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Moral Development and Self-Knowledge in Aristotle

Series
Power Structuralism in Ancient Ontologies
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Steve Makin, (Sheffield) gives a talk for the Power Structualism in Ancient Ontologies podcast series
Abstract: Aristotle emphasises the role of habituation in our acquiring moral virtues, as well as other abilities. I discuss an independently engaging problem concerning the acquisition of abilities through practice, formulated in the context of Aristotle’s account of virtue development. The problem consists in a tension between two plausible claims, one [A] concerning what is required for an agent to be acting on a decision, the other [B] concerning the view a novice should have of whether they could ever possible be making the decisions required for moral development. I recommend a solution: the self-blind novice response. That solution implies that self-blindness should be pervasive among Aristotelian moral developers. And that implication is confirmed by the fact that the necessarily rare state of self-aware expertise is an important part of the Aristotelian virtue of magnanimity.
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Episode Information

Series
Power Structuralism in Ancient Ontologies
People
Steve Makin
Keywords
philosophy
aristotle
ethics
morality
Department: Faculty of Philosophy
Date Added: 13/02/2014
Duration: 00:48:19

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Freedom and Responsibility Revisited

Series
Power Structuralism in Ancient Ontologies
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Richard Sorabji gives a talk for the Power Structuralism in Ancient Ontolgies podcast series
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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
Power Structuralism in Ancient Ontologies
People
Richard Sorabji
Keywords
philosophy
freedom
responsibility
Department: Faculty of Philosophy
Date Added: 13/02/2014
Duration: 00:42:59

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1914–1918: Was Britain Right to Fight?

Series
Oh What a Lovely War? First World War Anniversary Lectures
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The Regius Professor of Moral and Pastoral Theology, Canon of Christ Church, and author of In Defence of War (2013) analyses Britain's belligerency in terms of Christian just war reasoning, and concludes that it was justified.
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Episode Information

Series
Oh What a Lovely War? First World War Anniversary Lectures
People
Nigel Biggar
Keywords
great war
#ww1
philosophy
history
first world war
world war one
morality
Department: Christ Church
Date Added: 13/02/2014
Duration: 00:54:13

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Three asylum paradigms

Series
Refugee Studies Centre
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Public Seminar Series, Hilary term 2014. Seminar by Jean-François Durieux (RSC and the Graduate Institute, Geneva) recorded on 12 February 2014 at the Oxford Department of International Development, University of Oxford.
What special sense of duty connects us to those people whom we call refugees, and how does this duty translate into asylum? What does the practice of asylum tell us about who we are, as individuals as well as members of political communities? How does one morally justify the special concern we feel for, and consequently the privileged treatment we give, refugees as compared with other foreigners in need?
Revisiting the main features of the ethical debate over asylum and refugeehood, Mr Durieux argues that there cannot be one coherent set of answers to these questions, because in today’s world the concepts of ‘refugee’ and ‘asylum’ describe not one, but three distinct realities. The 1951 Refugee Convention provides a coherent framework to explain the first asylum paradigm, centered on admission and on the figure of the refugee as a ‘moral comrade’. The concept of persecution, emphasising the prohibition of discrimination and the identifying value of tolerance, is key to understanding this first paradigm. However, one must acknowledge that a proper understanding of the moral duty to admit and integrate refugees does not suffice to explain contemporary state practice in dealing with the ‘refugee problem’ as a matter of solidarity.
Mr Durieux also discusses two additional asylum paradigms at work in today’s world: one takes disaster as a motivation for action, and rescue as the underpinning moral and legal imperative; and the other rests upon a duty not to return individuals to specific forms of danger, absent affinity or even compassion. He examines some of the impacts which the co-existence of these three paradigms has on the global refugee regime, and their implications for law- and policy-making on asylum, both within and among states.
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Episode Information

Series
Refugee Studies Centre
People
Jean-François Durieux
Keywords
refugee
law
politics
asylum
immigration
migration
1951 convention
Department: Oxford Department of International Development
Date Added: 13/02/2014
Duration: 01:12:38

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The child in international refugee law

Series
Refugee Studies Centre
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Public Seminar Series, Hilary term 2014. Seminar by Jason Pobjoy (Blackstone Chambers) recorded on 5 February 2014 at the Oxford Department of International Development, University of Oxford.
International law has played an important role in advancing the rights of refugee children. In this seminar Mr Pobjoy considers how international refugee law and international law on the rights of the child might be creatively aligned to respond to the reality that a child seeking international protection is both a child and a refugee. Specifically, he examines three contexts – defined as ‘modes of interaction’ – where the Convention on the Rights of the Child (CRC) might be engaged to assist in determining the status of a child seeking international protection. First, the CRC may provide procedural guarantees not otherwise provided under international refugee law. Secondly, the CRC may be invoked as an interpretative aid to inform the interpretation of the Refugee Convention, and in particular the Article 1 definition. Thirdly, the CRC may give rise to an independent source of status outside the international refugee protection regime. These three modes of interaction provide a ‘child rights framework’ for assessing the status of a refugee child.
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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
Refugee Studies Centre
People
Jason Pobjoy
Keywords
refugee
children
law
international law
Department: Oxford Department of International Development
Date Added: 13/02/2014
Duration: 00:46:20

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African Knowledge and Livestock Health

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TORCH | The Oxford Research Centre in the Humanities
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Book at Lunchtime interview with Karen Brown and William Beinart about their book “African Knowledge and Livestock Health”
Part of the "Book at Lunchtime" series at The Oxford Research Centre in the Humanities (TORCH).
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Episode Information

Series
TORCH | The Oxford Research Centre in the Humanities
People
Karen Brown
William Beinart
Keywords
torch
humanities
research
Department: The Oxford Research Centre in the Humanities (TORCH)
Date Added: 13/02/2014
Duration: 00:03:33

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Collective Agency and Knowledge of Others' Minds

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Power Structuralism in Ancient Ontologies
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Stephen Butterfill gives a talk on philosophy and collective agency and other people's minds
When friends walk together, they typically exercise collective agency. By contrast, two strangers walking side by side exercise parallel but merely individual agency. This and other contrasts invite the question, What distinguishes collective agency from parallel but merely individual agency? To answer this question, philosophers standardly appeal to a special kind of intention or structure of intention, knowledge or commitment often called ‘collective intention’. The idea is that exercises of collective agency stand to collective intention much as exercises of ordinary, individual agency stand to ordinary, individual intention. In this talk I shall use this parallel between individual and collective intention to argue that some forms of collective agency are grounded in representations and processes more primitive than those associated with collective intention. Collective agency is not always a matter of what we intend: sometimes it constitutively involves certain structures of motor representation. One consequence is concerns a role for collective agency in explaining knowledge of others’ minds. Reflection on what is involved in sharing a smile suggests that there is a route to knowledge of others’ mental states that is neither straightforwardly perceptual nor inferential but hinges on interaction
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Episode Information

Series
Power Structuralism in Ancient Ontologies
People
Stephen Butterfill
Keywords
philosophy
psychology
Department: Faculty of Philosophy
Date Added: 12/02/2014
Duration: 00:57:50

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Aristotle on Singular Thought

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Power Structuralism in Ancient Ontologies
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Mika Perala gives a talk on Aristotle's philosophy
Aristotle states in the De Memoria et Reminiscentia that we have memories of individuals such as Koriscus. In line with this, he assumes in many contexts (e.g. logical and ethical) that we can make singular propositions on the basis of such perceptual states. However, commentators have been puzzled about whether singular propositions (and thoughts) can be given an adequate account in Aristotle’s psychological theory. The purpose of this paper is to argue that Aristotle’s account of thought admits of two kinds of singular thought: thought about an individual as an instance of a kind (‘This F is G’) and thought simply about an individual ‘a’, without the sortal concept F (‘a is G’). The difference between the two is that whereas the former requires knowledge of the kind (i.e. F) into which the singular item falls, or at least some sortal grasp of the individual in question such as through experience or the testimony of a knowledgeable person, the latter is simply based on, but cannot be identified with, sense perception, memory, phantasy or some other way of gaining non-sortal information about the individual. The view opposed is the Thomistic line of interpretation that, in Aristotle’s view, singular thought is to be understood as some sort of general thought, indirect or reflexive: general thought applied to a singular item given by a phantasm. The Thomistic view makes singular thought merely accidental and fails to give an adequate account of singular truth-claims.
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Episode Information

Series
Power Structuralism in Ancient Ontologies
People
Mika Perala
Keywords
philosophy
aristotle
Department: Faculty of Philosophy
Date Added: 12/02/2014
Duration: 00:40:55

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Multimodal Perception and the Distinction Between the Senses

Series
Power Structuralism in Ancient Ontologies
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Louise Fiona Richardson gives a talk on philosophy and perception
It is beyond dispute that the senses interact. In this paper I will consider the way in which such interaction constrains thought about the senses, and in particular, thought about how they are distinguished from one another. I will consider two views of what it is to have a sense. On the first view, senses are systems. On the second, they are capacities. I will argue that on each view, the occurrence of different forms of multimodal perception rules out some views of how the senses are distinguished. The occurrence of perception not restricted to one sense does not, however, make it impossible to distinguish between the senses, either as systems or capacities. Neither does it make that distinction otiose. And whilst there is an explanatory penalty to be paid if one seeks to explain perception only one sense at a time, I will argue that given a plausible, defensible view of how to count perceptual experiences at a time, interaction between the senses does not show that it is illegitimate to talk of perceptual experiences belonging to one modality, at least whilst thinking of senses as capacities.
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Episode Information

Series
Power Structuralism in Ancient Ontologies
People
Louise Fiona Richardson
Keywords
philosophy
perception
Multimodal Perception
Department: Faculty of Philosophy
Date Added: 12/02/2014
Duration: 00:46:48

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Common Sense and Metaperception

Series
Power Structuralism in Ancient Ontologies
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Jerome Dokic gives a talk on common sense and philosophy
One of the functions of the common sense in Aristotle’s theory of perception is apparently to monitor the activity of our sensory modalities, and to make us aware that we see, hear, touch, taste, etc. However, the status of the common sense as a “second-order” perception, and its relationship to “first-order” perception (seeing, hearing, touching, tasting, etc.) remains to be clarified. On the one hand, numerous examples (involving perceptual certainty and uncertainty, perception of silence, darkness, and more generally absences) show that second order perception cannot be reduced to first-order perception. On the other hand, second-order perception can hardly be conceived as a form of meta-representational awareness, whether perceptual or theory-based. In this presentation, I shall suggest that the monitoring function of the common sense is best understood in relation with contemporary cognitive science research on meta-cognition. Common sense is a meta-perceptual ability which is distinct from both object level sensory perception and meta-representational knowledge about our senses.

Episode Information

Series
Power Structuralism in Ancient Ontologies
People
Jerome Dokic
Keywords
philosophy
common sense
Department: Faculty of Philosophy
Date Added: 12/02/2014
Duration: 00:50:58

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