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APA Central Division 2017 Meeting Program PDF

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The American Philosophical Association CENTRAL DIVISION O N E H U N D R E D F O U R T E E N T H A N N UA L M E E T I N G P RO G R A M SHERATON KANSAS CITY HOTEL AT CROWN CENTER KANSAS CITY, MISSOURI MARCH 1 – 4, 2017 CoNfuCiaNism aNd ameriCaN PHilosoPHy Mathew A. Foust tHe good is oNe, its maNifestatioNs maNy Confucian essays on metaphysics, eNCouNters morals, rituals, institutions, of miNd and genders luminosity and Robert Cummings Neville Personhood in indian and uNderstaNdiNg tHe Chinese thought ANAleCTS of CoNfuCius Douglas l. Berger a New translation of lunyu with annotations Peimin Ni PaNel sessioN: Personalist discussion group: Plato’s STATeSMAN douglas l. Berger, illumination dialectic, myth, and Politics and Person in indian and John Sallis, editor Chinese Philosophy thursday, march 2  5:30–7:30 pm eNtaNglemeNts a system of Philosophy Neo-CoNfuCiaN Crispin Sartwell eCologiCal HumaNism an interpretive engagement with CeNteriNg aNd Wang fuzhi (1619–1692) exteNdiNg Nicholas S. Brasovan an essay on available in may metaphysical sense Steven G. Smith Just War aNd HumaN rigHts edgar allaN Poe, fighting with right intention euReKA, Todd Burkhardt aNd sCieNtifiC imagiNatioN ZHuaNgZi’s Critique David N. Stamos of tHe CoNfuCiaNs Blinded by the Human Kim-chong Chong tHe extraordiNary iN tHe ordiNary seven types of everyday miracle Donald A. Crosby Mention coupon code ZaPC17 and receive a 20% discount on all pb WHiteHead’s and a 40% discount on all hc only. religious tHougHt Offer good until 4/4/17 from mechanism to organism, Order online: www.sunypress.edu or from force to Persuasion by phone: 877.204.6073 / 703.661.1575 Daniel A. Dombrowski IMPORTANT NOTICES FOR MEETING ATTENDEES SESSION LOCATIONS Please note: this online version of the program does not include session locations. The locations of all individual sessions will be included in the paper program that you will receive when you pick up your registration materials at the meeting as well as in the meeting app beginning the first day of the meeting. IMPORTANT INFORMATION ABOUT REGISTRATION Online registration at www.apaonline.org will be available up to and including the time of the meeting itself, but please note that the advance registration rates end at 8:00 p.m. Eastern Time on Wednesday, February 15, 2017. Please note: it costs significantly less to register in advance than to register at the meeting. Registration fees provide the major source of support for every divisional meeting. Without that income, the APA is unable to host meetings and provide quality services and resources to members. Thank you for your support and cooperation. 1 SPECIAL EVENTS EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE MEETING Wednesday, March 1, Noon–2:00 p.m. PRIZE RECEPTION Thursday, March 2, 5:30–7:30 p.m. RECEPTION Thursday, March 2, 9:00 p.m.–midnight BUSINESS MEETING Friday, March 3, Noon–1:00 p.m. PRESIDENTIAL ADDRESS Friday, March 3, 4:30–5:45 p.m. PRESIDENTIAL ADDRESS RECEPTION Friday, March 3, 5:45–6:45 p.m. PRESIDENTIAL RECEPTION Friday, March 3, 8:30 p.m.–midnight APA MENTORING THE MENTORS WORKSHOP Saturday, March 4, 9:30 a.m.–6:00 p.m. 2 Wednesday Afternoon, 2:00–5:00 p.m. WEDNESDAY, MARCH 1 REGISTRATION 1:00–8:00 p.m., Terrace (mezzanine level) PLACEMENT INFORMATION 1:00–8:00 p.m., Terrace (mezzanine level) EXHIBITS 1:00–8:00 p.m., Terrace (mezzanine level) EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE MEETING Noon–2:00 p.m., Van Horn C (mezzanine level) WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON, 2:00–5:00 P.M. MAIN PROGRAM SESSIONS I-A. Invited Symposium: Feminist Critique of the Libertarian Ideal of Self-Ownership Chair: Karen E. Stohr (Georgetown University) Speaker: Ann E. Cudd (Boston University) “Feminist Critique of Libertarian Self-Ownership” Commentators: Peter Vallentyne (University of Missouri–Columbia) Charlotte Witt (University of New Hampshire) Andrea Westlund (University of Wisconsin– Milwaukee) I-B. Author Meets Critics: Jeffrey Speaks, The Phenomenal and the Representational Chair: Colin McLear (University of Nebraska) Critics: Adam Pautz (Brown University) Casey O’Callaghan (Washington University in St. Louis) Janet Levin (University of Southern California) Response: Jeffrey Speaks (University of Notre Dame) I-C. Invited Symposium: Alternative Epistemologies Chair: Melissa M. Kozma (University of Wisconsin Colleges) Speakers: Andrea Pitts (University of North Carolina at Charlotte) Gaile Pohlhaus, Jr. (Miami University) Kristie Dotson (Michigan State University) 3 Wednesday Afternoon, 2:00–5:00 p.m. (cont.) I-D. Invited Symposium: Persons and Their Selves Chair: Daniel R. Kelly (Purdue University) Speakers: Jenann Ismael (University of Arizona) Title TBA Don Ross (University College Cork) Title TBA Marya Schechtman (University of Illinois at Chicago) “From Many One: Persons, Selves, and a Strange Kind of Unity” I-E. Invited Symposium: Teleology and Reason Chair: Kathryn Lindeman (Saint Louis University) Speakers: Rachel E. Zuckert (Northwestern University) E. Sonny Elizondo (University of California, Santa Barbara) Commentator: Jeremy Schwartz (Texas Tech University) I-F. Author Meets Critics: José Zalabardo, Representation and Reality in Wittgenstein’s Tractatus Chair: Peter W. Hanks (University of Minnesota–Twin Cities) Critics: Michael Kremer (University of Chicago) Ian Proops (University of Texas at Austin) Response: José Zalabardo (University College London) I-G. Author Meets Critics: Justin Smith, Nature, Human Nature, and Human Difference: Race in Early Modern Philosophy Chair: Julia Jorati (Ohio State University) Critics: Koffi Maglo (University of Cincinnati) Magali Bessone (Université de Rennes) Lucy Allais (University of California, San Diego) Response: Justin Smith (Université Paris Diderot) I-H. Colloquium: Circularity, Closure, and Meno Problems Chair: Sharon Mason (University of Central Arkansas) 2:00–3:00 p.m. “Tame and Vicious Circularity” **Graduate student travel stipend recipient** Speaker: Everett C. Fulmer (Saint Louis University) Commentator: Ted Parent (Virginia Tech) 3:00–4:00 p.m. “Contrastivist Closure” Speaker: Pamela Robinson (Rutgers University) Commentator: Richard N. Manning (University of South Florida) 4:00–5:00 p.m. “The Other Value Problem for Knowledge” Speaker: Kenneth A. Boyd (University of Toronto) Commentator: Irena Cronin (University of California, Los Angeles) 4 Wednesday Evening, 5:00–7:00 p.m. I-I. Colloquium: Moral Obligation Chair: Susan Castro (Wichita State University) 3:00–4:00 p.m. “Refusing to Take Up the Slack” Speaker: Sameer Bajaj (University of Arizona) Commentator: Paul Hurley (Claremont McKenna College) 4:00–5:00 p.m. “The All Or Nothing Problem” **Graduate student travel stipend recipient** Speaker: Joe Horton (University of Southern California) Commentator: Rebecca Stangl (University of Virginia) 5:00–6:00 p.m. “Skepticism about Associative Obligation” Speaker: Ryan Davis (Brigham Young University) Commentator: Victoria I. Burke (University of Guelph) This session will run from 3:00 to 6:00 p.m. I-J. APA Committee Session: At Risk Departments: Learning from Experience Arranged by the APA Committee on the Status and Future of the Profession Chair: Peter Graham (University of California, Riverside) Speakers: Gordon L. Pettit (Western Illinois University) “How to Respond When Your Philosophy Program Is Threatened” David Beisecker (University of Nevada–Las Vegas) “Notes from a Department That Survived the Existential Crisis” Laura Bernhardt (Buena Vista University) “Exile in Old Main: Prioritization, Program Elimination, and Philosophy” WEDNESDAY EVENING, 5:00–7:00 P.M. MAIN PROGRAM SESSIONS II-A. Submitted Symposium: Explaining Moral Testimony: A Different Appeal to Understanding Chair: Stephen R. Grimm (Fordham University) Speaker: Laura Callahan (Rutgers University) “Explaining Moral Testimony: A Different Appeal to Understanding” **Graduate student travel stipend recipient** Commentators: Peter Graham (University of California, Riverside) Regina Rini (New York University) 5 Wednesday Evening, 5:00–7:00 p.m. (cont.) II-B. Submitted Symposium: On the Old Saw That ‘Supervenience Is Not an Explanatory Relation’ Chair: Jennifer McKitrick (University of Nebraska–Lincoln) Speaker: David Mark Kovacs (Bilkent University) Commentator: Terence Horgan (University of Arizona) II-C. Submitted Symposium: Denoting and Disquoting Chair: Adrian Switzer (University of Missouri, Kansas City) Speaker: Michael Rieppel (Syracuse University) Commentator: Devin Frank (Fort Lewis College) II-D. Submitted Symposium: How to Defend the Phenomenology of Attitudes Chair: Steven Wagner (University of Illinois at Urbana- Champaign) Speaker: Jared Peterson (Northwestern University) Commentator: Andrew Melnyk (University of Missouri) II-E. Colloquium: Practical Reason Chair: Fritz J. McDonald (Oakland University) 5:00–6:00 p.m. “Practical Deliberation and Background Conditions on Normative Reasons for Action” Speaker: Rachel Johnson (Trinity University) Commentator: Ting Cho Lau (University of Notre Dame) 6:00–7:00 p.m. “Expressivism as Quasi-defeasible Internalism” Speaker: William Bell (University of Missouri–St. Louis) Commentator: Camil Golub (New York University) II-F. Colloquium: Formal Epistemology Chair: Julia Staffel (Washington University in St. Louis) 5:00–6:00 p.m. “The Brier Score, Misleading Evidence, and Versimilitude” Speaker: Jeffrey S. Dunn (DePauw University) Commentator: Jennifer Jhun (Lake Forest College) 6:00–7:00 p.m. “Credal Omniscience and Relevance Confirmation” Speaker: Joel Pust (University of Delaware) Commentator: Konstantin Genin (Carnegie Mellon University) 6 Wednesday Evening, 7:00–10:00 p.m. II-G. Colloquium: Shared Agency Chair: Andrea Westlund (University of Wisconsin– Milwaukee) 5:00–6:00 p.m. “Can the Master and Slave Work Together?” **Graduate student travel stipend recipient** Speaker: Allison Massof (Ohio State University) Commentator: Randall Harp (University of Vermont) 6:00–7:00 p.m. “Unplanned Shared Agency” Speaker: David K. Chan (University of Wisconsin–Stevens Point) Commentator: Caroline Arruda (University of Texas at El Paso) II-H. Colloquium: Quine and His Quiddities Chair: Daniel Z. Korman (University of Illinois) 5:00–6:00 p.m. “Accounting for Quine’s Robust Realism” **Graduate student travel stipend recipient** Speaker: Paul Goldberg (Boston University) Commentator: Paul Gregory (Washington and Lee University) 6:00–7:00 p.m. “Caring for Quine’s Don’t Cares” Speaker: James Pearson (Bridgewater State University) Commentator: Matt Carlson (Wabash College) II-I. APA Committee Session: Professional Development Workshop for Black Doctoral Students Arranged by the APA Committee on the Status of Black Philosophers Session details TBA. WEDNESDAY EVENING, 7:00–10:00 P.M. GROUP PROGRAM SESSIONS GI-1. American Society for Political and Legal Philosophy Topic: Political Legitimacy I Speaker: Anna Stilitz (Princeton University) Commentators: Ekow Yankah (Cardozo Law School) Jonathan Quong (University of Southern California) 7 Wednesday Evening, 7:00–10:00 p.m. (cont.) GI-2. North American Spinoza Society Speakers: Idit Dobbs-Weinstein (Vanderbilt University) Title TBA Ursula Goldenbaum (Emory University) “Leibniz and Spinoza on Common Ground about Faith as the Genuine Basis of Religion” Jack Stetter (Université Paris 8) “In What Sense is Spinoza’s Free Man Religious?” Rodolfo Garau (Max-Planck-Institute and University of Pennsylvania) “Spinoza’s Anti-Anthropocentric Idea of Divine Providence” GI-3. Society for the Advancement of American Philosophy Speakers: Sheron Fraser-Burgess (Ball State University) “Neo-liberalism, Black Rage, and White Identity Convergence: Can Deweyan Social Inquiry Help?” Marilyn Fischer (University of Dayton) “Addams’s Analysis of Political Corruption” Commentator: Steven A. Miller (Ripon College) GI-4. Philosophy of Time Society Chair: Adrian Bardon (Wake Forest University) Speakers: Sayid Bnefsi (Northern Illinois University) “Do Ontologies of Time Have Rational Significance? Yes” Travis Matthew Figg (Wayne State University) “How to Understand Presentism” Nicholas Rimell (University of Virginia) “Persistence on the Edge” GI-5. Society for the Study of the History of Analytical Philosophy Topic: Women and Minorities in the History of Analytical Philosophy Chair: Marcus Rossberg (University of Connecticut) Speakers: Molly Kao (University of Montreal) “Janina Hosiasson-Lindenbaum” Aude Bandini (Université de Montréal) “Hector-Neri Castañeda: On Returning What One Received” Teresa Kouri (Ohio State University) “Susan Stebbing and Common Sense Metaphysics” 8

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Chair: Daniel R. Kelly (Purdue University) . Colloquium: Quine and His Quiddities 5:00–6:00 p.m. “Accounting for Quine's Robust Realism”.
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