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Part 3: If Physicalism Won't Work, What is the Alternative?

Series
A Romp Through the Philosophy of Mind
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Marianne Talbot presents the third of five episodes of the Romp through the Philosophy of Mind, on alternatives to Physicalism.
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Episode Information

Series
A Romp Through the Philosophy of Mind
People
Marianne Talbot
Keywords
philosophy
mind
psychology
Department: Department for Continuing Education
Date Added: 07/02/2012
Duration: 01:07:44

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Part 2: Non-Reductive Physicalisms and the Problems they Face

Series
A Romp Through the Philosophy of Mind
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Slides to accompany Marianne Talbot's second of five episodes of the Romp through the Philosophy of Mind, on Non-Reductive Physicalisms and the problems they face.
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Creative Commons Attribution-Non-Commercial-Share Alike 2.0 UK (BY-NC-SA): England & Wales; https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/2.0/uk/

Episode Information

Series
A Romp Through the Philosophy of Mind
People
Marianne Talbot
Keywords
philosophy
mind
psychology
Department: Department for Continuing Education
Date Added: 07/02/2012
Duration: 01:31:45

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Part 1: Identity Theory and Why it Won't Work

Series
A Romp Through the Philosophy of Mind
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Marianne Talbot presents the first of five episodes of the Romp through the Philosophy of Mind, on Identity Theory and why it won't work.
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Creative Commons Attribution-Non-Commercial-Share Alike 2.0 UK (BY-NC-SA): England & Wales; https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/2.0/uk/

Episode Information

Series
A Romp Through the Philosophy of Mind
People
Marianne Talbot
Keywords
philosophy
mind
psychology
Department: Department for Continuing Education
Date Added: 07/02/2012
Duration: 01:30:32

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A Romp Through the Philosophy of Mind

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A Romp Through the Philosophy of Mind
The mind is a fascinating entity. Where, after all, would we be without it? But what exactly is it? These days many people believe the mind simply is the brain. Descartes would have disagreed profoundly. He recommended a dualism of substance. Modern philosophers are again finding various forms of dualism attractive because the problems with physicalism are so intractable. One such problem is whether the mind, like the brain, is located in space (specifically inside the head). But does philosophy have anything sensible to say about the mind? Surely today it is scientists we should be listening to? Come and find out why this is – and always will be – false.

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J.M. Coetzee

Series
Great Writers Inspire
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Professor Peter McDonald gives a talk on the work of South African Nobel Laureate, J.M. Coetzee.
Professor McDonald sets out the various less-than-great guises of the writer in Coetzee's fiction. He goes on to consider passages from Foe (1986) and Disgrace (1999) to highlight Coetzee's linguistic disruptiveness that might be considered traits of postmodern or post-colonial writing. In these close readings, Professor McDonald demonstrates how in just a few words, we can see that J.M. Coetzee is a great writer.
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Episode Information

Series
Great Writers Inspire
People
Peter McDonald
Keywords
Neo-Colonialism
Coetzee
#greatwriters
literature
south africa
Department: Faculty of English Language and Literature
Date Added: 07/02/2012
Duration: 00:12:57

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Olive Schreiner

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Great Writers Inspire
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Professor Elleke Boehmer gives a talk on Olive Schreiner (1855-1920), the South African novelist, pioneering feminist, and anti-imperialist polemicist.
For Boehmer, Schreiner is not 'great' in the conventional sense (she did not possess the great literary brain of George Eliot, for example), but she is a great inspiration in many spheres: she influenced other writers (fellow South African J.M. Coetzee, in particular); other critical thinkers and activists (including John A. Hobson and Vladimir Lenin); and general trends in feminism, gender studies, and postcolonialism. As Boehmer explains, Schreiner's greatness is to be found in her flaws and failures. Under the pseudonym 'Ralph Iron', Schreiner published one critically acclaimed book - The Story of an African Farm (1883) - and was highly praised in London literary circles. However, she failed to publish any more novels; she wrote two draft manuscripts but was never completely satisfied with them, so never sought publication. Schreiner suffered writer's block and several episodes of illness (both physical and psychosomatic). These struggles produced inspiring, yet never fully formed, treatises on South Africa, racism, imperialism, capitalism, gender, and other material and power relations. Indeed, it is Schreiner's struggles - her constant revisions and enduring attempts to give a formative shape to the world - which make her the embodiment of modern life, of a world in constant flux. She was a Modernist ahead of time. Schreiner died in 1920, two years before one of the most significant years for Modernist literature (1922 saw the publication of James Joyce's 'Ulysses', T.S. Eliot's 'The Waste Land', and Virginia Woolf's 'Jacob's Room'), but her innovative attempts to change the way the world was perceived make her a truly Modern writer. Boehmer ends her talk with a brief insight into Schreiner's biography and work. Schreiner was brought up by missionary parents but went on to denounce religion. She worked as a governess, before moving to the UK to begin (but never complete) medical school. Her choice of reading matter was varied, but she was particularly taken with J. S. Mill and Ralph Waldo Emerson. Finally, Boehmer reads a couple of extracts from The Story of an African Farm, asking us to pay particular attention to the masterful ways in which Schreiner gives aesthetic form to her native South Africa through shifting between macrocosm and microcosm, between the country itself and detailed descriptions of single flowers.
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Episode Information

Series
Great Writers Inspire
People
Elleke Boehmer
Keywords
#greatwriters
literature
Olive Schreiner
Department: Faculty of English Language and Literature
Date Added: 07/02/2012
Duration: 00:11:21

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Katherine Mansfield and Rhythm Magazine

Series
Great Writers Inspire
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Dr Faith Binckes explains why modernist short story writer and critic Katherine Mansfield (1888-1923) is a great writer, highlighting her involvement with the 1911-1913 periodical Rhythm, edited by her second husband John Middleton Murry.
Dr Binckes discusses how three stories from 1912 - 'The Woman at the Store', 'How Pearl Button Was Kidnapped', and 'Sunday Lunch' - illustrate different facets of Mansfield's writing. Though she has in the past been considered a domestic writer of women's and children's concerns, these earlier versions of stories play with a colonial New Zealand setting (later written out), deal with fairytale and race, and poke fun at the London literati, respectively. Katherine Mansfield was originally from New Zealand but came to London in 1903. She was a prolific story writer, whose talent made Virginia Woolf envious. Mansfield's two best known collections are Bliss and Other Stories (1920) and The Garden Party and Other Stories (1922). Mansfield died in January, 1923 of pulmonary tuberculosis. Dr Binckes' podcast focuses on Mansfield's early involvement with Rhythm, which she wrote for under a number of pseudonyms, supported financially, and edited. Dr. Binckes discusses how three stories from 1912 - 'The Woman at the Store', 'How Pearl Button Was Kidnapped', and 'Sunday Lunch' - illustrate different facets of Mansfield's writing. Though she has in the past often been considered a domestic writer of women's and children's concerns, these earlier versions of stories play with a colonial New Zealand setting, deal with fairytale and race, and poke fun at the London literati, respectively. Mansfield's use of New Zealand is especially interesting in these early stories, as these details were often written out when the stories were published in book form. The periodical versions thus allow the reader to experience Mansfield's original intentions for her stories.
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Episode Information

Series
Great Writers Inspire
People
Faith Binckes
Keywords
#greatwriters
Rhythm Magazine
poetry
modernism
literature
Katherine Mansfield
Department: Faculty of English Language and Literature
Date Added: 07/02/2012
Duration: 00:20:28

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George Eliot - A Very Large Brain

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Great Writers Inspire
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Dr Catherine Brown gives a talk on George Eliot and her influences.
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Episode Information

Series
Great Writers Inspire
People
Catherine Brown
Keywords
George Eliot
#greatwriters
literature
Department: Faculty of English Language and Literature
Date Added: 07/02/2012
Duration: 00:11:08

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William Blake

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Great Writers Inspire
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Dr David Fallon introduces the poetry, painting, and engraving of William Blake, focusing on the imaginative and visionary aspects of Blake's work and his desire to break the publics 'mind-forg'd manacles'.
Dr Fallon also highlights Blake's exposure to the political radicalism of the 1780s and 90s through his work as an engraver for the Unitarian publisher Joseph Johnson. Blake's unorthodox Christianity led him to challenge conventional notions of good and evil in his visionary 'The Marriage of Heaven and Hell', in which dynamic energy is praised. Blake is best known for his Songs of Innocence and Experience and 'The Marriage of Heaven and Hell'. Dr Fallon highlights Blake's exposure to enlightenment thinking and the political radicalism of the 1780s and 90s through his work as an engraver for the Unitarian publisher Joseph Johnson. Johnson published works by Joseph Priestley (Unitarian minister and discoverer of oxygen), ground-breaking feminist Mary Wollstonecraft, and Erasmus Darwin (grandfather to Charles Darwin), among others. Blake's unorthodox Christianity led him to challenge conventional notions of good and evil in his visionary 'The Marriage of Heaven and Hell' (1790-93), in which dynamic energy is praised above all else. In the poem, Blake famously wrote 'The reason Milton wrote in fetters when he wrote of Angels and God, and at liberty when of Devils and Hell, is because he was a true Poet and of the Devils party without knowing it.'
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Episode Information

Series
Great Writers Inspire
People
David Fallon
Keywords
William Blake
#greatwriters
poetry
literature
Songs of Innocence and Experience
Department: Faculty of English Language and Literature
Date Added: 07/02/2012
Duration: 00:12:28

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18th Century Labouring Class Poetry

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Great Writers Inspire
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Dr Jennifer Batt gives a talk on Stephen Duck, one of the 18th Century labouring-class poets.
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Episode Information

Series
Great Writers Inspire
People
Jennifer Batt
Keywords
#greatwriters
poetry
stephen duck
literature
labouring classes
working class
Department: Faculty of English Language and Literature
Date Added: 07/02/2012
Duration: 00:10:28

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