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Public Lecture by Miranda Fricker on “Explaining Forgiveness”

10 December 2014 @ 11:00 - 12:00

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Department of Philosophy, Tilburg Center for Logic, General Ethics and Philosophy of Science (TiLPS), Tilburg University, The Netherlands December 9, 10h-18 (workshop) Dante Building, Room DZ 4 and December 10, 11.00h (public lecture) Dante Building, Room DZ 7 Keynote Speaker: Miranda Fricker (Sheffield University) Commentators: Boudewijn de Bruin (University of Groningen) Kathryn Brown (Tilburg University) Silvia Ivani (TiLPS, Tilburg University) Alan Thomas (TiLPS, Tilburg University) Machteld Geuskens (TiLPS, Tilburg University) Organizer: Hanno Sauer (TiLPS, Tilburg University) Traditional theories of social…
Department of Philosophy,
Tilburg Center for Logic, General Ethics and Philosophy of Science (TiLPS),
Tilburg University, The Netherlands
December 9, 10h-18 (workshop)
Dante Building, Room DZ 4
and
December 10, 11.00h (public lecture)
Dante Building, Room DZ 7
Keynote Speaker:
Miranda Fricker (Sheffield University)
Commentators:
Boudewijn de Bruin (University of Groningen)
Kathryn Brown (Tilburg University)
Silvia Ivani (TiLPS, Tilburg University)
Alan Thomas (TiLPS, Tilburg University)
Machteld Geuskens (TiLPS, Tilburg University)
Organizer:
Hanno Sauer (TiLPS, Tilburg University)
Traditional theories of social justice focus on the distribution of
goods and resources and the institutional framework determining this
distribution. In her groundbreaking book “Epistemic Injustice. Power &
The Ethics of Knowing” (OUP 2009), Miranda Fricker (Sheffield) argues
that such theories suffer from a characteristic blind spot: they
overlook the fact that there are some injustices which affect subjects
specifically as subjects of knowledge. Some people are excluded from the
flow of information, whilst some groups are, by default, distrusted in
their capacity to give reliable testimony. This workshop aims to discuss
the important topic of epistemic injustice and to develop an assessment
of its merits for issues in epistemology and political philosophy.
Everybody is cordially invited to attend the workshop and the public
lecture. Registration is free of charge, but participants are requested
to send an email to h.c.sauer@uvt.nl.
 

Details

Date:
10 December 2014
Time:
11:00 - 12:00
Cost:
Event Categories:
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Website:

Organizer

Hanno Sauer
Phone
Email
h.c.sauer@uvt.nl
View Organizer Website
Department of Philosophy,
Tilburg Center for Logic, General Ethics and Philosophy of Science (TiLPS),
Tilburg University, The Netherlands
December 9, 10h-18 (workshop)
Dante Building, Room DZ 4
and
December 10, 11.00h (public lecture)
Dante Building, Room DZ 7
Keynote Speaker:
Miranda Fricker (Sheffield University)
Commentators:
Boudewijn de Bruin (University of Groningen)
Kathryn Brown (Tilburg University)
Silvia Ivani (TiLPS, Tilburg University)
Alan Thomas (TiLPS, Tilburg University)
Machteld Geuskens (TiLPS, Tilburg University)
Organizer:
Hanno Sauer (TiLPS, Tilburg University)
Traditional theories of social justice focus on the distribution of
goods and resources and the institutional framework determining this
distribution. In her groundbreaking book “Epistemic Injustice. Power &
The Ethics of Knowing” (OUP 2009), Miranda Fricker (Sheffield) argues
that such theories suffer from a characteristic blind spot: they
overlook the fact that there are some injustices which affect subjects
specifically as subjects of knowledge. Some people are excluded from the
flow of information, whilst some groups are, by default, distrusted in
their capacity to give reliable testimony. This workshop aims to discuss
the important topic of epistemic injustice and to develop an assessment
of its merits for issues in epistemology and political philosophy.
Everybody is cordially invited to attend the workshop and the public
lecture. Registration is free of charge, but participants are requested
to send an email to h.c.sauer@uvt.nl.

 

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The OZSW event calendar lists academic philosophy events organized by/at Dutch universities, and is offered by the OZSW as a service to the research community. Please check the event in question – through their website or organizer – to find out if you could participate and whether registration is required. Obviously we carry no responsibility for non-OZSW events.