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First Carinthian Workshop on Topics from Early Modern Philosophy to Kant ( Alpen-Adria-Universität Klagenfurt, September 18–19, 2015)

We are pleased to announce the First Carinthian Workshop on Topics from Early Modern Philosophy to Kant, that will be held at Alpen-Adria-Universität Klagenfurt on September 18th-19th 2015.

First Carinthian Workshop on Topics from Early Modern Philosophy to Kant: Cognition, Self-Knowledge and the Self

Alpen-Adria-Universität Klagenfurt, Austria, September 18 – 19, 2015

Supported by the research council of the Alpen-Adria-Universität Klagenfurt with sponsoring provided by Privatstiftung Kärntner Sparkasse.

Keynote speakers:

Eric Watkins, UCSD
Christian Barth, HU Berlin

Schedule:

  • Friday September 18, 2015, Room I. 1. 44

Session 1:

9.00-10.15

Olivér István Tóth, Eotvos-Lorand-University Budapest and Ernst-Mach-Fellow at the Alpen-Adria-Universität Klagenfurt: The epistemic foundations of Spinoza’s theory of consciousness

10.30-12.00

Julia Borcherding, Yale University: The Nature of Things and the Nature of Mind: Leibniz on Self-Knowledge as a Source of Metaphysical Insight

12.00-13.15

First keynote speaker: Christian Barth, Humboldt University Berlin: Inner Sentiment and Self-Knowledge in Leibniz

Session 2

14.15-15.30

Martin Lenz, University of Groningen: Language and Cognition in Locke

15.45-17.00

Dávid Bartha, Central European University Budapest: Berkeley on Self-Experience

Friday Evening, conference dinner sponsored by the History of Philosophy Book Prize 2011

  •  Saturday, September 19, 2015, Room I. 1. 44

Session 3

9.30-10.45

Tamar Levanon, Bar-Ilan University Ramat Gan: Reid on the Duration of the Self

11.00-12.15

Second Keynote Speaker: Eric Watkins, UC San Diego: Knowledge and Cognition in Kant

Session 4

13.30-14-45

Bernhard Ritter, University of Klagenfurt: The Subject in Kant’s Refutation of Idealism

15.00-16.15

Giuseppe Motta, Universität Graz: „Was Objektive Einheit des Selbstbewusstseins sei“. A Structural Analysis of § 18: Critique of the Pure Reason, B 139-140.v

NO REGISTRATION NEEDED

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