humanities A02
Description
Laura Gow, University of Liverpool, is the speaker at this Department of Philosophy research seminar

Lorna Finlayson- Philosophy spring research seminar

Lorna Finlayson- Philosophy spring research seminar
Date
Wednesday 4 May 2022
Location:
Humanities A02
Description
Lorna Finlayson, University of Essex, is the speaker at this Department of Philosophy research seminar

Joe Cunningham- Philosophy spring research seminar

Joe Cunningham- Philosophy spring research seminar
Date
Wednesday 11 May 2022
Location:
Humanities A02
Description
Responding to Reasons: From Deviance to Disjunctivism
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Autumn 2021

Errol Lord- Autumn research seminar

Errol Lord- Autumn research seminar
Date
Wednesday 6 October 2021
Location:
Online - 365 Teams Meeting
Description
Errol Lord, University of Pennsylvania, is the speaker at this Department of Philosophy research seminar

Quill Kukla- Autumn research seminar

Quill Kukla- Autumn research seminar
Date
Wednesday 13 October 2021
Location:
Online - 365 Teams Meeting
Description
Quill Kukla, Georgetown University, is the speaker at this Department of Philosophy research seminar

Penelope Mackie- Autumn research seminar

Penelope Mackie- Autumn research seminar
Date
Wednesday 20 October 2021
Location:
Online - 365 Teams Meeting
Description
Penelope Mackie, University of Nottingham, is the speaker at this Department of Philosophy research seminar

Federica Malfatti- Autumn research seminar

Federica Malfatti- Autumn research seminar
Date
Wednesday 27 October 2021
Location:
Online - 365 Teams Meeting
Description
Federica Malfatti, University of Innsbruck, is the speaker at this Department of Philosophy research seminar
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Spring 2021

Alex Grzankowski- Spring research seminar

Alex Grzankowski- Spring research seminar
Date
Wednesday 27 January 2021
Location:
Online - 365 Teams Meeting
Description
Alex Grzankowski, Birkbeck, University of London, is the speaker at this Department of Philosophy research seminar
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Autumn 2020

Research seminar - 30 September - Nat Hansen

Date
Wednesday 30 September 2020
Description
Nat Hansen, University of Reading, is the speaker at this Department of Philosophy research seminar

Research seminar - 7 October - Paulina Sliwa

Date
Wednesday 7 October 2020
Description
Dr Paulina Sliwa, University of Cambridge, is the speaker at this Department of Philosophy research seminar

Research seminar - 21 October - Ann Whittle

Date
Wednesday 14 October 2020
Description
Dr Ann Whittle, University of Manchester, is the speaker at this Department of Philosophy research seminar

Research seminar - 14 October - Mark Jago

Date
Wednesday 14 October 2020
Description
Mark Jago, University of Nottingham, is the speaker at this Department of Philosophy research seminar

Research seminar - 28 October - Rachel Handley

Date
Wednesday 28 October 2020
Description
Rachel Handley, University of Liverpool, is the speaker at this Department of Philosophy research seminar

Research seminar - 4 November - Marcus Lee

Date
Wednesday 4 November 2020
Description
Marcus Lee, University of Nottingham, is the speaker at this Department of Philosophy research seminar

Research seminar - 11 November - Maggie O'Brien

Date
Wednesday 11 November 2020
Description
Maggie O'Brien, University of Edinburgh, is the speaker at this Department of Philosophy research seminar

Research seminar - 18 November - Annina Loets

Date
Wednesday 18 November 2020
Description
Annina Loets, University of Oxford, is the speaker at this Department of Philosophy research seminar

Research seminar - 25 November - Neil Sinclair

Date
Wednesday 25 November 2020
Description
Dr Neil Sinclair, University of Nottingham, is the speaker at this Department of Philosophy research seminar

Research seminar - 2 December - Neil Turnbull

Date
Wednesday 2 December 2020
Description
Dr Neil Turnbull, Nottingham Trent University, is the speaker at this Department of Philosophy research seminar
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Spring 2020

Philosophy Research Seminar - Neil Williams

Date
Wednesday 5 February 2020
Description
Philosophy research seminar: Neil Williams (University of Roehampton) - The Role of Temperament in Philosophical Inquiry: A Pragmatic Approach

Philosophy Research Seminar - Christine Tiefensee

Date
Wednesday 12 February 2020
Description
Philosophy research seminar: Christine Tiefensee (Frankfurt School)

Philosophy Research Seminar - Louise Richardson

Date
Wednesday 19 February 2020
Description
Philosophy research seminar: Louise Richardson (University of York)

Philosophy Research Seminar - Jim Cargile

Date
Wednesday 26 February 2020
Description
Philosophy research seminar: Jim Cargile (University of Virginia)

Philosophy Research Seminar - Denise Vigani

Date
Wednesday 4 March 2020
Description
Philosophy research seminar: Denise Vigani (Seton Hall University)

Philosophy Research Seminar - Alex Grzankowski

Date
Wednesday 4 March 2020
Description
*Event cancelled due to coronavirus precautions* Philosophy research seminar: Alex Grzankowski (Birkbeck)

Philosophy Research Seminar - Lorna Finlayson

Date
Wednesday 11 March 2020
Description
Philosophy research seminar: Lorna Finlayson (University of Essex)

Philosophy Research Seminar - Ann Whittle

Date
Wednesday 25 March 2020
Description
*Event cancelled due to coronavirus precautions* Philosophy research seminar: Ann Whittle (University of Manchester)

Philosophy Research Seminar - Guiliano Torrengo

Date
Tuesday 31 March 2020
Description
*Event cancelled due to coronavirus precautions* Philosophy research seminar: Guiliano Torrengo (University of Milan)

Philosophy Research Seminar - Sophia Connell

Date
Wednesday 1 April 2020
Description
*Event cancelled due to coronavirus precautions* Philosophy research seminar: Sophia Connell (Birkbeck)
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Autumn 2019

Philosophy Research Seminar - Mark Jago

Date
Wednesday 2 October 2019
Description
Philosophy research seminar: Mark Jago - Metaphysical Structure

Philosophy Research Seminar - Michael Hannon

Date
Wednesday 9 October 2019
Description
Philosophy research seminar: Michael Hannon - Political Disagreement or Partisan Badmouthing? The Role of Expressive Discourse in Politics

Philosophy Research Seminar - Jonathan Knowles

Date
Tuesday 15 October 2019
Description
Philosophy research seminar: Jonathan Knowles, NTNU - Metaphysics for Anti-representationalists.

Philosophy Research Seminar - Laura D'Olimpio

Date
Wednesday 16 October 2019
Description
Philosophy research seminar: Laura D'Olimpio - Critical Perspectivism: Social Media and Moral Education

Philosophy Research Seminar - Jessica Brown

Date
Wednesday 23 October 2019
Description
Philosophy research seminar: Jessica Brown, St Andrews - Profiling, Doxastic Wrongs and Encroachment

Philosophy Research Seminar - Jess Leech

Date
Wednesday 30 October 2019
Description
Philosophy research seminar: Jess Leech, King's College London - Metaphysical Necessity

Philosophy Research Seminar - Chris Cowie

Date
Wednesday 13 November 2019
Description
Philosophy research seminar: Chris Cowie, Durham University

Philosophy Research Seminar - Sara Uckelman

Date
Wednesday 20 November 2019
Description
Philosophy research seminar: Sara Uckelman, University of Birmingham

Philosophy Research Seminar - Sophie Allen

Date
Wednesday 27 November 2019
Description
Philosophy research seminar: Sophie Allen, University of Keele

Philosophy Research Seminar - Lee Walters

Date
Wednesday 4 December 2019
Description
Philosophy research seminar: Lee Walters, University of Southampton
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Spring 2019

30 January 2019

Andrew Stephenson (Southampton)

06 February 2019

Michael Hannon (Nottingham)

13 February 2019

Ursula Coope (Oxford)

20 February 2019

Rowland Stout (University College Dublin)

27 February 2019

Joanna Burch-Brown (Bristol)

06 March 2019

Jules Holroyd (Sheffield)

20 March 2019

Fiona Ellis (Heythrop College)

27 March 2019

Simona Aimar (UCL)

03 April 2019

Emma Gordon (Edinburgh)

 
Autumn 2018

03 October 2018

Helen de Cruz (Oxford Brookes)

10 October 2018

Anil Gomes (Oxford)

17 October 2018

Mihaela Popa (Birmingham)

24 October 2018

Koshka Duff (Nottingham)

31 October 2018

Alex Gregory (Southampton)

14 November 2018

Patrick Todd (Edinburgh)

21 November 2018

Louise Hanson (Durham)

28 November 2018

Komarine Romdenh-Romluc (Sheffield)

05 December 2018

Benedict Rumbold (Nottingham)

 
Spring 2018

31 January 2018

Joel Smith (Manchester)

The First Person Plural Perspective

Language and thought can be first-personal. That is, one can utter the words ‘I’ or ‘me’, and one can employ the first-person concept I in one’s thinking. More generally, philosophers often speak of the first-person perspective: a perspective from which one speaks, or thinks, first-personally. But language and thought can be first-personal in both the singular and the plural. That is, one can not only utter ‘I’ or ‘me’, but also ‘we’ and ‘us’, and one can employ the first-person plural concept we in one’s thinking. Is there, then, a first-person plural perspective; a perspective from which one speaks, or thinks, plural first-personally? I argue that there is and that much of what can be said about the first-person singular perspective carries over to the plural case.

7 February 2018

Stephen Bero (Surrey)

Blame, Shame, and the Emotional Economy of Responsibility

It has become a commonplace in the growing theoretical literature on blame to say that blame is something more than adverse assessment yet something less than adverse treatment. But this commonplace has proven resistant to explanation; the difficulty is sometimes described as the challenge of accounting for the distinctive force of blame. Attention has tended to focus on what the blaming party is doing, resulting in various suggestions that the force of blame is a matter of (for instance) judging, desiring, expressing, or feeling in some special way.

But we might approach blame’s force from a different direction. Rather than focusing on what the blaming party is doing, we could focus instead on how the blamed party reacts. If blame has a special force then we should expect those on the receiving end of it to feel that force, and by considering how the force is felt we might better appreciate what it amounts to.

To this end, I examine the interaction between blame and shame. Philosophers usually associate blame with guilt rather than shame. But shame, I contend, is responsive to blame in a way that guilt is not, and this reveals a dimension of blame’s force that has not been adequately reckoned with, due in part to a theoretical tendency to intellectualize and de-personalize blame. More generally, the blame/shame link provides a promising point of entry into a larger emotional economy of responsibility.

14 February 2018

Claire Mac Cumhaill (Durham)

Still Life, a Mirror

I explore a candidate form of recollection that is akin to episodic recollection but which may be better cast as ‘phasic’, at least insofar as one can be said to remember what it was like to be oneself at an earlier stage or phase in one’s subjective history. I suggest that episodes of re-encountering certain kinds of artworks (re-listening, re-reading) can sometimes occasion such ‘phasic remembering’. The kinds of works that enable such recall I call ‘still lives’ – they are self-limiting wholes the formal properties of which are stable over time. Unlike standard cases of episodic recollection however, the phasic recollection which might be said to be occasioned by ‘still lives’, so understood, requires the temporal presence of the artwork.

Cast differently, the experience must be partly temporally transparent to its object. But to this extent, re-encounters with still lives can be likened to perceiving with a mirror. In specular experience, direction and location are cleaved apart. One can see things located behind one by looking in the direction of the mirror. In part analogy, I test the idea that one can sometimes seem to experience times behind one – in particular, past phases in one’s subjective history – through re-experiencing artworks temporally located at the present time. I consider whether this suggests a reason for valuing the formal features of artworks.

21 February 2018

Julian Dodd (Manchester)

Authenticities and normative conflict

In this talk I distinguish three kinds of authenticity that are candidates to be performance values governing the performance of works of Western classical music. These are, respectively, score-compliance authenticity (accurately rendering the composer's instructions, as explicitly and implicitly expressed in the score, into sound), interpretive authenticity (delivering a performance that evinces a deep or profound understanding of the work), and Kivy's notion of personal authenticity (performing the work in a way that is faithful to the performer's artistic persona).

I defend the following claims: that only score-compliance authenticity and interpretive authenticity are genuine performance values within Western classical music; that these two performance values are constitutive norms of work performance in that tradition; and that when interpretive authenticity and score-compliance authenticity conflict, the former trumps the latter.

21 March 2018

Alison Fernandes (Warwick)

The Time Traveller’s Guide to Causation

Causation has an uneasy place in the picture of the world presented by fundamental physics. It’s unclear, for example, how we can explain the pervasive temporal asymmetry of causation, given that candidate laws are, for the most part, temporally symmetric. I’ll argue that considering the evidential relations relevant to time travelling agents can help. On the negative side, time travel cases provide reasons for thinking we can’t evaluate counterfactuals (from which causal relations might derive) by holding the state of the world outside the antecedent fixed.

This creates trouble for certain statistical mechanical explanation of causal asymmetry. On the positive side, thinking about time travel cases suggests other standards for evaluating counterfactuals: hold fixed the states that a relevant deliberating agent has (external) evidence of, and consider what her decisions are further evidence for. This approach makes good sense of the relevance of causal relations for decision-making, and can use resources from evidential decision theory to explain causal asymmetry. It also offers a new diagnosis for what is puzzling about causal loops: they systematically undermine the possibility of rational agents making use of the causal relations of which they’re composed.

25 April 2018

Shyam Nair (Arizona State)

The Explanatory Power of Probabilistic Analyses of Reasons

One popular albeit controversial idea in ethics and epistemology is that we can explain what we ought to do and ought to believe in terms of our reasons for action and reasons for belief. In this paper, I argue that in order to make good on the explanatory ambitions of this project those who accept it should also accept an analysis of reasons that has a probabilistic structure. I do this by showing that there are classes of ordinary cases involving the competition of reasons that can be smoothly explained by such an analysis.

These are cases of so-called "accrual" of reasons, cases where what we ought to do cannot be settled just by comparing the strengths of individual reasons but instead comparison among collections of reasons is also needed (eg, a case where two reasons are individually worse than another reason but collectively are better than another reason). I then show that a variety of popular views in metaethics can be implemented so that they have a probabilistic structure. I do not offer any argument or proof that a non-probabilistic analysis or quietism about reasons cannot explain these cases. But I close by giving some grounds for pessimism.

2 May 2018

Chon Tejedor (Valencia)

The Ethics of Belonging as a Form of Honesty in One’s Position in the World

In this paper, I explore an idea which I believe to be central to ethics but which has proved surprisingly elusive, at least in Anglophone (mostly analytic) moral philosophy: the idea that some of my individual ethical responsibilities and dues (that which I am ethically owed) arise from my being part of interlocking structures (eg, cultures, markets, natural or artificial environments, institutions, social groups) that condition me. Crucially, the ethical responsibilities and dues in question arise by virtue of my belonging to (i.e. here: being conditioned by) these structures, regardless of whether I belong to them voluntarily or am even aware of my belongings. In analytic philosophy, the idea that ethical responsibilities and dues could arise in this way has sometimes been discussed (and, typically, found wanting) as part of debates on Marxism and Communitarianism, or in discussions relating to collective and associative responsibility. I aim to show that the ethics of belonging goes much further than these debates would suggest: indeed, insofar as it taps directly onto an ethical requirement of honesty in our position in the world, it can be seen as constitutive of the very possibility of our ethical agency.

 
Autumn 2017

4 October 2017

Kirsten Walsh (University of Nottingham) 

Newton's Epistemic Triad

11 October 2017

Elinor Mason (University of Edinburgh) 

Rape, Harassment and Refusal

18 October 2017

Mark Jago (University of Nottingham)

Real Contingent Identity

25 October 2017

Åsa Burman (Stockholm University)

Telic Power

1 November 2017

Kathleen Stock (University of Sussex)

8 November 2017

Alison Wylie (University of British Columbia)

What Knowers Know Well: Why Feminism Matters to Archaeology – and to Philosophy

15 November 2017

Jenny Saul (University of Sheffield)

Dogwhistles and Figleaves: Techniques of Racist Linguistic Manipulation

22 November 2017

Stephen Ingram (University of Manchester)

Realism, Anti-Realism, and Arbitrariness in Ethics

29 November 2017

Derek Matravers (Open University)

Visualising

6 December 2017 

Matt Duncombe (University of Nottingham)

Thinking of an object: Transparency and Demarcation in Plato

 
Spring 2017

1 February 2017

Heather Widdows (University of Birmingham)

Beauty, Choice and Exploitation

8 February 2017

Chris Woodard (University of Nottingham)

Knowing What is Good for You

11 February 2017

A one-off extra seminar from  Stephen Grimm, who will be visiting the UK from from Fordham University in New York.

Understanding as an Intellectual Virtue

15 February 2017

Aness Webster (University of Nottingham)

What's Bad About Casual Racism?

22 February 2017

David Owens (King's College London)

Property and Authority

1 March 2017

Lea Ypi (London School of Economics)

The Moral Ought in 'As If' Politics

8 March 2017

Jon Robson (University of Nottingham)

Omni-beauty as a Divine Attribute

15 March 2017

Jessica Begon (University of Oxford)

Disability: A Justice-Based Account

22 March 2017

Neil Sinclair (University of Nottingham)

Belief Pills and the Possibility of Moral Epistemology

5 April 2017 

Emily Thomas (Durham University)

The Nature of Space and Time in John Locke

 
Autumn 2016

28 September 2016

Karen Simecek (Warwick)

Claudia Rankine's 'Citizen' and the value of intimacy in poetry

12 October 2016

Ian Kidd (Nottingham)

Following the Way of Heaven – Exemplars, Emulationism, and Daoism

19 October 2016

Rachel Fraser (Peterhouse College, Cambridge)

The Ethics of Metaphor

26 October 2016

Lina Jansson (Nottingham)

Newton’s Methodology Meets Humean Supervenience about Laws of Nature

2 November 2016

Jonathan Tallant (Nottingham) and David Ingram (Milan)

Nefarious Truth

9 November 2016

Jonathan Way (Southampton)

Creditworthiness and Matching Principles

16 November 2016

Peter Vickers (Durham)

The Sommerfeld Miracle

23 November 2016

Rosanna Keefe (Sheffield)

Essentialism and logical consequence

30 November 2016

Matt Matravers (York)

Rootless Desert and Unanchored Sanctions

7 December 2016
NB: Seminar will take place
in Humanities, A02.  

Philipp Rau (University of Nottingham)

The Person and the Self

 
Spring 2016

27 January 2016

Stacie Friend, Birbeck

The Real Foundation of Fictional Worlds

I argue that judgements of what is ‘true in a fiction’ presuppose the Reality Assumption: the assumption that everything that is (really) true is also fictionally the case, unless excluded by the work. By contrast with the more familiar Reality Principle, the Reality Assumption is not a rule or ‘principle of generation’ for inferring implied content from what is explicit in a text. Instead it provides an array of real-world truths that can be used in making such inferences. I claim that the Reality Assumption is essential to our ability to understand stories, drawing on a range of empirical evidence. However, the Reality Assumption has several unintuitive consequences, not least that what is fictionally the case includes countless facts that neither authors nor readers could (or should) ever consider. I argue that such consequences provide no reason to reject the Reality Assumption.

3 February 2016

Katharine Jenkins, Cambridge/Nottingham 

Ontic Injustice

In this talk, I argue that there is a distinctive type of injustice, ontic injustice, which occurs when someone is wronged by the social construction of categories, such as race categories or gender categories. A victim of ontic injustice suffers a wrong in virtue of being made into a member of the social category in question; that is to say, it is the very fact of category membership that constitutes the wrong, not any particular negative experiences that may follow. This wrong consists of a failure of recognition respect: the victim of ontic injustice instantiates morally relevant properties that warrant certain sorts of responses from others, but her category membership serves to license contrary sorts of responses. Although the notion of ontic injustice can be combined with different accounts of the ontology of social categories, here I draw on John Searle’s account of institutional reality to offer a more detailed explanation of ontic injustice. Finally, I apply the notion of ontic injustice to the Black Lives Matter movement, showing that interpreting the slogan ‘Black Lives Matter’ with reference to ontic injustice helps to fend off some confused and obstructive responses.

10 February 2016

Fiona Macpherson, Glasgow 

Cognitive Penetration and Predictive Coding

If beliefs and desires affect perception—at least in certain specified ways—then cognitive penetration occurs. Whether it occurs is a matter of controversy. Recently, some proponents of the predictive coding account of perception have claimed that the account entails that cognitive penetrations occurs. I argue that the relationship between the predictive coding account and cognitive penetration is dependent on both the specific form of the predictive coding account and the specific form of cognitive penetration. In so doing, I spell out different forms of each and the relationship that holds between them. Thus, mere acceptance of the predictive coding approach to perception does not determine whether one should think that cognitive penetration exists. Moreover, given that there are such different conceptions of both predictive coding and cognitive penetration, researchers should cease talking of either without making clear which form they refer to, if they aspire to make true generalisations.

17 February 2016

Natalja Deng, Cambridge 

Does Time Seem to Pass?

One of the current philosophical debates about the nature of temporal experience concerns whether or not we (perceptually) experience time as passing in a certain sense. That sense is as follows. According to (some) A-theoretic views of time, the most fundamental description of the world is tensed; it includes such claims as that it’s Wednesday today. On such views, time passes in a ‘robust’ sense. For example, only the present exists and which time exists constantly changes, or the past and the present exist and which time is the latest time constantly changes, or times constantly move into the present and then into the more and more distant past. I defend veridicalism, which denies that we (perceptually) experience time as passing in this sense. The talk has two parts. In the first part, I take the debate at face-value. I show that veridicalism gains indirect support from a close inspection of rival proposals. Moreover, I point out that veridicalists can offer good explanations for why we are nevertheless sometimes inclined towards A-theoretic views. In the second part, I suggest that a deflationary view of the debate can provide further support for veridicalism. Finally, I offer some McTaggart-style reasons to adopt this deflationary view and respond to a recent objection.

24 February 2016

Kristoffer Ahlstrom-Vji, Kent 

Epistemic Heroes and Duties to Inform

We owe duties to others, and those duties include a duty to help. Our duty to address other people’s need for information is a special case of this more general duty of beneficence. Taking Goldberg’s recent proposal regarding the nature of our duty to inform as my starting point, I will argue that the principle Goldberg is defending is demanding, since it (a) makes for an upward shift of the bar between duty and epistemic charity, and (b) is consistent with our in some cases having a duty to change our fundamental commitments if that would make us more useful to others. But it’s not too demanding—so long as it’s properly reformulated to handle cases of epistemic heroism.

2 March 2016

James Ladyman, Bristol 

An Apology for Every Thing Must Go

In this paper I enumerate the main positive and negative theses of Every Thing Must Go: Metaphysics Naturalised. I will explain and defend some of them in more detail and clarify the version of Ontic Structural Realism the book advances replying to some objections.

9 March 2016

Naomi Thompson, Southampton 

Irrealism about Grounding

Grounding talk has become increasingly familiar in contemporary philosophical discussion. Most discussants of grounding think that grounding talk is useful, intelligible, and accurately describes metaphysical reality. Call them realists about grounding. Some dissenters reject grounding talk on the grounds that it is unintelligible, or unmotivated. They would prefer to eliminate grounding talk from philosophy, so we can call them eliminitivists about grounding. This paper outlines a new position in the debate about grounding, defending the view that grounding talk is (or at least can be) intelligible and useful. Grounding talk does not, however, provide a literal and veridical description of mind-independent metaphysical reality. This (non-eliminative)irrealism about grounding treads a path between realism and eliminativism. 

16 March 2016

Nathan Wildman, Hamburg 

For Contingent Necessity-makers

Are there true grounding claims of the form, 'P's necessity is  grounded in Q', for some absolute necessity P and some contingent Q?  Or, to rephrase, are there any contingent necessity-makers for  absolute necessities? Here, I argue that there are. More specifically,  I argue that, for every contingent Q that is a partial grounds of some  absolute necessity P's truth, there is a contingent plurality G,  consisting of Q plus some (possibly empty) D, that is P's  necessity-maker. And while this result doesn't show that all  necessities, let alone all absolute necessities, are grounded in  contingencies, it does show that the necessity of some absolute  necessities are fully grounded in contingent matters.

13 April 2016

Marcello Oreste Fiocco, University of California Irvine 

Time as a Substance

In this paper (the third chapter of a book in draft), I lay out the framework for a metaphysics of time by deriving some ontological principles of a more general metaphysical theory whose crux is a certain account of what a thing is.  A thing is a natured entity, something constrained in what it is by its very existence and, via this existence, constraining other things.  This account is derived from a unique methodology, one that assumes nothing about the world, confronting it as merely the impetus to inquiry.  Applying this methodology as the first step in a wholly critical metaphysics of time, I argue that time itself is a thing, more specifically, a substance.  In so doing, I examine the most obvious phenomena associated with time, providing accounts of change and what a moment is, and considering the relations among these and time per se.  The resulting account of time summarily resolves several much-discussed controversies in the metaphysics of time.  This just shows, however, that the most contentious and interesting issues here are not about time itself, but about temporal reality—the world in time.

20 April 2016

Christopher Bennett, Sheffield 

Why and How to Express One's Emotions

'My point of departure is an interest in actions that are expressive of emotion. Recently philosophy has concentrated on expressions of emotion that are automatic and involuntary, such as facial expressions. My focus is different. I would like to understand expressions of emotions that are deliberate and intentional (though not normally done with some further purpose in mind). In particular, I am interested in the idea that expressive actions ‘symbolise' the way in which the person experiencing the emotion sees the salient features (the ‘gravity’) of their situation. After providing some examples by way of illustration I will consider two potential objections: what is the point of expressing one’s emotions in this sense; and is the vehicle for expression merely conventional? In exploring the beginnings of an answer to this question, I turn to the history of ideas - in particular to the Romantic or post-Kantian tradition - for a range of understandings of 'expressive needs,' that is, our alleged need to express our emotions. I provide a taxonomy of five different answers to the question of why we have expressive needs. One of these understandings is the tradition of Symbolism, and I suggest that this tradition may help in understanding the claim that expressions of emotion symbolise the intentional content of the emotion. I suggest that the idea of symbolising the content of one’s emotions in external form has some advantages over the alternative answers as a way of explaining the value of expressing the emotions. I conclude by considering how this history can help us begin to answer the two objections to the idea of symbolic, expressive action with which we started.’

27 April 2016

Katherine Hawley, St Andrews 

Are You Trying to Tell Me Something?

To learn from what others say, we need to understand the content of their utterances, and also to grasp the force with which they are expressed: who is joking around, who is asking rhetorical questions, who is trying to tell me something?  In the first part of this talk, I investigate some obstacles to the communication of force, paying particular attention to obstacles which arise from power imbalances, social stereotypes, and clashes of localised conventions.  In the second part, I explore why some of us sometimes need to use non-standard speech acts to achieve our perlocutionary goals, for example persuading by speculating rather than telling.

4 May 2016

Jeff McMahan, Oxford 

 

 

Theology and Religion research seminars

Spring 2023

08 February Research Seminar Scott Pacey

Date
Wednesday 8 February 2023
Location:
A02 Humanities Building, MS Teams

10 May Research Seminar Stephen Houlgate

Date
Wednesday 8 February 2023
Location:
A02 Humanities Building

22 March Research Seminar Johannes Zachhuber

Date
Wednesday 22 March 2023
Location:
A02 Humanities Building, Online - MS Teams
Description
The Greek Fathers in Early Modernity and the Historicization of Theology

17 May Research Seminar Dr David Newheiser

Date
Wednesday 17 May 2023
Location:
A02 Humanities Building, Online - MS Teams

14 June Research Seminar - Dr Philippa Townsend

Date
Wednesday 14 June 2023
Location:
A02 Humanities Building, Online - MS Teams

14 June Research Seminar Philippa Townsend

Date
Wednesday 14 June 2023
Location:
A02 Humanities Building
Displaying 1 to 6 of 6
 
Autumn 2022
Seminar series suspended due to Covid-19 pandemic.
 
Spring 2022
Seminar series suspended due to Covid-19 pandemic.
 
Autumn 2021

Tom Breakwell - Biblical seminar series

Date
Tuesday 12 October 2021
Location:
Online - 365 Teams Meeting
Description
The Place of the Bible and Biblical Studies in Secondary Religious Education

Tim Hutchings - TRS Autumn research seminar

Date
Wednesday 13 October 2021
Location:
Online - 365 Teams Meeting
Description
Religion and Worldviews: The Future of RE?

Cath Kennedy - Biblical seminar series

Date
Tuesday 19 October 2021
Location:
Online - 365 Teams Meeting
Description
Bringing the Room into the Bible: Reception Goes 3D with Jerome Berryman's Godly Play

Megan Loumagne Ulishney - TRS Autumn research seminar

Date
Wednesday 20 October 2021
Location:
Online - 365 Teams Meeting
Description
The Evolution of Homo Ludens: Sexual Selection and a Theology of Play

Jason Staples- Biblical seminar series

Date
Tuesday 2 November 2021
Location:
Online - 365 Teams Meeting
Description
Join us for our Biblical seminar series of 2021.

Adam Morton - TRS Autumn research seminar

Date
Wednesday 3 November 2021
Location:
Online - 365 Teams Meeting
Description
"He esteemed them above other animals": The Influence of Sirach and Wisdom of Solomon on Luther's Interpretation of the Imago Dei

Hugo Drochon- TRS Autumn research seminar

Date
Wednesday 10 November 2021
Location:
Online - 365 Teams Meeting
Description
Conspiracy Theories and Religious Belief

Brian Kōlia - Biblical seminar series

Date
Tuesday 16 November 2021
Location:
Online - 365 Teams Meeting
Description
Qohelet and the Moana: Futility in Diaspora?

Karina Atudosie - Biblical seminar series

Date
Tuesday 23 November 2021
Location:
Online - 365 Teams Meeting
Description
Disrupting Hegemonic Power in the Song of Songs

Alexiana Fry- Biblical seminar series

Date
Tuesday 30 November 2021
Location:
Online - 365 Teams Meeting
Description
Trauma Tales: Genesis 19 and Judges 19 in Conversation and Context

Lena-Sofia Tiemeyer- Biblical seminar series

Date
Tuesday 7 December 2021
Location:
Online - 365 Teams Meeting
Description
Missing Jonathan: The Curious Case of the Missing Prince in Modern Dramatization of the David Narrative

Arman Shokhikyan- TRS Autumn research seminar

Date
Wednesday 8 December 2021
Location:
Online - 365 Teams Meeting
Description
When a Translation is a Hermeneutics: The Armenian Bible as a Case-Study

Jacqueline Vayntrub- Biblical seminar series

Date
Tuesday 14 December 2021
Location:
Online - 365 Teams Meeting
Description
Join us for our Biblical seminar series of 2021.
Displaying 1 to 13 of 13
 
Autumn 2020 - Spring 2021
Seminar series suspended due to Covid-19 pandemic.
 
Spring 2020

Biblical Seminar - Sarah Holt

Biblical Seminar - Sarah Holt
Date
Friday 14 February 2020
Location:
C53 Humanities Building
Description
Sarah Holt (Nottingham) - The Yokes of Gods and Kings and the Interpretative Crux in Job 12:18

Theology Research Seminar - Yaqub Choudhary

Date
Wednesday 19 February 2020
Location:
Hemsley B7
Description
Yaqub Chaudhary - Cambridge Muslim College, Cambridge - Augmented Ecology and a "Query-able Earth"

Biblical Seminar - Casey Strine

Biblical Seminar - Casey Strine
Date
Friday 21 February 2020
Location:
C53 Humanities Building
Description
The Famine in the Land Was Severe: Environmentally Induced Involuntary Migration and the Joseph Narrative - Casey Strine (Sheffield)

Theology Research Seminar - Chris Thornhill

Date
Wednesday 26 February 2020
Location:
Hemsley B7
Description
Chris Thornhill (Teaching Associate, Nottingham) - On Harrowed Ground: The Emergent Theologies of the New Nature Writing

Roundtable on Teaching Biblical Languages

Roundtable on Teaching Biblical Languages
Date
Friday 28 February 2020
Location:
Hemsley B7
Description
Roundtable on Teaching Biblical Languages with Drs Tom DeBruin, Jonny Rowlands, Cat Quine, and Sara Parks

Theology Research Seminar - Jennifer Barry

Date
Wednesday 4 March 2020
Location:
Hemsley B7
Description
Jennifer Barry ( University of Mary Washington) - The Heroic Bishop in Flight

Theology Research Seminar - Mohammed Aldhfar

Date
Wednesday 11 March - Wednesday 1 April 2020
Location:
Hemsley B7
Description
*Event cancelled due to coronavirus* Mohammed Aldhfar (Nottingham) - Between the Naked Eye and Astronomical Calculations:

Theology Research Seminar - Simone Kotva

Date
Wednesday 11 March 2020
Location:
Hemsley B7
Description
Simone Kotva (Research Fellow, Emmanuel College, Cambridge) - An Enquiry Concerning Non-Human Understanding

Biblical Seminar - Dr Matthew Anderson

Biblical Seminar - Dr Matthew Anderson
Date
Friday 13 March 2020
Location:
C53 Humanities Building
Description
Dr Matthew Anderson (Concordia) - Strangers on the Textual Land: Aware-Settler Biblical Studies

Theology Research Seminar - Marian Kelsey

Date
Wednesday 18 March 2020
Location:
Hemsley B7
Description
*Event cancelled due to coronavirus* Marian Kelsey (Nottingham) - Who Was Ever Destroyed like Tyre? The Appearance and Absence of Tyre in Biblical Narrative

Biblical Seminar - Michael Burdett

Biblical Seminar - Michael Burdett
Date
Friday 20 March 2020
Location:
C53 Humanities Building
Description
*Event cancelled due to coronavirus* Michael Burdett (Nottingham) - A History of the Image of God from the Bible to the Present Day

Theology Research Seminar - Rebecca Watson

Date
Wednesday 25 March 2020
Location:
Hemsley B7
Description
*Event cancelled due to coronavirus* Rebecca Watson (Cambridge) - Blue Bible? Bringing Biblical Studies and Oceanography into Dialogue

Biblical Seminar - Marian Kelsey

Biblical Seminar - Marian Kelsey
Date
Friday 27 March 2020
Location:
C53 Humanities Building
Description
*Event cancelled due to coronavirus* Marian Kelsey (Nottingham) - The Attributes of God Between the Testaments
Displaying 1 to 13 of 13
 
Autumn 2019

Theology Research Seminar 9 October - Alison Milbank

Date
Wednesday 9 October 2019
Location:
Hemsley B7
Description
Alison Milbank, University of Nottingham - The Spirit of Nature from the Cambridge Platonists to Coleridge

Theology Research Seminar 16 October - Emily Burdett

Date
Wednesday 16 October 2019
Location:
Hemsley B7
Description
Emily Rachel Reed Burdett, University of Nottingham - The Cognitive Science of Religion

Theology Research Seminar - Tim Hutchings

Date
Monday 21 October 2019
Location:
C53 Humanities Building
Description
Tim Hutchings - '"Kill Jesus!": Imagining the Other in Christian Videogames'

Theology Research Seminar 23 October - Megan Loumagne

Date
Wednesday 23 October 2019
Location:
Hemsley B7
Description
Megan Loumagne, University of Nottingham - Inheriting Sin: Original Sin and the Extended Evolutionary Synthesis

Theology Research Seminar 30 October - Jon Hoover

Date
Wednesday 30 October 2019
Location:
Hemsley B7
Description
Jon Hoover, University of Nottingham - Ibn Taymiyya and the Spatial Extent of God

Biblical Seminar - Celia-Jayne Matthews

Biblical Seminar - Celia-Jayne Matthews
Date
Friday 1 November 2019
Location:
C53 Humanities Building
Description
Celia-Jayne Matthews - 'Using Judas: What Early Depictions of Judas Iscariot can tell us about their Authors'.

Theology Research Seminar 13 November - Eleanor McLaughlin

Date
Wednesday 13 November 2019
Location:
Hemsley B7
Description
Eleanor McLaughlin, Regents Park College, Oxford - The Limit as Grace? Bonhoeffer's Theological Anthropology and Disability Theology

Biblical Seminar - Ellena Lyell, Michael Bullock, and Sara Parks

Biblical Seminar - Ellena Lyell, Michael Bullock, and Sara Parks
Date
Friday 15 November 2019
Location:
C53 Humanities Building
Description
Ellena Lyell, Michael Bullock, and Sara Parks - Society of Biblical Literature Short Paper Previews

Biblical Seminar - Bethany Roberts

Biblical Seminar - Bethany Roberts
Date
Friday 29 November 2019
Location:
C53 Humanities Building
Description
Bethany Roberts - 'A Month in Beqaa Valley: Learning from Syrian Refugees in Lebanon'

Theology Research Seminar 4 December - Fern Elsdon-Baker

Date
Wednesday 4 December 2019
Location:
Hemsley B7
Description
Fern Elsdon-Baker, University of Birmingham - Reframing Evolution and Belief in Society
Displaying 1 to 10 of 10
 
Spring 2019
30 January


Dr Joel D.S. Rasmussen, Mansfield College, Oxford

Kant and The Conflict of the Faculties, Reconsidered

13 February


Dr Matthew R. Anderson, Concordia University, Montreal

Unsettled Pilgrimage: Walking as First Steps to Indigenous-Settler Reconciliation in Canada’s West

15 February

Dr Cat Quine, University of Nottingham

From Worshipped to Worshippers:The Host of Heaven and Developing Monotheism

27 February

Dr David Emerton, Diocese of Southwell and Nottingham

Mis-Locating the Church: Bonhoeffer and Third Article Ecclesiology

13 March

Dr Sean Ryan, University of Roehampton

Visualising the Divine Dwelling: Tent and Temple Imagery in the Apocalypse and the Venerable Bede

15 March

Dr Meredith Warren, University of Sheffield

Tasting Death: Sensory Metaphors & Other Worlds

27 March

Luke Hopper, Azhar Majoth and Arman Shokhikyan, all University of Nottingham

A medley of three papers by Postgraduate Researchers

29 March

Dr Matthew Anderson, Concordia University, Montreal

Paul and the Eschatological Pilgrimage of the Gentiles

12 April

Dr Luke Hopper, University of Nottingham

Coronation Ritual in the Hebrew Bible

 
Autumn 2018

3 October


Professor Hugh Houghton, University of Birmingham

The Old Latin Translation of the Bible: Its Sources and Significance

17 October


Professor Alec Ryrie, University of Durham

The Intended Reformation: Unbelief, the Battle for Credulity and its Consequences in the Reformation Age

31 October

Professor Jorgen Nielsen, University of Birmingham

In Europe, who is a Muslim?

7 November

Dr Livnat Holtzman, Bar-Ilan University

The Prophet and the Throne: An Anthropmorphic Tradition in the Public Sphere

14 November

Professor Richard Bell, University of Nottingham

Studying Wagner’s Pantheon of Gods in the Ring Cycle: A Way of Doing Christian Theology

28 November

Professor Michael Snape, University of Durham

Parsons and Fliers: The First World War and the Origins of RAF Chaplaincy

 
Spring 2018
7 February

Hemsley B7

Dr Erich Groat

Call It One: at the intersection of linguistics, mathematics, and theology

16 February

Humanities B53

Katrina Wilkins, University of Nottingham

Esther, Ælfric, and Character: The Bible in Anglo Saxon England

21 February

Hemsley B7

Dr Stuart Bell, Durham University and Professor Tom O'Loughlin, University of Nottingham

From Messines Ridge to Moltmann: Studdert Kennedy and a Suffering God after a century

2 March

Humanities C53

Jonny Rowlands, University of Nottingham

Reception History and the Future of New Testament Studies

7 March

Hemsley B7

Dr Matthew Novenson, University of Edinburgh

Whoever thought that a person is justified by works of the law? An ancient idea in search of a proponent

16 March

Humanities C53

Tim Murray

The New Testament and the Welfare State

21 March

Hemsley B7

Dr Mary Cunningham, University of Nottingham

"Garden without Seed": The Virginal Body of Mary, the Theotokos, in the Eastern Christian Tradition

25 April

Hemsley B7

Lavinia Cerioni

Christological Observations on Logion 114 of the Gospel of Thomas

Yulia Rozumna

Were St Basil's Words a "Betrayal of Faith" concerning the Holy Spirit? His ways of arguing for the Divinity of the Spirit 

 
Autumn 2017
4 October                                     
Lenton Grove A18

Dr David Gehring, University of Nottingham

Lutheranism in Elizabethan England

18 October
Hemsley B7

Dr Richard Todd, University of Birmingham 

Contrasting approaches to scriptural anthropomorphism in medieval Islam: from Ibn Furak’s Ash’ari theology to Sadr al-Din al-Qunawi’s Sufi hermeneutics

1 November
Hemsley B7

Dr David Shepherd, Trinity College Dublin 

Blessed are the peacemakers: the depiction of Jesus in American and German cinema before and after the Great War

15 November
Humanities A3

Dr Simeon Zahl, University of Nottingham

Devices and Desires: Affect Theory and the Plausibility of Sin in Late Modernity

29 November  
Humanities A3

Professor James Crossley, St Mary’s University, Twickenham

The Bible and Religion in English Political Discourse: Has anything changed?

 
Spring 2017
 
8 February

Professor Todd Landman, Pro-vice chancellor, University of Nottingham 

Rigorous Morality: What states ought and ought not do to the (non-)citizens

22 February

Professor Susan Docherty, Newman University, Birmingham 

Rewriting the Exodus Narratives in a Hellenistic Context: A Model for Cultural and Religious Integration?

8 March

Dr Doug Ingram, University of Nottingham 

What’s “good” in Ecclesiastes?

22 March

Dr Peter Darby, University of Nottingham

 

Prefatory Texts and Prefatory Images in the Codex Amiatinus

5 April

Revd Karen Gardiner, University of Nottingham

Alice’s Adventures in Eternity

and

Revd Gabrielle Thomas, University of Nottingham

 

Gregory Nazianzen: Interpreting the Human Eikon of God Literally as a Physical Bearer of God’s Presence

 
Spring 2016 
 
27 January
NB: B2, Hemsley

Professor George Pattison, School of Critical Studies, University of Glasgow

Oblivion, Memory and Hope: Rethinking the Eternal

10 February

Dr Alison Milbank, Department of Theology, University of Nottingham

Reformation Anthropology and the Gothic Double/Doppelgänger

2 March

Dr Jonathan Tallant, Department of Philosophy, University of Nottingham

The Varieties of Presentism: An Opinionated Introduction to Some Issues in the Philosophy of Time

16 March

Professor Joachim Schaper, School of Divinity, History and Philosophy, University of Aberdeen

Monotheism, violence, and the "better angels of our nature”

20 April

Dr Rob Lutton, Department of History, University of Nottingham

Charisma and Routinization in the Cult of the Holy Name of Jesus in Late medieval England

 
Autumn 2015
14 October

Professor Alan Ford (Department of Theology and Religious Studies, University of Nottingham):

‘Love God and hate the Pope’: the Church of Ireland and anti-Catholicism, 1600-2000

28 October

Dr Chrysanthi Gallou (Assistant Prof in Aegean Archaeology, Co-Director of the Centre for Spartan & Peloponnesian Studies, Department of Archaeology, University of Nottingham):

Mycenaean skulls: “feeble heads” or social actors in Aegean Late Bronze Age metaphysics and society (16th-12th c. BC)?

11 November

The Revd Professor David Brown (Institute for Theology, Imagination & the Arts, St Mary's College, University of St Andrews):

Revelation that goes beyond the strictly historical: three contemporary approaches assessed.

25 November
NB: Humanities Building A3, 4pm

Reverend Robin Griffith-Jones (Master of the Temple, Temple Church, London and Senior Lecturer in New Testament Studies, King’s College London):

Magna Carta: Archbishop Langton and the Church’s Finest Hour?

2 December

Dr David Firth (Old Testament Tutor and Head of Research, St John’s College, Nottingham):

Aren’t the Canaanites all destroyed? Inclusion of Canaanites and Exclusion of Israelites in Joshua

 
Spring 2015 
14 January B7

Professor Judith Lieu, Lady Margaret’s Professor of Divinity (University of Cambridge)
In Search of Marcion

 
18 February B7

Professor Jan Joosten, Regius Professor of Hebrew (University of Oxford)
Biblical Rhetoric: A Trial Cut. Judah's Speech in Genesis 44:18-34

 
4 March
B7

Dr Douglas Hedley, Reader in Hermeneutics and Metaphysics, Faculty of Divinity (University of Cambridge)
Image and Imagination: The Problem of Idolatry

 
13 March
B2

Dr Paul Tyson, Honorary Fellow of the Centre of Theology and Philosophy (University of Nottingham)
Kierkegaard; A Christian Platonist for the Present Age

 
25 March
B2

Dr Andrew Davison, Starbridge Lecturer in Theology and Natural Sciences, Faculty of Divinity (University of Cambridge)
Recalling Causes: Retrieving Formal and Material Causation

 
8 May
A01,
Highfields House3-5pm 

Special seminar on Interreligious Dialogue in association with the International Rosenzweig Society.

  • Prof Ephraim Meir (Bar Ilan University)
    Franz Rosenzweig in the Perspective of Interreligious Theology
  • Prof Hans-Christoph Askani (University of Geneva)
    Rosenzweig’s and Buber’s Dialogical Thinking and the Dialogue between Religions

Moderated by Prof Robert Gibbs (University of Toronto) and Prof Agata Bielik-Robson (University of Nottingham)

 
20 May
B7

Professor Salvador Ryan, Professor of Ecclesiastical History, Faculty of Theology (St Patrick's College, Maynooth)
Theologies of Christ's Passion and Death in the Religious Verse of Irish Bardic Poets

 
10 June
B7

Professor Anthony Milton, Department of History (University of Sheffield)
England's Second Reformation

 
 
Autumn 2014
15 October
Lenton Grove B13, 4pm

Dr Jon Hoover (University of Nottingham)
Is Ibn Taymiyya’s theology corporealist?

7 November
Humanities Building A2, 4.30pm
Dr Antoine Arjakovsky (Co-director of the Society-Freedom-Peace research group at the Collège des Bernardins, Paris)
Russia-Ukraine: Theology and Politics
 
19 November 
Hemsley B7, 4pm

Dr Petra Carlsson Redell (University of Uppsala)
Foucault, Manet and the invisible

3 December 
Hemsley B7, 4pm

Professor Neil Messer (University of Winchester)
Neuroscience, Moral Reasoning and the Theological Suspicion of Ethics
 
Spring 2014
2 Jan 2014

Professor Peter Marshall (University of Warwick)
After Purgatory: Death and Remembrance in the Reformation World

12 Feb 2014 Professor Neil Messer (University of Winchester)
Neuroscience, Moral Reasoning and the Theological Suspicion of Ethics 
 
19 Mar 2014

Professor Karl-Wilhelm Niebuhr (University of Jena)
Which Jesus are we preaching about? Some considerations following Martin Kähler

21 May 2014 Professor Agata-Bielik Robson (University of Nottingham)

Philosophical Marranos: Open Idiom and Secret Meaning in Modern Jewish Philosophy

4 June 2014 Dr Andreas Andreopoulos (University of Winchester)

A liturgical Reading of Dionysios the Areopagite

 

 

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