The American Philosophical Association CENTRAL DIVISION · The American Philosophical Association...

88
The American Philosophical Association CENTRAL DIVISION ONE HUNDRED TWELFTH ANNUAL MEETING PROGRAM HILTON ST. LOUIS AT THE BALLPARK ST. LOUIS, MISSOURI FEBRUARY 18 – 21, 2015

Transcript of The American Philosophical Association CENTRAL DIVISION · The American Philosophical Association...

The American Philosophical Association

CENTRAL DIVISIONO N E H U N D R E D T W E L F T H

A N N U A L M E E T I N G P R O G R A M

HILTON ST. LOUIS AT THE BALLPARK

ST. LOUIS, MISSOURI

FEBRUARY 18 – 21, 2015

EnvironmEntal PhilosoPhy in asian traditions of thought

J. Baird Callicott and James McRae, editors

manifEsto of nEw rEalismMaurizio Ferraris

Translated by Sarah De SanctisForeword by Graham Harman

why BE moral?Learning from the Neo-Confucian Cheng Brothers

Yong Huang

sExual virtuEAn Approach to Contemporary Christian Ethics

Richard W. McCarty

rEligionPhilosophical Theology, Volume Three

Robert Cummings Neville

whosE tradition? which dao?Confucius and Wittgenstein

on Moral Learning and ReflectionJames F. Peterman

KlEE’s mirrorJohn Sallis

AvAilAble MArch 2015

how to EscaPEMagic, Madness, Beauty, and Cynicism

Crispin Sartwell

anciEnt and mEdiEval concEPts of friEndshiP

Suzanne Stern-Gillet and Gary M. Gurtler, SJ, editors

good whitE PEoPlEThe Problem with Middle-Class White Anti-Racism

Shannon Sullivan

EmPlotting virtuEA Narrative Approach to Environmental Virtue Ethics

Brian Treanor

wondErA Grammar

Sophia VasalouAvAilAble MAy 2015

Visit our table at the conference.

Offering a 20% / 40%

discount with free shipping to the contiguous U.S. for orders placed at the conference.

3

Important Notices for Meeting Attendees

SESSION LOCATIONS

Please note: 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.

To save on printing costs, the program will be available only online prior to the meeting; with the exception of plenary sessions, the online version does not include session locations.

In addition, locations for sessions on the first evening (February 18) will be posted in the registration area.

IMPORTANT INFORMATION ABOUT REGISTRATION

Please note: it costs 25 percent less to register in advance than to register at the meeting. Online advance registration is available until midnight Eastern time on February 4 at www.apaonline.org.

Please note: there is a $5 charge for replacement name badges and meeting programs.

4

Wednesday Evening, February 18: 6:00–9:00 p.m.

WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 18

REGISTRATION3:00–10:00 p.m., registration area (second floor)

PLACEMENT INTERVIEW AREA5:00–10:00 p.m., Manchester Room (fourth floor)

EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE MEETING7:00–10:00 p.m., Salon G (second floor)

WEDNESDAY EVENING, 6:00–9:00 P.M.

MAIN PROGRAM SESSIONS

I-A. Invited Symposium: Conservation and Continuous Creation Chair: Scott Ragland (Saint Louis University) Speakers: Sukjae Lee (Seoul National University) John Whipple (University of Illinois at Chicago) Julia Jorati (Ohio State University) “Conservation and Persistence”

I-B. Invited Symposium: The Epistemology of Higher-Order States Chair: Julia Staffel (Washington University in St. Louis) Speakers: Daniel Greco (Yale University) Aaron Bronfman (University of Nebraska) Lisa Miracchi (New York University)

I-C. APA Committee Session: Buddhahood as a Type of Knowing HowArranged by the APA Committee on the Status of Asian and Asian-American Philosophers

Chair: Dan Arnold (University of Chicago) Speakers: Ashby Lynne Butnor (Metropolitan State College of

Denver) “Drinking Tea and Eating Rice: The Meaning of

Practice-Enlightenment in Dogen’s Zen” Constance Kassor (Smith College) “Tibetan Buddhists on Knowing-How:

Intellectualists, Anti-intellectualists, Both, or Neither?” David Tomlinson (University of Chicago) “When Knowing-How Is Seeing Nothing: A

Buddhist Theory of Consciousness without Content”

5

Wednesday Evening, February 18: 6:00–9:00 p.m. (cont.)

I-D. Submitted Symposium**Short session: ends at 8:00 p.m.**

Chair: Christina Conroy (Morehead State University) Speaker: Sam Cowling (Denison University) “Advice for Eleatics” Commentator: Kevin M. Morris (Tulane University)

I-E. Colloquium: Modality 6:00-7:00 p.m. “Defeating Extreme Modal Skepticism” Chair: Andrew Howat (California State University, Fullerton) Speaker: Lars Enden (University of Washington) Commentator: Allison Thornton (Baylor University) 7:00-8:00 p.m. “Necessitism and the Abstract/Concrete Distinction” Chair: David Sanson (Illinois State University) Speaker: Daniel Rubio (Rutgers University) Commentator: Reina Hayaki (University of Nebraska–Lincoln)

I-F. Colloquium: Metaethics 6:00-7:00 p.m. “Metalinguistic Moral Disagreement” Chair: Nora Grigore (University of Texas at Austin) Speaker: Renee Bolinger (University of Southern California) **Graduate student travel stipend recipient** Commentator: James Dreier (Brown University) 7:00-8:00 p.m. “Quasi-realism and the Problem of the Schizoid

Attitude” Chair: Julia Driver (Washington University in St. Louis) Speaker: Kenneth Shields (University of Missouri) **Graduate student travel stipend recipient** Commentator: Mara Bollard (University of Michigan) 8:00-9:00 p.m. “Moral Error Theory and the Law of Excluded

Middle” Chair: Luke J. Kallberg (Saint Louis University) Speaker: Christopher Tomaszewski (University of Connecticut) Commentator: Daniel Wodak (Princeton University)

6

Wednesday Evening, February 18: 6:00–9:00 p.m. (cont.)

GROUP PROGRAM SESSIONS

GI-1. International Ernst Cassirer SocietyTopic: Cassirer and the Neo-Kantian Legacy

Chair: Steve G. Lofts (University of Western Ontario) Speakers: Frederick Beiser (Syracuse University) “The Question of Jean-Jacques Rousseau Revisited” Lydia Patton (Virginia Tech) “Cassirer and the Human Sciences

(Geisteswissenschaften)” Fabien Capeillères (Université de Caen and CEPA

Paris I) “A Priori and Transcendental Dimensions of

Symbolization in Philosophy of Symbolic Forms” Simon Truwant (KU Leuven, Belgium) “The Hierarchy Among the Cultural Domains and

the Forms”

7

Thursday Morning, February 19: 9:00 a.m.–noon

THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 19

PLACEMENT INTERVIEW AREA8:30 a.m.–5:30 p.m., Manchester Room (fourth floor)

REGISTRATION8:30 a.m.–5:30 p.m., Registration area (second floor)

EXHIBITS9:00 a.m.–5:00 p.m., Grand Ballroom, Salons A, B, and C (second floor)

THURSDAY MORNING, 9:00 A.M.–NOON

GROUP PROGRAM SESSIONS

GII-1. International Society for Buddhist Philosophy Topic: Buddhist Approaches to the Philosophy of Language

Chair: Xiaoxing Zhang (Paris-Sorbonne University) Speakers: Frederique Janssen-Lauret (University of

Campinas, Brazil) “Parts and Persons: Early Buddhist Language

of Personhood and Its Ramifications for Contemporary Ontology”

Nickolas Montgomery (Indiana University) “Truth and Reference in Nāgārjuna’s

Vigrahavyāvartanī” Rafael Stepien (Columbia University) “On Anti-Language Language in Linji, or Sticks and

Stones May Break His Bones, but Words Will Kill the Buddha”

Joshua Hall (Muskingum University) “Buddhist Dancing Gestures and the Philosophy of

(Non-Verbal) Language”

GII-2. International Ernst Cassirer Society Topic: Cassirer and the Neo-Kantian Legacy

Chair: Fabien Capeillères (Université de Caen and CEPA Paris I)

Speakers: Sebastian Luft (Marquette University) “Cohen’s Idea of a Philosophy of Culture and the

Question of the Human Subject”

8

Thursday Morning, February 19: 9:00 a.m.–noon (cont.)

Pierre Keller (University of California, Riverside) “Kant and the Proud Name of Ontology: Between

Cassirer’s Philosophy of Symbolic Forms and Heidegger’s Being and Time”

Steve G. Lofts (University of Western Ontario) “Response to Dr. Pierre Keller: The Project of

Ontology after Cassirer and Heidegger”

GII-3. Society for Analytical Feminism Chair: Robin S. Dillon (Lehigh University) Speaker: Asha Bhandary (University of Iowa) “Dependency Care and Multiculturalism” Commentator: Serene Khader (Brooklyn College, CUNY) Speaker: Robin Dembroff (Princeton University) “What is Sexual Orientation?” Commentator: Esa Diaz-Leon (University of Manitoba) Speakers: Jeanine Weekes Schroer (University of Minnesota

Duluth) Melissa M. Kozma (University of Wisconsin–Barron

County) “The Integrity Privilege: The Hows and Whys of

Who Gets to be a Social Justice Hero” Commentator: Clair Morrissey (University of North Carolina at

Chapel Hill)

GII-4. Society for the Philosophic Study of Genocide and the HolocaustTopic: Genocide: Aesthetics and Art

Chair: James R. Watson (Loyola University New Orleans) Speakers: David Pettigrew (Southern Connecticut State

University) “Cinematic Witnessing of the Genocide in Bosnia

1992–1995: Towards a Politics of Responsibility” Osman Nemil (Emory University) “Filming Catastrophe and the Antinomies of

Moving Images” André Mineau (University of Quebec at Rimouski) “The Holocaust in the Arts: The Politics of Empathy”

9

Thursday Morning, February 19: 9:00 a.m.–noon (cont.)

GII-5. International Society for Neoplatonic StudiesTopic: Recent Work on Proclus

Speakers: Van Thuy (University of Michigan) “Proclus on Henosis: Knowing the One by the One” David Morphew (University of Michigan) “Proclus on Plotinus’ Theory of Matter-Evil” Umer Shaikh (University of Michigan) “How to Think about Proclus on the Self-Caused”

GII-6. International Society for Environmental Ethics Speakers: Frank Jankunis (University of Calgary) “Geoengineering vs. Business as Usual”

Joao Salm (Governors State University) “A Call for Deeply Ecological Restorative Justice” Karen Emmerman (University of Washington) “Inter-animal Conflicts of Interest and the

Possibility of Moral Repair” Ben Almassi (Governors State University) “Intergenerational Restorative Justice and

Environmental Moral Repair”

GII-7. George Santayana SocietyTopic: Does More Health Care Lead to Better Lives?

Speakers: Griffin Trotter (Gnaegi Center for Health Care Ethics, Saint Louis University)

“Is Health Care Hazardous to Life? An American Transcendentalist Perspective”

Michael Brodrick (Miami University (Ohio)) “Health Care for Unique Individuals: What We Can

Learn from Santayana”

GII-8. Society for the Study of the History of Analytical PhilosophyTopic: Saying as Doing: Peirce on Assertion, Belief, and Judgment

Chair: Richard Kenneth Atkins (Boston College) Speakers: Diana Heney (Fordham University) “‘Even in Solitary Meditation’: Considering Private

Judgment as Genuine Assertion” Andrew Howat (California State University,

Fullerton) “Hookway’s Peirce on Convergence, Assertion, and

Truth” Kenneth A. Boyd (Dalhousie University) “Peirce and ‘Commonality’”

10

Thursday Morning, February 19: 9:00 a.m.–noon (cont.)

GII-9. American Society for Value InquiryTopic: Dewey’s Value of Democracy

Chair: Thomas Magnell (Drew University) Speakers: Kenneth Stikkers (Southern Illinois University

Carbondale) “Democracy as an Economic Way of Life” Eric Weber (University of Mississippi) “Liberalism Reconstructed for Democratic Culture”

GII-10. American Society for Aesthetics Chair: Stephanie Ross (University of Missouri–St. Louis) Speakers: Theodore Gracyk (Minnesota State University

Moorhead) “What Is Popular Music?” James O. Young (University of Victoria) “Bach vs. the Beatles: Is Popular Music as Good as

Classical Music?” Sarah E. Worth (Furman University) “Instructional and Narrative Literature: Lessons

from the Common Core” Aili Bresnahan (University of Dayton) “Taking It to the Stage: How Popular Dance

Achieves Fine Art Status”

GII-11. Society for the Philosophy of AgencyTopic: Neil Levy’s Consciousness and Moral Responsibility

Chair: Zac Cogley (Northern Michigan University) Critics: Gregg Caruso (Corning Community College, SUNY) Philip J. Robichaud (Delft University of Technology) Chandra Sripada (University of Michigan) Response: Neil Levy (University of Oxford and Florey Institute

of Neuroscience and Mental Health)

GII-12. Personalist Discussion Group Chair: Randall E. Auxier (Southern Illinois University

Carbondale) Speakers: Erin McKenna (Pacific Lutheran University) “Cows, Chickens, and Pigs: Food, Fiber, and Friends” Laura Mueller (Southern Illinois University

Carbondale) “Animals and Personhood in Kant: Transcendental

Sensus Communis and Organized Beings”

11

Thursday Morning, February 19: 9:00 a.m.–noon (cont.)

GII-13. APA Committee Session: Ferguson, Missouri, and Social JusticeArranged by the APA Committee on Public Philosophy

Chair: Luvell Anderson (University of Memphis) Speakers: Bernard Boxill (University of North Carolina at

Chapel Hill) Kit Wellman (Washington University in St. Louis) Shay Welch (Spelman College)

GII-14. APA Committee Session: Committee MeetingArranged by the APA Committee on the Status of WomenTHIS MEETING HAS BEEN CANCELLED.

GII-15. Evangelical Philosophical SocietyTopic: Kevin Timpe’s Free Will in Philosophical Theology

Critics: Leigh Vicens (Augustana College) Jesse Couenhoven (Villanova University) Derk Pereboom (Cornell University) Response: Kevin Timpe (Northwest Nazarene University)

12

Thursday Afternoon, February 19: 12:10–2:10 p.m.

THURSDAY AFTERNOON, 12:10–2:10 P.M.

MAIN PROGRAM SESSIONS

II-A. Invited Session: The John Dewey Memorial Lecture Chair: Connie S. Rosati (University of Arizona) Speaker: Peter Railton (University of Michigan)

A reception courtesy of the John Dewey Foundation will follow the lecture and question period in the same room.

II-B. Memorial Symposium for Ted Cohen Chair: Kate Abramson (Indiana University Bloomington) Speakers: Joel Snyder (University of Chicago) Peter Kivy (Rutgers University) Miles Rind (Brandeis University)

II-C. Invited Paper: Disability Chair: Stephen Steward (Syracuse University) Speaker: Teresa Blankmeyer Burke (Gallaudet University) Commentator: Adam Cureton (University of Tennessee)

II-D. Invited Paper: Life and World: Heidegger’s Phenomenological ‘Metaphysics’ and Its Discontents (1928–1934)

Chair: Joseph Bien (University of Missouri) Speaker: Steven Crowell (Rice University) Commentator: William Blattner (Georgetown University)

II-E. Invited Paper: Pleasure in Plato Chair: Ian McCready-Flora (Saint Louis University) Speaker: Emily Fletcher (University of Wisconsin–Madison) Commentator: Georgia Mouroutsou (University of Western

Ontario, Kings University College)

II-F. Submitted Symposium Chair: Michael Rea (University of Notre Dame) Speaker: Shieva Kleinschmidt (University of Southern

California) “Refining Four-Dimensionalism” Commentator: Anthony Shiver (University of Georgia)

13

Thursday Afternoon, February 19: 12:10–2:10 p.m. (cont.)

II-G. Submitted Symposium Chair: Jon McGinnis (University of Missouri–St. Louis) Speakers: Scott Ragland (Saint Louis University) Everett C. Fulmer (Saint Louis University) “There Is No Circle in the Fourth Meditation” Commentator: Lex Newman (University of Utah)

II-H. Submitted Symposium Chair: Andrei Marasoiu (University of Virginia) Speaker: Mihnea D. I. Capraru (Syracuse University) “Teleological Functional Explanations: A New

Naturalist Synthesis” Commentator: Robert C. Richardson (University of Cincinnati)

II-I. Submitted Symposium Chair: Mark Povich (Washington University in St. Louis) Speaker: Emily Sullivan (Fordham University) “Idealizations, Truth, and Understanding” Commentator: Collin Rice (Lycoming College)

II-J. Submitted Symposium Chair: Dorit Ganson (Oberlin College) Speaker: Sophie Horowitz (Rice University) “Immodesty and Educated Guesses” Commentators: James M. Joyce (University of Michigan) Sinan Dogramaci (University of Texas at Austin)

II-K. Submitted Symposium Chair: Stephanie Lewis (Municipal Capital Management,

LLC) Speaker: Tyrus Fisher (University of California, Davis) “Counterlegal Dependence and Causation’s Arrows” Commentator: Adam D. Edwards (University of Illinois at Urbana-

Champaign)

II-L. Submitted Symposium Chair: Ezra J. Cook (Northwestern University) Speaker: Malte Willer (University of Chicago) “Advice for Noncognitivists” Commentator: Anthony Gillies (Rutgers University)

14

Thursday Afternoon, February 19: 12:10–2:10 p.m. (cont.)

II-LL. Submitted Symposium Chair: Michael R. Hicks (Miami University) Speaker: Iskra Fileva (University of Colorado–Boulder) “What Does Belief Have to Do with Truth?” Commentator: Ralph Wedgwood (University of Southern California)

II-M. Colloquium: Epistemology and Philosophy of Mathematics **Short session: ends at 2:10 p.m.**

12:10-1:10 p.m. “Mathematical Fictionalists Cannot Be Sceptics about Reference to Abstract Objects”

Chair: Irena Cronin (University of California, Los Angeles) Speaker: James Davies (University of Toronto) **Graduate student travel stipend recipient** Commentator: T. Parent (Virginia Tech) 1:10-2:10 p.m. “Against the No-Miracle Response to the

Indispensability Argument” Chair: Eileen Nutting (University of Kansas) Speaker: Kenneth A. Boyce (University of Missouri) Commentator: Michael Liston (University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee)

II-N. Joint Group/APA Committee Session: Inclusive Philosophy Pedagogy: What Is It and How Do We Achieve It? (Part One: Theorizing Inclusiveness) Arranged by the APA Committee on Inclusiveness in the Profession and the American Association of Philosophy Teachers

Chair: Shannon Dea (University of Waterloo) Speakers: David Concepcion (Ball State University) “Inclusive Pedagogy: Loving World-Staying” Verena Erlenbusch (University of Memphis) and

Luvell Anderson (University of Memphis) “Against White Philosophy in Blackface” Larry Busk (University of Oregon) “When Is Being a Woman Enough?”

15

Thursday Afternoon, February 19: 12:10–2:10 p.m. (cont.)

II-O. APA Committee Session: The Yijing Studies in Korean PhilosophyArranged by the APA Committee on the Status of Asian and Asian-American Philosophers and Philosophies

Chair: Chaehyun Chong (Sogang University (South Korea)) Speaker: In Bang (Kyungpook University (South Korea)) “Simulation and Philosophical Therapy: Semiotic

Re-interpretation of Dasan Jeong Yagyong’s View on the Zhouyi”

Commentator: Halla Kim (University of Nebraska Omaha) Speaker: Halla Kim (University of Nebraska Omaha) “Kwon Kun and the Structure of the World in His

Yijing Interpretation” Commentator: In Bang (Kyungpook University (South Korea))

16

Thursday Afternoon, February 19: 2:20–5:20 p.m.

THURSDAY AFTERNOON, 2:20–5:20 P.M.

MAIN PROGRAM SESSIONS

III-A. Invited Symposium: Aristotle on Soul Chair: David Ebrey (Northwestern University) Speakers: André Laks (Université Paris-Sorbonne and

Universidad Panamericana, Mexico D.F.) Klaus Corcilius (University of California, Berkeley) Christiana Olfert (Tufts University)

III-B. Invited Symposium: New Work in Speech Act Theory Chair: Dawn Starr (Ohio State University) Speaker: Elisabeth Camp (Rutgers University) “The Semantics of Slurs: A Dual Speech-Act

Analysis” Commentators: Luvell Anderson (University of Memphis) William B. Starr (Cornell University)

III-C. Invited Symposium: Mathematical Explanation Chair: Jill Dieterle (Eastern Michigan University) Speakers: Marc B. Lange (University of North Carolina at

Chapel Hill) “What Is Explanation in Mathematics?” Susan Vineberg (Wayne State University) Commentator: Christopher Pincock (Ohio State University)

III-D. Invited Symposium: Self-Knowledge and Transparency Chair: Sanford Goldberg (Northwestern University) Speakers: Brie Gertler (University of Virginia) Alex Byrne (Massachusetts Institute of Technology) Commentator: Adam J. Leite (Indiana University Bloomington)

III-E. Invited Symposium: Intersectionality: Race and Gender Chair: Alisa Bierria (Stanford University) Speakers: Elena Ruiz (Florida Gulf Coast University) V. Denise James (University of Dayton)

17

Thursday Afternoon, February 19: 2:20–5:20 p.m. (cont.)

III-F. Author Meets Critics: Macalester C. Bell, Hard Feelings: The Moral Pscyhology of Contempt

Chair: Kate Shrumm (Washington University in St. Louis) Critics: Michelle Mason (University of Minnesota Twin

Cities) David Sussman (University of Illinois at Urbana-

Champaign) Response: Macalester C. Bell (Columbia University)

III-G. Author Meets Critics: David Brink, Mill’s Progressive Principles Chair: Piers Norris Turner (Ohio State University) Critics: Wendy Donner (Carleton University) Henry R. West (Macalester College) Response: David Brink (University of California, San Diego)

III-H. Colloquium: Perception 2:20-3:20 p.m. “Marking the Perception—Cognition Boundary” Chair: Sarah Robins (University of Kansas) Speaker: Jacob Beck (York University) Commentator: Brad Thompson (Southern Methodist University) 3:20-4:20 p.m. “Perceptual Learning and Recognition” Chair: Anne Jaap Jacobson (University of Houston) Speaker: Kevin Connolly (University of Pennsylvania) Commentator: Kevan Edwards (Syracuse University) 4:20-5:20 p.m. “Introspecting the Temporal Structure of Perceptual

Experience” Chair: Geoffrey Lee (University of California, Berkeley) Speaker: Aaron Henry (University of Toronto) **Graduate student travel stipend recipient** Commentator: Jonathan Simon (New York University)

III-I. Colloquium: Metaethics 2 2:20-3:20 p.m. “How Not to Defend the Factoring Account” Chair: Eric Wiland (University of Missouri–St. Louis) Speaker: Sarah Raskoff (University of Arizona) **Graduate student travel stipend recipient** Commentator: Teresa Bruno Niño (Syracuse University) 3:20-4:20 p.m. “Normative Naturalism and the Wrong Type of

Reasons Problem” Chair: Kathryn Lindeman (Saint Louis University) Speaker: Andrew Forcehimes (Vanderbilt University) Commentator: Hille Paakkunainen (Syracuse University)

18

Thursday Afternoon, February 19: 2:20–5:20 p.m. (cont.)

4:20-5:20 p.m. “Noncognitivism and Epistemic Evaluations” Chair: Nicole Dular (Syracuse University) Speaker: Bob Beddor (Rutgers University) **Graduate student travel stipend recipient** Commentator: Annette Bryson (University of Michigan)

III-J. Colloquium: Applied Justice 2:20-3:20 p.m. “Intergenerational Justice and Discounting the

Future” Chair: Corey Barnes (University of Memphis) Speaker: Duncan Purves (University of Wyoming) Commentator: Brandon Hogan (Howard University) 3:20-4:20 p.m. “Are Skill Selective Immigration Policies Just?” Chair: Corey Barnes (University of Memphis) Speaker: Douglas MacKay (University of North Carolina at

Chapel Hill) Commentator: Shay Welch (Spelman College) 4:20-5:20 p.m. “Just Reasons to Refuse Just Reparations” Chair: Avril Fuller (Universty of Memphis) Speaker: Jeffrey Watson (Arizona State University) Commentator: Howard McGary (Rutgers University)

III-K. Colloquium: Formal Epistemology 2:20-3:20 p.m. “A New Solution to the Problem of Old Evidence” Chair: Felipe Romero (Washington University in St. Louis) Speaker: Stephan Hartmann (Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität

München) Commentator: Branden Fitelson (Rutgers University) 3:20-4:20 p.m. “An Epistemic Utility Argument for the Threshold

View of Outright Belief” Chair: Matthew Lee (Berry College) Speaker: Kevin Dorst (Massachusetts Institute of Technology) **Graduate student travel stipend recipient** Commentator: Kenneth Easwaran (Texas A&M University) 4:20-5:20 p.m. “Williamson, Closure, and KK” Chair: Michael Carver (Washington University in St. Louis) Speaker: Daniel Immerman (University of Notre Dame) **Graduate student travel stipend recipient** Commentator: Jennifer Jhun (University of Pittsburgh)

19

Thursday Afternoon, February 19: 2:20–5:20 p.m. (cont.)

III-L. Colloquium: Language and Metaphysics 2:20-3:20 p.m. “Plain Truth and the Incoherence of Alethic

Functionalism” Chair: Caroline Stone (Washington University in St. Louis) Speaker: Jay M. Newhard (East Carolina University) Commentator: Michael B. Horton (Harper College) 3:20-4:20 p.m. “What Is a Sorites Series?” Chair: Fabrizio Cariani (Northwestern University) Speaker: Jonathan Barker (University of Virginia) **Graduate student travel stipend recipient** Commentator: Joshua Spencer (University of Wisconsin–

Milwaukee) 4:20-5:20 p.m. “Comparing Tastes: A New Problem for Relativism” Chair: Matthias Jenny (Massachusetts Institute of

Technology) Speaker: Eric Snyder (Ohio State University) **Graduate student travel stipend recipient** Commentator: Ezra J. Cook (Northwestern University)

III-M. Colloquium: Grounding 2:20-3:20 p.m. “Is Grounding an Internal Relation?” Chair: D. Gene Witmer (University of Florida) Speaker: Jon Litland (University of Texas at Austin) Commentator: Louis deRosset (University of Vermont) 3:20-4:20 p.m. “Some Challenges to a Contrastive Treatment of

Grounding” Chair: Axel Mueller (Northwestern University) Speaker: Amir Arturo Javier Castellanos (Syracuse University) **Graduate student travel stipend recipient** Commentator: Jonathan M. Schaffer (Rutgers University) 4:20-5:20 p.m. “Grounding, Determinables, and Supplementation” Chair: Meg Wallace (University of Kentucky) Speaker: Scott Dixon (University of California, Davis) Commentator: Li Kang (Syracuse University)

III-N. APA Committee Session: Best Practices in PublishingArranged by the APA Committee on the Status of Women

Chair: Hilde Lindemann (Michigan State University) Speakers: Kieran Healy (Duke University) “Gender and Citation Patterns in Generalist

Philosophy Journals, 1993–2013” Sally Scholz (Villanova University) “Referees, Gender Neutrality, and Diversity in

Publishing Feminist Philosophy”

20

Thursday Afternoon, February 19: 2:20–5:20 p.m. (cont.)

Colin Allen (Indiana University) “Editorial Strategies Concerning the Participation of

Women at the SEP”

III-O. APA Committee Session: Experiential Learning in PhilosophyArranged by the APA Committee on the Teaching of Philosophy

Chair: Alexandra E. Bradner (Independent Scholar) Speakers: Matthew Ryg (Southern Illinois University

Carbondale) “Radical Equations as Experience: Dewey on

Learning, Quine in a Straight Jacket, and Moses’ Algebra Project”

Shoshana R. Brassfield (Frostburg State University), Peter Bradley (Ferris State University), and Kamran Swanson (Harold Washington College)

“Learning by Being Someone Else: Using Reacting to the Past to Provide Experiential Learning of Philosophy”

Julinna Oxley (Coastal Carolina University) “Getting Off the Armchair: Experiential Learning

and Philosophy Activism” Megan Halteman Zwart (Saint Mary’s College) “Philosophy as Transformational Experience: Service

Learning in an Urban Garden with Pierre Hadot”

21

Thursday Evening, February 19: 5:30–7:30 p.m.

THURSDAY EVENING, 5:30–7:30 P.M.

GROUP PROGRAM SESSIONS

GIII-1. Radical Philosophy AssociationTopic: Anarchism and the Academy

Speakers: Virginia Costello (University of Illinois at Chicago) “Emma Goldman: Defining Anarchism through

Canonical Literature” Nathan Jun (Midwestern State University) “On Philosophical Anarchism” Anne Balay (Independent Scholar and Over-the-

Road Trucker) “Activism in the Academy: Steelworkers, Queers,

Unions, and Me”

GIII-2. Hume Society Speakers: Samuel Murray (Saint Louis University) “A Humean Emendation to Reid’s Volitional Theory

of Agency” Tina Baceski (Rockhurst University) “Hume on the ‘Naturalness’ of Religious Belief” Commentator: Mark Piper (James Madison University)

GIII-3. North American Kant SocietyTopic: Kant’s CosmopolitanismSESSION CANCELLED

Chair: Anne Margaret Baxley (Washington University in St. Louis)

Speakers: Loren Goldman (Ohio University) “Kantian Prophecy, Armed and Unarmed” Timothy Waligore (Pace University) “Kant’s Cosmopolitan Right Reconsidered”

GIII-4. Charles S. Peirce Society Chair: Ivo Ibri (Pontifícia Universidade Católica de São

Paulo) Speaker: Demetra Sfendoni-Mentzou (Aristotle University of

Thessaloniki) “Charles S. Peirce’s Tychism and Its Relevance to

Contemporary Physics”

22

Thursday Evening, February 19: 5:30–7:30 p.m. (cont.)

GIII-5. North American Spinoza SocietyTopic: Eugene J. Marshall’s The Spiritual Automaton

Critics: Keith Green (East Tennessee State University) Ericka Tucker (Marquette University) Response: Eugene J. Marshall (Florida International

University)

GIII-6. North American Nietzsche SocietyTopic: Nietzsche and Affirmation

Chair: Scott Jenkins (University of Kansas) Speakers: Guy Elgat (Northwestern University) “‘Value Judgments Have Value Only as

Symptoms’—a Reconstruction of Nietzsche’s Argument in Twilight of the Idols”

Daniel I. Harris (Hunter College, CUNY) “Compassion and Affirmation in Nietzsche”

GIII-7. Conference of Philosophical SocietiesTopic: Moral Responsibility

Chair: G. John M. Abbarno (D’Youville College) Speakers: Fritz J. McDonald (Oakland University) “Kantian Autonomy and Responsibility” Audrey L. Anton (Western Kentucky University) “Retrospective Responsibility and Desert of Praise

and Blame”

GIII-8. Society for Philosophy in the Contemporary WorldTopic: Whose Phenomenology, What Politics?

Speakers: Christian Matheis (Virginia Tech) “Politics and Pentagons: For Whom Does

Phenomenology Advance Political Philosophy?” Chioke I’Anson (Virginia Commonwealth University) “Hegel Postbellum: Assessing the Uses and

Abuses of Phenomenology for Black Life from Reconstruction to the Present”

Geoffrey Pfeifer (Worcester Polytechnic Institute) “Toward a Marxist Critique of Phenomenology” S. West Gurley (Sam Houston State University) “Flipping (Off) the Question: Of What Use Is the

Political to Phenomenology?”

23

Thursday Evening, February 19: 5:30–7:30 p.m. (cont.)

GIII-9. International Association for the Philosophy of Sport Speaker: Aaron Harper (West Liberty Unversity) “‘You’re the Best Around’: Reconsidering Athletic

Excellence in Seasons and Playoffs” Commentator: Craig Carley (Phoenix College)

GIII-10. Philosophy of Time Society Speakers: Kathy Fazekas (University of Connecticut) “The Functional Role of the Passage of Time” Adam Bowen (University of Illinois at Urbana-

Champaign) “Combating an Argument Against Extensionalism” Commentator: Philippe Chuard (Southern Methodist University)

24

Thursday Evening, February 19: 7:40–10:40 p.m.

THURSDAY EVENING, 7:40–10:40 P.M.

GROUP PROGRAM SESSIONS

GIV-1. William James Society Chair: Paul B. Cherlin (Southern Illinois University

Carbondale) Speakers: Douglas R. Anderson (Southern Illinois University

Carbondale) “What James Found in Peirce” Kenneth Stikkers (Southern Illinois University

Carbondale) “Radical Empiricism and Anti-Imperialism” Matthew Ryg (Southern Illinois University

Carbondale) “The Nonviolence in James’s Moral Equivalent of

War” Commentator: Steven A. Miller (Southern Illinois University

Carbondale)

GIV-2. North American Society for Social PhilosophyTopic: Anthony Cunningham’s Modern Honor: A Philosophical Defense

Chair: Jacob M. Held (University of Central Arkansas) Critics: Jacob M. Held (University of Central Arkansas) Nancy E. Snow (Marquette University) Krista Thomason (Swarthmore College) Response: Anthony Cunningham (St. John’s University

(Minnesota))

GIV-3. Society for the History of Political PhilosophyTopic: Plato and Aristotle on Justice, Reason, and the Gods

Chair: Evanthia Speliotis (Bellarmine College) Speakers: Mary Tetzlaff (Catholic University) “Plato’s Gorgias” Mark Pryor (Tulane University) “The Tyrant in Republic IX” Alex Green (University of Buffalo) “Parables of Natural Justice in Aristotle’s Ethics V” Evanthia Speliotis (Bellarmine College) “Theoretical Reason in Aristotle” Aaron Halper (Catholic University) “The Gods in Aristotle’s Politics Book I”

25

Thursday Evening, February 19: 7:40–10:40 p.m. (cont.)

GIV-4. Society for the Philosophic Study of Genocide and the Holocaust Chair: André Mineau (University of Quebec at Rimouski) Speakers: Erik Vogt (Trinity College (Hartford)) “Auschwitz as ‘le déchet of the Western Idea of Art’” Ryan Crawford (Webster University, Vienna) “Weeping Without Tears: On Adorno and Cioran” James R. Watson (Loyola University New Orleans) “Forcing the Pauline Fable”

GIV-5. Society for Asian and Comparative PhilosophyTopic: Asian Philosophical Traditions

Speakers: Bina Gupta (University of Missouri–Columbia) “Can an Advaitin Pray? The Role of Upāsānā in

Advaita Vedānta” Donna Giancola (Suffolk University) “Reflections on the Buddhist Concept of

‘Impermanence’” Billy Dean Goehring (University of Oregon) “Sima Guang and Machiavelli: A History Lesson” Joel Chow (University of Arizona) and Farhan M.

Idris (National University of Singapore) “Reconfiguring the Sensible—Kukai and Jacques

Ranciere on the Radical Potential of Aesthetics” Response: Bina Gupta (University of Missouri–Columbia)

GIV-6. Committee on Institutional Cooperation

GIV-7. Adam Smith SocietyTopic: Economists as Moral Theorists: Language, Reciprocity, and the “School of Self Command”

Chair: Sandra Peart (University of Richmond) Speakers: Christopher S. Martin (Hillsdale College) “The Sympathy of Concord and the Market Order” Sandra Peart (University of Richmond) “Adam Smith on Discussion, Trade and the Moral

Imagination” David M. Levy (George Mason University) “Adam Smith’s Praise versus Praiseworthy as

Central Question in Utilitarian Motivation” Leonidas Montes (Duke University) “Language, Self Command and Moral Motivation”

26

Thursday Evening, February 19: 7:40–10:40 p.m.

GIV-8. Society for the Philosophic Study of the Contemporary Visual ArtsTopic: Philosophy of Film and Art

Chair: Dan Flory (Montana State University) Speakers: James J. Conlon (Mount Mary College) “Goodness and the ‘Holy Fool’ in Almodovar’s Talk

to Her (Hable con ella)” Sheryl Tuttle Ross (University of Wisconsin–La

Crosse) “Finding Fallacies Funny: How Sesame Street’s

Playing with Mistakes in Reasoning Makes Learning Fun”

Mojca Küplen (Research Centre for the Humanities, Hungarian Academy of Science)

“The Paradox of Artistic Ugliness in Light of Kant’s Theory of Aesthetic Ideas”

Alexey Aliyev (University of Maryland) “Toward an Ontology of Photographic Works”

GIV-9. Joint Group/APA Committee Session Arranged by Concerned Philosophers for Peace and the APA Committee on the Status of Black PhilosophersTopic: Eloquent Peasant: Priming the Canon

Speakers: Chadwick Layne (St. Edwards University) “The Eloquent Peasant: Comparative Analysis of

Functions of the State” Court Lewis (Owensboro Community and Technical

College) “Disparate Accounts of Justice in The Eloquent

Peasant” Arnold Farr (University of Kentucky) “No Justice for Peasants: A Reading of The

Eloquent Peasant from the Perspective of Liberation Philosophy”

Vanessa Wills (St. Joseph’s University) “Ideals of Ethical Leadership in ‘The Tale of the

Eloquent Peasant’” Chike Jeffers (Dalhousie University) “Political Authority and Egalitarianism in The

Eloquent Peasant”

RECEPTION8:30 p.m.–12:30 a.m., Arch View Balloom (second floor)

27

Friday Morning, February 20: 9:00 a.m.–noon

FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 20

PLACEMENT INTERVIEW AREA8:30 a.m.–5:00 p.m., Manchester Room (fourth floor)

REGISTRATION8:30 a.m.–5:00 p.m., registration area (second floor)

EXHIBITS9:00 a.m.–5:00 p.m., Grand Ballroom, Salons A, B, and C (second floor)

FRIDAY MORNING, 9:00 A.M.–NOON

MAIN PROGRAM SESSIONS

IV-A. Invited Symposium: Metaethics of Reasons Chair: Mary Clayton Coleman (Illinois Wesleyan University) Speakers: Kate Manne (Cornell University) Ruth Chang (Rutgers University) Commentator: Daniel Star (Boston University)

IV-B. Invited Symposium: The Infinite in Early Modern Philosophy of Mathematics

Chair: Waldemar Rohloff (University of Missouri–St. Louis) Speakers: Mary A. Domski (University of New Mexico) Anat Schechtman (University of Wisconsin–

Madison) Commentator: Samuel Levey (Dartmouth College)

IV-C. Invited Symposium: Rights and Democracy Chair: Roxanne Kurtz (University of Illinois at Springfield) Speakers: Simon May (Florida State University) Christopher Lebron (Yale University) Derrick Darby (University of Michigan) “The Fair Value of Voting Rights”

IV-D. Invited Symposium: The Epistemic Role of Attention Chair: Mason Westfall (University of Toronto) Speakers: Ned Block (New York University) Declan Smithies (Ohio State University) “Attention and Visual Crowding” Commentator: Adrienne Prettyman (Bryn Mawr College)

28

Friday Morning, February 20: 9:00 a.m.–noon (cont.)

IV-E. Author Meets Critics: Michael Titelbaum, Quitting Certainties Chair: Kenneth Easwaran (Texas A&M University) Critics: Joel Pust (University of Delaware) William J. Talbott (University of Washington) Trent G. Dougherty (Baylor University) Response: Michael Titelbaum (University of Wisconsin–

Madison)

IV-F. Submitted Symposium**Short session: ends at 11:00 a.m.**

Chair: Eric A. Brown (Washington University in St. Louis) Speaker: Douglass Reed (University of Virginia) “Embodied Virtue in the Phaedo” Commentator: Timothy D. Roche (University of Memphis)

IV-G. Colloquium: Philosophical Methodology 9:00-10:00 a.m. “Infallibilism, Skepticism, and Cultural Differences” Chair: Tom Wysocki (Washington University in St. Louis) Speakers: John Waterman (Colby College), Karen Yan

(National Yang-Ming University), Chad Gonneman (University of Southern Indiana), and Joshua Alexander (Siena College)

Commentator: Barry Lam (Vassar College) 10:00-11:00 a.m. “An Empirical Reductio of the Expert/Gender

Principle” Chair: Sally Scholz (Villanova University) Speaker: Geoffrey Holtzman (The Graduate Center, CUNY) Commentator: Kaija Mortensen (Randolph College) 11:00 a.m.-noon “Philosophical Individualism” Chair: Nathan Jun (Midwestern State University) Speaker: John A. Keller (Niagara University) Commentator: Nathan Ballantyne (Fordham University)

IV-H. Colloquium: Virtue and Moral Demands 9:00-10:00 a.m. “Rescue, Beneficence and Contempt” Chair: Anne Margaret Baxley (Washington University in St.

Louis) Speaker: Adam Blincoe (University of Virginia) Commentator: Luke P. Phillips (Auburn University) 10:00-11:00 a.m. “The (Non-) Psychology of Virtues: Radical Virtue

Externalism” Chair: Paula Gottlieb (University of Wisconsin–Madison) Speaker: Charles Starkey (Clemson University) Commentator: Patrick Beach (Coastal Carolina University)

29

Friday Morning, February 20: 9:00 a.m.–noon (cont.)

11:00 a.m.-noon “Responsibility for Disjunctions and an Alleged Counterexample to Rule A”

Chair: Elizabeth Victor (William Paterson University) Speaker: Michael Robinson (Washington & Jefferson College) Commentator: Andrew James McAninch (University of

Pennsylvania)

IV-I. Colloquium: Power and Social Construction 9:00-10:00 a.m. “The Metaphysics of Social Construction: A

‘Grounding’ Account” Chair: Naomi Dershowitz (Syracuse University) Speaker: Aaron Griffith (Central Michigan University) Commentator: Ron Mallon (Washington University in St. Louis) 10:00-11:00 a.m. “‘Climate Change Deniers’ and Nietzsche” Chair: Ariela Tubert (University of Puget Sound) Speaker: Phillip A. McReynolds (University of North Carolina

at Charlotte) Commentator: Jason R. Kawall (Colgate University) 11:00 a.m.-noon “A Problem for Theories of Power” Chair: Ann E. Cudd (University of Kansas) Speaker: Torsten Menge (Georgetown University) **Graduate student travel stipend recipient** Commentator: Ruth Groff (Saint Louis University)

IV-J. Colloquium: Quantification, Ontology, and Fundamentality 9:00-10:00 a.m. “Between Arbitrariness and Redundancy” Chair: Jason Turner (Saint Louis University) Speaker: Stephen Steward (Syracuse University) **Graduate student travel stipend recipient** Commentator: Sophie Ban (Mercer County Community College) 10:00-11:00 a.m. “Quantifier Variance and Ontological Deflationism” Chair: Scott Berman (Saint Louis University) Speaker: Andrew Brenner (University of Notre Dame) Commentator: Sean Foran (Independent Scholar) 11:00 a.m.-noon “A New Solution to the Problem of Temporary

Intrinsics” Chair: Samuel Newlands (University of Notre Dame) Speaker: Peter Finocchiaro (University of Notre Dame) Commentator: Brannon McDaniel (University of Richmond)

30

Friday Morning, February 20: 9:00 a.m.–noon (cont.)

IV-K. Colloquium: Epistemic Virtue and the Value of Knowledge 9:00-10:00 a.m. “How Virtue Epistemologists Should Handle

Epistemic Luck” Chair: Matthew J. Frise (University of Rochester) Speaker: John Mahlan (University of Virginia) **Graduate student travel stipend recipient** Commentator: Guy Axtell (Radford University) 10:00-11:00 a.m. “On the Distinctive Value of Knowledge” Chair: Kenneth A. Boyd (Dalhousie University) Speaker: Kok Yong Lee (University of Missouri) Commentator: Julien Dutant (University of Geneva) 11:00 a.m.-noon “All You Need Is Virtue (with a Little Help from Your

Friends)” Chair: Kenneth A. Boyd (Dalhousie University) Speaker: Jonathan Reibsamen (Saint Louis University) **Graduate student travel stipend recipient** Commentator: Juli K. Thorson (Ball State University)

IV-L. Colloquium: Foundations of Semantics 9:00-10:00 a.m. “What Makes Sounds into Meaningful Words?” Chair: Claire Horisk (University of Missouri) Speaker: Megan Stotts (University of California, Riverside) **Graduate student travel stipend recipient** Commentator: Indrek Reiland (Rice University) 10:00-11:00 a.m. “A Sinnless Solution to Frege’s Puzzle” Chair: Esa Diaz-Leon (University of Manitoba) Speaker: Paolo Bonardi (Université de Genève) Commentator: Zachary Miller (University of Oklahoma) 11:00 a.m.-noon “Against Cognitive Propositions” Chair: Devin Frank (University of Missouri) Speaker: Lorraine Keller (Niagara University) Commentator: Matthew McGrath (University of Missouri–Columbia)

IV-M. Colloquium: Function and Individuation 9:00-10:00 a.m. “The Failure of the Ineliminability Argument for

Causal Role Functions” Chair: Catherine Kendig (Missouri Western State

University) Speaker: Jannai Shields (University of Rochester) **Graduate student travel stipend recipient** Commentator: Alan C. Love (University of Minnesota)

31

Friday Morning, February 20: 9:00 a.m.–noon (cont.)

10:00-11:00 a.m. “Concept Individuation for the Neo-Millian in Cases of Belief Revision”

Chair: Chad Farish Hall (University of Wyoming) Speaker: Kyle Landrum (University of Houston) **Graduate student travel stipend recipient** Commentator: Lauren Olin (Washington University in St. Louis) 11:00 a.m.-noon “Computational Individualism and Functional

Significance” Chair: Michael Dacey (Washington University in St. Louis) Speaker: Chris Tucker (College of William and Mary) Commentator: Gualtiero Piccinini (University of Missouri–St. Louis)

IV-N. APA Committee Session: Love and the StateArranged by the APA Committee on the Status of Black Philosophers

Speakers: Myisha Cherry (University of Illinois at Chicago) “Love Is Not All We Need” Justin Clardy (University of Arkansas) “Civic Tenderness: A First Approximation”

IV-O. Joint APA Committee Session: Long-Term Care for the ElderlyArranged by the APA Committee on Philosophy and Medicine and the APA Committee on the Status of Women

Speakers: Lisa Eckenwiler (George Mason University) “Long-Term Care, Global Markets, and the Ethics of

Dis-placement” Eva Feder Kittay (Stony Brook University) “Long Term Care and the Problem of Patient

Autonomy” Jeremy Snyder (Simon Fraser University) “Can We Care for the Elderly without Worsening

Global Inequity? The Case of Nurse Migration from the Caribbean”

Hilde Lindemann (Michigan State University) “Families and Professionals: Who Is Responsible?”

BUSINESS MEETING12:15-1:15 p.m., Gateway 1 (second floor)

32

Friday Afternoon, February 20: 1:30–4:30 p.m.

FRIDAY AFTERNOON, 1:30–4:30 P.M.

MAIN PROGRAM SESSIONS

V-A. Invited Symposium: New Work on Counterfactuals Chair: Fabrizio Cariani (Northwestern University) Speakers: Paolo Santorio (University of Leeds) Stefan Kaufmann (University of Connecticut) Karen Lewis (Barnard College and Columbia

University)

V-B. Memorial Symposium for Fred Dretske Chair: Timothy Schroeder (Ohio State University) Speakers: Peter Graham (University of California, Riverside) Christopher Hill (Brown University) Brian P. McLaughlin (Rutgers University) Karen Neander (Duke University)

V-C. Invited Symposium: The Experience of Time Chair: Alan Thomas (Tilburg University) Speakers: Geoffrey Lee (University of California, Berkeley) Carla Merino-Rajme (Arizona State University) Commentator: Philippe Chuard (Southern Methodist University)

V-D. Author Meets Critics: Paul C. Taylor, Race: A Philosophical Introduction

Chair: Myisha Cherry (University of Illinois at Chicago) Critics: Chike Jeffers (Dalhousie University) Desiree Melton (Notre Dame of Maryland University) Quayshawn Spencer (University of San Francisco) Response: Paul C. Taylor (Pennsylvania State University)

V-E. Author Meets Critics: Julia Markovits, Moral Reason Chair: Julia Driver (Washington University in St. Louis) Critics: David Sobel (Syracuse University) Stephen Kearns (Florida State University) Response: Julia Markovits (Cornell University)

V-F. Submitted Symposium**Short session: ends at 3:30 p.m.**

Chair: Andrew McFarland (Kansas State University) Speaker: Irem Kurtsal Steen (Boğaziçi University) “Modally Plenitudinous Endurantism” Commentator: Catherine Sutton (Virginia Commonwealth

University)

33

Friday Afternoon, February 20: 1:30–4:30 p.m. (cont.)

V-G. Colloquium: Ancient (and Ancient-inspired) Ethics and Political Philosophy

1:30-2:30 p.m. “Heraclitus on Political Order” Chair: Aaron Harper (West Liberty Unversity) Speaker: Jan Maximilian Robitzsch (University of Pennsylvania) Commentator: Dan Werner (SUNY New Paltz) 2:30-3:30 p.m. “Tyrannized Souls: Plato’s Depiction of the

Tyrannical Man” Chair: Dhananjay Jagannathan (University of Chicago) Speaker: Mark A. Johnstone (McMaster University) Commentator: Emily Austin (Wake Forest University) 3:30-4:30 p.m. “Aristotelian Eudaimonism and Patriotism” Chair: Nicholas Baima (Washington University in St. Louis) Speaker: Noell Birondo (Wichita State University) Commentator: Anna Christensen (Washington University in St.

Louis)

V-H. Colloquium: Suárez, Descartes, and Spinoza 1:30-2:30 p.m. “Truthmaking as a Suárezian Legacy: The Semi-

Extrinsic Denomination View of Truth in 17th-Century Scholasticism”

Chair: Eric W. Hagedorn (St. Norbert College) Speaker: Brian Embry (University of Toronto) **Graduate student travel stipend recipient** Commentator: Sydney Penner (Cornell University) 2:30-3:30 p.m. “Reason and Literary Form in Descartes’s

Meditations: The Case of the Cartesian Circle” Chair: Andrew Black (University of Missouri–St. Louis) Speaker: Matthew Simpson (Luther College) Commentator: Eric Stencil (Utah Valley University) 3:30-4:30 p.m. “Spinoza and the Definition of an Immanent Cause” Chair: Charles Huenemann (Utah State University) Speaker: Stephen Zylstra (University of Toronto) **Graduate student travel stipend recipient** Commentator: Juan Garcia (Ohio State University)

V-I. Colloquium: Meaning and Well-Being 1:30-2:30 p.m. “Theories of Welfare: Monistic or Pluralistic,

Enumerative or Explanatory?” Chair: Michael Hayes (University of Kansas) Speaker: Eden Lin (Rutgers University) Commentator: Daniel M. Haybron (Saint Louis University)

34

Friday Afternoon, February 20: 1:30–4:30 p.m. (cont.)

2:30-3:30 p.m. “Meaning without Fulfillment” Chair: Dale Dorsey (University of Kansas) Speaker: Kirsten Egerstrom (Syracuse University) **Graduate student travel stipend recipient** Commentator: Jason R. Raibley (California State University, Long

Beach) 3:30-4:30 p.m. “Well-Being, Self-Regarding Reasons, and Morality” Chair: Corey J. Maley (University of Kansas) Speaker: Howard Nye (University of Alberta) Commentator: Patrick Beach (Coastal Carolina University)

V-J. Colloquium: Applied Ethics 1:30-2:30 p.m. “Children and Added Sugar: The Case for Restriction” Chair: Jacob M. Held (University of Central Arkansas) Speaker: Theodore Bach (Bowling Green State University) Commentator: Colleen Murphy (University of Illinois at Urbana-

Champaign) 2:30-3:30 p.m. “Animal Euthanasia and the Moral Responsibility of

Zoos” Chair: Amy E. White (Ohio University Zanesville) Speaker: Crystal Allen Gunasekera (Principia College) Commentator: Elizabeth Foreman (Missouri State University) 3:30-4:30 p.m. “Virtue in Machine Ethics: An Approach Based on

Evolutionary Computation” Chair: Carrie Figdor (University of Iowa) Speakers: Ioan Muntean (University of Notre Dame) Don Howard (University of Notre Dame) Commentator: Nathaniel Sharadin (University of North Carolina at

Chapel Hill)

V-K. Colloquium: Actions and Causes 1:30-2:30 p.m. “Agency, Causalism, and Intentional Omissions” Chair: Marcela Herdova (Florida State University) Speaker: Andrei A. Buckareff (Marist College) Commentator: Carolina Sartorio (University of Arizona) 2:30-3:30 p.m. “Basic Mistakes in Performance” Chair: Avery Archer (University of Tennessee–Knoxville) Speaker: Kim Frost (Syracuse University) Commentator: Santiago Amaya (Universidad de los Andes) 3:30-4:30 p.m. “Reasons-Explanations and Normative Signficance” Chair: J. A. Smart (University of Missouri) Speaker: Andrew Greenlee (University of Rochester) **Graduate student travel stipend recipient** Commentator: Christa Johnson (The Ohio State University)

35

Friday Afternoon, February 20: 1:30–4:30 p.m. (cont.)

V-L. Colloquium: Philosophy of Science 1:30-2:30 p.m. “Major Problems in Evolutionary Transitions:

Toward a Metabolism-Based Account of Macroevolution”

Chair: Isaac Wiegman (Washington University in St. Louis) Speaker: Russell Powell (Boston University) Commentator: Catherine Driscoll (North Carolina State University) 2:30-3:30 p.m. “Is ‘Life’ a Core-Dependent Homonym?: A Response

to Christopher Shields’s ‘The Dialectic of Life’” Chair: Andrew P. Mills (Otterbein University) Speaker: Gideon Jeffrey (Saint Louis University) Commentator: Justin C. Fisher (Southern Methodist University) 3:30-4:30 p.m. “Must a Cause Precede Its Effect?” Chair: Stephanie Lewis (Municipal Capital Management,

LLC) Speaker: John Roberts (University of North Carolina at

Chapel Hill) Commentator: Katie Elliott (University of California, Los Angeles)

V-M. Colloquium: Philosophy of Religion**Short session: ends at 3:30 p.m.**

1:30-2:30 p.m. “Paraphrase Atheism” Chair: Leigh Vicens (Augustana College) Speaker: Shane Wilkins (Fordham University) **Graduate student travel stipend recipient** Commentator: Jack Himelright (University of Notre Dame) 2:30-3:30 p.m. “Testimonial Traditions and Religious Disagreement” Chair: Dustin Crummett (University of Notre Dame) Speaker: Donald Bungum (Saint Louis University) Commentator: Joshua Thurow (University of Texas at San Antonio)

V-N. Colloquium: History of Aesthetics**Short session: ends at 3:30 p.m.**

1:30-2:30 p.m. “Formal Purposiveness in Kant’s Aesthetic Judgment”

Chair: Scott Jenkins (University of Kansas) Speaker: Gerad Gentry (University of South Carolina) Commentator: Hans Lottenbach (Kenyon College) 2:30-3:30 p.m. “An ‘American Sublime’ in Nineteenth-Century

American Art and Philosophy” Chair: Corey McCall (Elmira College) Speaker: Nicholas Guardiano (Southern Illinois University

Carbondale) Commentator: Anthony Rudd (St. Olaf College)

36

Friday Afternoon, February 20: 1:30–4:30 p.m. (cont.)

V-O. APA Committee Session: Newer Research from GermanyArranged by the APA Committee on Lectures, Publications, and Research and the APA Committee on International Cooperation

Chair: Sebastian Luft (Marquette University) Speakers: Ruth Hagengruber (University of Paderborn) “Including Women Philosophers, Rewriting the

History of Philosophy?” Andreas Hüttemann (University of Cologne) “Causation and Default Processes” Anton Koch (University of Heidelberg) “The Threefold Structure of Truth” Sebastian Luft (Marquette University) “German Funding Opportunities for North

American Scholars”Session on new work from Germany will be followed by a presentation of funding opportunities for research in Germany through organizations such as DAAD, Humboldt, and DFG.

V-P. APA Committee Session: How Do I Obtain and Keep a Full-Time Community College Faculty Position?Arranged by the APA Committee on Philosophy in Two-Year Colleges

Chair: Bill Hartmann (St. Louis Community College–Forest Park)

Panelists: Kristen Zbikowski (Hibbing Community College) Lisa Cagle (Washington University in St. Louis) Michael B. Horton (Harper College) Thomas Urban (Houston Community College) Donna Werner (St. Louis Community College–

Meramec) Rick Repetti (Kingsborough Community College–

CUNY)

37

Friday Afternoon, February 20: 4:45–6:00 p.m.

FRIDAY AFTERNOON, 4:45–6:00 P.M.

PRESIDENTIAL ADDRESS4:45-6:00 p.m., Arch View Balloom (second floor)

Introduction: Linda Zagzebski (University of Oklahoma) Speaker: Elizabeth Secor Anderson (University of Michigan) “Moral Bias and Corrective Practices: A Pragmatist

Perspective”

PRESIDENTIAL ADDRESS RECEPTION6:15-7:15 p.m. Arch View Ballroom foyer

38

Friday Afternoon, February 20: 7:00–10:00 p.m.

FRIDAY EVENING, 7:00–10:00 P.M.

GROUP PROGRAM SESSIONS

GV-1. Bertrand Russell Society Speakers: Katarina Perovic (University of Iowa) “Russell on Bare Particulars” Milan Soutor (Charles University in Prague and

University of Iowa) “Epistemological Consequences of Russell’s

Departure from the Primitivist Theory of Truth” Vera Albrecht (La Guardia Community College) “The Russell-Meinong Dialogue about Non-Existent

Objects” Gregory Landini (University of Iowa) “Modus Ponens Denied: Whitehead’s Meltdown in

Principia’s Volume II” James Connelly (University of Iowa) “On the Elementary Blunder Concerning

Wittgenstein’s Operator N”

GV-2. Society for Ancient Greek Philosophy Chair: Mark Wheeler (San Diego State University) Speakers: Naomi Reshotko (University of Denver) “Recollection, Reference and the Paradox of

Inquiry in Plato’s Meno and Phaedo” Marta Jimenez (Emory University) “Listening to Reason in Aristotle’s Ethics: Shame

and Receptivity to Ethical Arguments” James Ambury (King’s College) “Self-Knowledge Constitution, and Purification: The

Progression of the Soul in Late Neoplatonism”

GV-3. Society for Analytical FeminismTopic: Epistemic Friction and Responsible Knowing: Reflections on José Medina’s The Epistemology of Resistance

Chair: Robin S. Dillon (Lehigh University) Speakers: Lorraine Code (York University) Saba Fatima (Southern Illinois University

Edwardsville) Michael Doan (Eastern Michigan University) Ami Harbin (Oakland University) Responses: José Medina (Vanderbilt University) Andrea Pitts (Vanderbilt University)

39

Friday Afternoon, February 20: 7:00–10:00 p.m. (cont.)

GV-4. Society of Christian Philosophers Speakers: Bradley Rettler (Baylor University) “Prolegomena to an Analysis of Faith” Eleonore Stump (Saint Louis University) “Intellectual Humility and Mind-Reading” Commentators: Andrew M. Cullison (DePauw University) Kevin Timpe (Northwest Nazarene University)

GV-5. Association for Informal Logic and Critical ThinkingTopic: Intellectual Virtues and Critical Thinking

Chair: Frank Fair (Sam Houston State University) Speakers: Wayne Riggs (University of Oklahoma) Title TBA David Wright (Sam Houston State University) “Adam Morton’s Bounded Thinking” Response: Adam Morton (University of British Columbia) Speaker: Benjamin Hamby (Coastal Carolina University) “Willingness to Inquire: The Cardinal Critical

Thinking Virtue” Commentator: Frank Fair (Sam Houston State University)

GV-6. International Society for Environmental Ethics Chair: Charles Starkey (Clemson University) Speakers: Mark Woods (University of San Diego) “The Imperial Argument against the Practice of

Wilderness Preservation” Sergio Gallegos (Metropolitan State University of

Denver) “Vulnerability in a Virtue-based Approach to

Bioethics and Environmental Ethics” Pamela J. Lomelino (Loyola University Chicago) “A Relational Autonomy Approach to Layered

Vulnerability” Alison Reiheld (Southern Illinois University

Edwardsville) “Hungry Because of Change: Vulnerability, Food,

and Climate”

GV-7. AMINTAPHILTopic: Immigration Justice and Health-Related Restrictions

Chair: Ann E. Cudd (University of Kansas) Speakers: Peter Higgins (Eastern Michigan University) “Immigration Policy as a Matter of Structural

Justice”

40

Friday Afternoon, February 20: 7:00–10:00 p.m. (cont.)

Mark C. Navin (Oakland University) “The Ethics of U.S. Alien Vaccination Laws” Heidi Malm (Loyola University Chicago) “On Disease-related Restrictions to Immigration

and Entry”

GV-8. Concerned Philosophers for PeaceTopic: Terrorism, Liberation, and Roller Derby

Speakers: Jan Narveson (University of Waterloo) “What Makes Terrorism Work (When It Does)?” Predrag Cicovacki (College of the Holy Cross) “Liberation from the ‘Tyrannical Automatism’ of

Violence: Gandhi and Merton” Danielle Poe (University of Dayton) “Yes, You Heard Me Right . . . Roller Derby and the

Philosophy of Peace”

GV-9. Josiah Royce Society Chair: Tanya Jeffcoat (University of Central Arkansas) Speakers: Gregory Singleton (Northeastern Illinois University) “The Problem of Christianity as a Blueprint for a De-

Institutionalized Church” Aaron Pratt (Emory University) “Josiah Royce’s Religious Insight: Or, Why We Still

Need the Absolute” Dwight Welch (University of Oklahoma) “Josiah Royce’s Translation Project and Its Impact

on Religious Language” Commentator: Tanya Jeffcoat (University of Central Arkansas)

GV-10. International Society of Chinese PhilosophyTopic: Truth, Life, and the Rectification of Names in Confucianism

Chair: Alexus McLeod (Colorado State University) Speakers: Chaehyun Chong (Sogang University (South Korea)) “Confucian Rectification of Names Revisited” Li Lizhu (Hong Kong University of Science and

Technology) “Zhou Dunyi’s Expectation of the Life Value with a

Focus on ‘Cheng’ (Sincerity)” Alexus McLeod (Colorado State University) “‘Truth Property Chauvinism’, Deflationism, and

Early Chinese Philosophy”

PRESIDENTIAL RECEPTION8:30 p.m.–12:30 a.m., Arch View Balloom (second floor)

41

Saturday Morning, February 21: 9:00 a.m.–noon

SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 21

PLACEMENT INTERVIEW AREA8:30 a.m.–12:30 p.m., Manchester Room (fourth floor)

REGISTRATION8:30 a.m.–noon, registration area (second floor)

EXHIBITS9:00 a.m.–noon, Grand Ballroom, Salons A, B, and C (second floor)

SATURDAY MORNING, 9:00 A.M.–NOON

MAIN PROGRAM SESSIONS

VI-A. Invited Symposium: The Meaning of a Life Chair: Polo Camacho (University of Kansas) Speakers: Antti Kauppinen (Trinity College Dublin) Gwen Bradford (Rice University) Commentator: Connie S. Rosati (University of Arizona)

VI-B. Invited Symposium: Ordinary Objects Chair: Jonathan D. Jacobs (Saint Louis University) Speakers: Daniel Z. Korman (University of Illinois at Urbana-

Champaign) Meg Wallace (University of Kentucky) Commentator: Michaela McSweeney (Princeton University)

VI-C. Invited Symposium: Vagueness and Belief Chair: Roy Sorensen (Washington University in St. Louis) Speakers: Michael Caie (University of Pittsburgh) Diana Raffman (University of Toronto) Andrew Bacon (University of Southern California)

VI-D. Invited Symposium: Implicit Attitudes Chair: Ron Mallon (Washington University in St. Louis) Speaker: Edouard Machery (University of Pittsburgh) Commentators: Carole Lee (University of Washington) Neil Levy (University of Oxford and Florey Institute

of Neuroscience and Mental Health)

42

Saturday Morning, February 21: 9:00 a.m.–noon (cont.)

VI-E. Invited Symposium: Oppression Chair: Nathalie Nya (The Pennsylvania State University) Speakers: Meena Krishnamurthy (University of Manitoba) Carol Hay (University of Massachusetts Lowell) Vanessa Wills (St. Joseph’s University)

VI-F. Author Meets Critics: Matthew Fulkerson, The First Sense Chair: Sarah Beach (University of Missouri–St. Louis) Critics: John Schwenkler (Florida State University) Robert E. Briscoe (Ohio University) Response: Matthew Fulkerson (University of California, San

Diego)

VI-G. Colloquium: Causation and Explanation 9:00-10:00 a.m. “A Closer Look at Causal Bases and Its Implications

for Reducing Dispositions” Chair: Katarina Perovic (University of Iowa) Speaker: David Blanks (Ohio State University) **Graduate student travel stipend recipient** Commentator: Jennifer McKitrick (University of Nebraska–Lincoln) 10:00-11:00 a.m. “Microphysical Causation and the Case for

Physicalism” Chair: Eric Hochstein (Washington University in St. Louis) Speaker: Alyssa Ney (University of Rochester) Commentator: D. Gene Witmer (University of Florida) 11:00 a.m.-noon “Metaphysical Explanation without Grounding” Chair: Alexander Jackson (Boise State University) Speaker: David Mark Kovacs (Cornell University) **Graduate student travel stipend recipient** Commentator: Kelly Trogdon (Virginia Tech)

VI-H. Colloquium: Deliberation and Obligation 9:00-10:00 a.m. “Practical Deliberation and Acting for a Reason:

Two Arguments against Source Externalism” Chair: Gregory Beabout (Saint Louis University) Speaker: Jeff Behrends (Illinois State University) Commentator: Zac Cogley (Northern Michigan University) 10:00-11:00 a.m. “Good Moral Judgment and Decision-Making

Without Deliberation” Chair: Charles B. Kurth (Washington University in St. Louis) Speaker: Asia Ferrin (University of Washington) **Graduate student travel stipend recipient** Commentator: Krista Thomason (Swarthmore College)

43

Saturday Morning, February 21: 9:00 a.m.–noon (cont.)

11:00 a.m.-noon “A Defense of Ought-Implies-Can” Chair: Julinna Oxley (Coastal Carolina University) Speaker: Justin Caouette (University of Calgary) Commentator: John Brunero (University of Nebraska–Lincoln)

VI-I. Colloquium: Political Philosophy and Philosophy of Race 9:00-10:00 a.m. “Anamnesia: Remembrance and Resistance in

Benjamin and Fanon” Chair: Sarah Marshall (University of Memphis) Speaker: Taine Duncan (University of Central Arkansas) Commentator: Kris Sealey (Fairfield University) 10:00-11:00 a.m. “Transmitting Prejudice: How Slurs Influence Us

Through Imagery” Chair: John Torrey (University of Memphis) Speaker: Ralph DiFranco (University of Connecticut) **Graduate student travel stipend recipient** Commentator: Anthony Neal (Paine College) 11:00 a.m.-noon “Emotion and Deadly Force: A Sartrean

Phenomenological Analysis of ‘Stand Your Ground’ Laws”

Chair: Bill E. Lawson (University of Memphis) Speaker: Kimberly Engels (Marquette University) Commentator: Verena Erlenbusch (University of Memphis)

VI-J. Colloquium: Skepticism, Dogmatism, and Phenomenal Conservatism

9:00-10:00 a.m. “Dogmatism Without Mooreanism” Chair: Christiane Merritt (Washington University in St.

Louis) Speaker: Jonathan Fuqua (Purdue University) **Graduate student travel stipend recipient** Commentator: Michael Huemer (University of Colorado) 10:00-11:00 a.m. “The Self-Defeat Argument for Phenomenal

Conservatism” Chair: Lana Kühle (Illinois State University) Speaker: Landon Hedrick (University of Nebraska–Lincoln) **Graduate student travel stipend recipient** Commentator: Brian Talbot (Washington University in St. Louis) 11:00 a.m.-noon “A Kantian Critique of Our Epistemological

Common Sense” Chair: Konstantin Pollok (University of South Carolina) Speaker: Matthew Kelsey (Arizona State University) Commentator: Dai Heide (Simon Fraser University)

44

Saturday Morning, February 21: 9:00 a.m.–noon (cont.)

VI-K. Colloquium: Ancient and Medieval Philosophy 9:00-10:00 a.m. “Platonic Particulars and Timaean Tropes” Chair: Jessica Adkins (Saint Louis University) Speaker: Christopher Buckels (University of California, Davis) Commentator: Brian D. Prince (Independent Scholar) 10:00-11:00 a.m. “‘This’” Chair: Robin Smith (Texas A&M University) Speaker: Phil Corkum (University of Alberta) Commentator: Christopher Frey (University of South Carolina) 11:00 a.m.-noon “Aquinas on Intentionality and Intelligible Species:

A Problem for Primitive Accounts” Chair: Andrew Helms (University of Notre Dame) Speaker: Kendall Englund (Syracuse University) **Graduate student travel stipend recipient** Commentator: Caleb Cohoe (Metropolitan State University of

Denver)

VI-L. Colloquium: Aesthetics 9:00-10:00 a.m. “Two Aims in Artistic Interpretation: Thesis and

Theme” Chair: Theodore Gracyk (Minnesota State University

Moorhead) Speaker: James Harold (Mount Holyoke College) Commentator: James R. Hamilton (Kansas State University) 10:00-11:00 a.m. “What Instances of Novels Are” Chair: Jason Gardner (Washington University in St. Louis) Speaker: Alexey Aliyev (University of Maryland) **Graduate student travel stipend recipient** Commentator: Wesley D. Cray (Grand Valley State University) 11:00 a.m.-noon “A Critical Look at Jesse Prinz’s Emotions-Based

Account of Aesthetics” Chair: Nick Curry (University of Illinois at Chicago) Speaker: Allison Fritz (University of Nebraska–Lincoln) **Graduate student travel stipend recipient** Commentator: Stephanie Ross (University of Missouri–St. Louis)

VI-M. Colloquium: Early Modern Empiricists 9:00-10:00 a.m. “Distinguishing Willing from Desiring in Locke” Chair: Lisa Downing (Ohio State University) Speaker: Julie Walsh (Université du Québec à Montréal) Commentator: Antonia LoLordo (University of Virginia)

45

Saturday Morning, February 21: 9:00 a.m.–noon (cont.)

10:00-11:00 a.m. “Berkeley’s Semantic Argument” Chair: Waldemar Rohloff (University of Missouri–St. Louis) Speaker: Alexander Paul Bozzo (Marquette University) **Graduate student travel stipend recipient** Commentator: Lewis Powell (University at Buffalo) 11:00 a.m.-noon “Thomas Reid on Remembering Events” Chair: Shelley Weinberg (University of Illinois at Urbana-

Champaign) Speaker: Marina Folescu (University of Missouri) Commentator: Todd Buras (Baylor University)

VI-N. APA Committee Session: Under What Conditions Does Adherence to Strict Faculty Credentialing Guidelines Doom a Two-Year Philosophy Program, or Will It?Arranged by the APA Committee on Philosophy in Two-Year Colleges

Chair: Thomas Urban (Houston Community College) Panelists: Kristen Zbikowski (Hibbing Community College) Donna Werner (St. Louis Community College–

Meramec) Bill Hartmann (St. Louis Community College–Forest

Park) Roxanne Kurtz (University of Illinois at Springfield)

VI-O. APA Committee Session: Empirical Studies and the Future of PhilosophyArranged by the APA Committee on the Status of Black Philosophers

Chair: Jeanine Weekes Schroer (University of Minnesota Duluth)

Speakers: M. A. Hunter (University of California, Davis) “Philosophers Behaving Badly: The Systemic

Failures of ‘Experimental Philosophy’ and What Can Be Done to Salvage It ”

Christopher Gregory Weaver (Rutgers University) “Fundamental Causation” Myisha Cherry (University of Illinois at Chicago) “Coming Out of the Shade: Philosophy’s Embrace

of Empirical Studies as an Embrace of the World”

46

Saturday Afternoon, February 21: 12:15–2:15 p.m.

SATURDAY AFTERNOON, 12:15–2:15 P.M.

GROUP PROGRAM SESSIONS

GVI-1. Radical Philosophy AssociationTopic: Racial Identities in Struggle: Examining State Violence Against Latinas/os

Chair: Elisabeth Paquette (York University) Speakers: Andrea Pitts (Vanderbilt University) “Nativism and Civic Education: Banning Mexican

American Studies in Tucson, Arizona” Ernesto Rosen Velásquez (University of Dayton) “Race and National Sovereignty in Immigration

Matters” Maria P. Chaves (SUNY Binghamton) “The ‘Crisis’ of Latinx Unaccompanied Minors and

Their Mothers”

GVI-2. Society for the Philosophy of Creativity Chair: Larry R. Cobb (Foundation for Philosophy of

Creativity) Speaker: James Engell (Harvard University) “Kant, Coleridge, Einstein: A Schema from Creative

Thinkers” Commentator: Corey McCall (Elmira College)

GVI-3. Society for the Advancement of American PhilosophyTopic: Hegel and American Philosophy

Chair: Tadd Ruetenik (Saint Ambrose University) Speakers: Paul B. Cherlin (Southern Illinois University

Carbondale) “John Dewey’s Transfiguration of Dialectical Logic” Vincent Colapietro (The Pennsylvania State

University) “The Critique of Institutions: Denton Jaques Snider

and Max H. Fisch” James Good (Lone Star College) “Some Thoughts on the American Reception of

Hegel, 1850–1900” Commentator: Laura Mueller (Southern Illinois University

Carbondale)

47

Saturday Afternoon, February 21: 12:15–2:15 p.m. (cont.)

GVI-4. Marxism and Philosophy AssociationTopic: Marxism and Human Nature

Chair: Anton Ford (University of Chicago) Speakers: Vanessa Wills (St. Joseph’s University) “Species-Being and the Ethics of Human

Enhancement” Ruth Groff (Saint Louis University) “Essence, Energeia, and Species-Being” Gregory Meyerson (North Carolina A&T State

University) “Marxism, Moral Realism, and the Fact/Value Split”

GVI-5. Joint Group/APA Committee Session: American Association of Philosophy Teachers and the APA Committee on Inclusiveness in the ProfessionTopic: Inclusive Philosophy Pedagogy: What Is It and How Do We Achieve It? (Part Two: Inclusive Practices)

Chair: Andrew P. Mills (Otterbein University) Speakers: Frederique Janssen-Lauret (University of Campinas

(Brazil)) “Teaching Logic in a Gender-Inclusive Way” Michael Seifried (College of Wooster) “Must Inclusive Materials, Practices, and Methods

Be ‘Lopped On’ to Classic Philosophy Courses?” Kristina Gehrman (University of Tennessee–

Knoxville) “Why ‘I Think’”

GVI-6. Special Session Organized by the APA Task Force on a Code of ConductTopic: Information about the Task Force’s activities and an opportunity for feedback

Chair: Nancy J. Holland (Hamline University)

48

Saturday Afternoon, February 21: 2:30–5:30 p.m.

SATURDAY AFTERNOON, 2:30–5:30 P.M.

MAIN PROGRAM SESSIONS

VII-A. Invited Symposium: New Directions in Global Justice Chair: Gina Schouten (Illinois State University) Speakers: Cristian Dimitriu (University of Kansas) “New Directions in Global Justice: An Agent-

Principal Approach” Helena de Bres (Wellesley College) “Justice in Transnational Governance” Commentator: Lisa Fuller (University at Albany, SUNY)

VII-B. Invited Symposium: Epistemology of the Internet Chair: Jennifer Nagel (University of Toronto) Speakers: Peter Ludlow (Northwestern University) Berit Brogaard (University of Miami) Andrew M. Cullison (DePauw University) Erik J. Olsson (Lund University)

VII-C. Invited Symposium: Metaphysics of Facts Chair: Andrew Cortens (Boise State University) Speaker: Jason Turner (Saint Louis University) Commentators: Gabriel Uzquiano (University of Southern California) Anna-Sofia Maurin (University of Gothenburg)

VII-D. Memorial Symposium for Arthur Danto Chair: Mark Rollins (Washington University in St. Louis) Speakers: Ben Caplan (Ohio State) Carl Matheson (University of Manitoba) Elizabeth Schellekens (University of Uppsala) Bill E. Lawson (University of Memphis) Anne Eaton (University of Illinois at Chicago)

VII-E. Invited Symposium: Constitutivism Chair: Ariela Tubert (University of Puget Sound) Speaker: Michael Smith (Princeton University) Commentators: Selim Berker (Harvard University) Nadeem J. Z. Hussain (Stanford University)

49

Saturday Afternoon, February 21: 2:30–5:30 p.m. (cont.)

VII-F. Invited Symposium: Analytical Buddhism Chair: Dan Arnold (University of Chicago) Speakers: Miri Albahari (University of Western Australia) “What Is Nibbana? Investigating Its Possibility” Mark Siderits (Illinois State University) Commentator: Matt MacKenzie (Colorado State University)

VII-G. Author Meets Critics: Michael Friedman, Kant’s Construction of Nature

Chair: Kent Staley (Saint Louis University) Critics: Konstantin Pollok (University of South Carolina) Christopher Smeenk (University of Western Ontario) Response: Michael Friedman (Stanford University)

VII-H. Author Meets Critics: Jeffrey C. King, Scott Soames, and Jeffrey Speaks, New Thinking about Propositions

Chair: Joshua Dever (University of Texas at Austin) Critics: Peter W. Hanks (University of Minnesota Twin Cities) Lawrence R. Buchanan (University of Texas at

Austin) Responses: Jeffrey C. King (Rutgers University) Scott Soames (University of Southern California) Jeffrey Speaks (University of Notre Dame)

VII-I. Submitted Symposium Chair: Mark Steen (Bogazici University) Speaker: Landon D. C. Elkind (University of Iowa) “In Defense of Simples in Contact” Commentators: Vera Flocke (New York University) Andrew Jones (Saint Louis University)

VII-J. Colloquium: Rationality, Deliberation, and Intellectualism 2:30-3:30 p.m. “The Perspective of Rational Deliberation” Chair: Thomas D. Senor (University of Arkansas and

University of Notre Dame) Speaker: Sharon Mason (Indiana University Bloomington) **Graduate student travel stipend recipient** Commentator: Brian Kim (Bowdoin College) 3:30-4:30 p.m. “A Problem for Intellectualism about Knowledge-

How” Chair: Joel Pust (University of Delaware) Speaker: Georgina Gardiner (Rutgers University) **Graduate student travel stipend recipient** Commentator: Ted Poston (University of South Alabama)

50

Saturday Afternoon, February 21: 2:30–5:30 p.m. (cont.)

4:30-5:30 p.m. “A Defense of Epistemic Instrumentalism” Speaker: Matthew C. Kopec (Northwestern University) Chair: Benjamin Henke (University of Nebraska–Lincoln) Commentator: Matthew Lockard (Southern Methodist University)

VII-K. Colloquium: Semantics of Modals 2:30-3:30 p.m. “On the Performativity of Deontic Must” Chair: Camil Golub (New York University) Speaker: Daniel Skibra (Northwestern University) Commentator: Dilip Ninan (Tufts University) 3:30-4:30 p.m. “Epistemic Possibility and Its Abominable

Conjunction” Chair: Ross Inman (Saint Louis University) Speaker: Chris Tweedt (Baylor University) **Graduate student travel stipend recipient** Commentator: Geoffrey Pynn (Northern Illinois University) 4:30-5:30 p.m. “When ‘Or’ Meets ‘Might’: A Compositional

Acceptability-Conditional Semantics for Classical Logic and Epistemic Modality”

Chair: Joe R. Salerno (Saint Louis University) Speaker: Hanti Lin (Australian National University) Commentator: Benjamin Lennertz (Davidson College)

VII-L. Colloquium: Consciousness 2:30-3:30 p.m. “Why Phenomenal Intentionality Isn’t Compositional” Chair: Derek Jones (University of Evansville) Speaker: Galen Barry (University of Virginia) **Graduate student travel stipend recipient** Commentator: David Pitt (California State University, Los Angeles) 3:30-4:30 p.m. “Emergent Panpsychism, Emotional Zombies, and

Fundamental Kinds” Chair: Tim Fuller (Yonsei University, Underwood

International College) Speaker: Maxwell Suffis (Rice University) Commentator: Andrew Melnyk (University of Missouri) 4:30-5:30 p.m. “Dilemmas for Higher-Order Though Theories of

Consciousness” Chair: Robert J. Howell (Southern Methodist University) Speaker: Martha Gibson (University of Wisconsin–Madison) Commentator: Rocco J. Gennaro (University of Southern Indiana)

51

Saturday Afternoon, February 21: 2:30–5:30 p.m. (cont.)

VII-M. Colloquium: Blame 2:30-3:30 p.m. “Relations, Cooperation, and the Problem of the

Stranger” Chair: Emily McGill-Rutherford (Vanderbilt University) Speaker: Dan Burkett (Rice University) **Graduate student travel stipend recipient** Commentator: Emily M. Crookston (Coastal Carolina University) 3:30-4:30 p.m. “At Enmity with Unreality: Is Abolitionism Self-

Defeating?” Chair: Robert N. Johnson (University of Missouri–

Columbia) Speaker: Per-Erik Milam (University of California, San Diego) Commentator: Tyler Paytas (Washington University in St. Louis) 4:30-5:30 p.m. “Blameworthiness and Imaginary Moral Reasons” Chair: Robert F. Card (SUNY Oswego and University of

Rochester Medical Center) Speaker: Sean Clancy (Syracuse University) **Graduate student travel stipend recipient** Commentator: Kristina Gehrman (University of Tennessee–

Knoxville)

VII-N. APA Committee Session: Virtues: Intellectual and MoralArranged by the APA Committee on International Cooperation

Speakers: Chienkuo Mi (Soochow University) “Reflection and Extended Knowledge” Kai Marchal (Soochow University, Taipei, Taiwan) “Virtue Ethics and Kantian Moral Theory” Zhi-Hue Wang (Soochow University, Taipei, Taiwan) “Action as Performance” Cheng-Hung Tsai (Soochow University, Taipei,

Taiwan) “Skill Models of Virtue” Hsiang-Min Shen (Soochow University, Taipei,

Taiwan) “Zhu Xi on ‘Intellectual Virtue’: A Perspective from

Virtue Epistemology” Commentator: Michael Slote (University of Miami)

52

Saturday Afternoon, February 21: 2:30–5:30 p.m. (cont.)

VII-O. APA Committee Session: High School Philosophy Teaching as an Alternative Career PathArranged by the APA Committee on Pre-College Instruction in Philosophy

Chair: Renée Smith (Coastal Carolina University) Speakers: Christopher Freiler (Hinsdale Central High School,

Hinsdale, IL) Brian Haffey (Bishop Kenny High School,

Jacksonville, FL) John Cleary (Raritan Valley Community College) Marina Vladova (Andrews Osborne Academy,

Willoughby, OH)

VII-P. APA Committee Session: Moral Enhancement: A Critical AssessmentArranged by the APA Committee on Philosophy and Medicine

Chair: Fabrice Jotterand (Regis University) Speakers: James Giordano (Georgetown University Medical

Center) “Cognitive and Moral Enhancement: Realities,

Risks—and Opportunities” Jeffrey P. Bishop (Albert Gnaegi Center for Health

Care Ethics, Saint Louis University) “Neuroscience and Other Political Schemes” Nicole Vincent (Georgia State University) “Moral Enhancement: 60 Years On” Veljko Dubljevic (Institut de Recherches Cliniques

de Montréal and McGill University) “Implications of the ADC Model Judgment for the

Theoretical Feasibility of Moral Enhancement”

53

Main and Group Program Participants

(Group sessions begin with the letter G; all others are main sessions.)

AAbbarno, G. John M. (D’Youville College) ................................................GIII-7Abramson, Kate (Indiana University Bloomington) ..................................... II-BAdkins, Jessica (Saint Louis University) .....................................................VI-KAlbahari, Miri (University of Western Australia) ......................................... VII-FAlbrecht, Vera (La Guardia Community College) ......................................GV-1Alexander, Joshua (Siena College) .............................................................IV-GAliyev, Alexey (University of Maryland) ............................................VI-L, GIV-8Allen Gunasekera, Crystal (Principia College) ..............................................V-JAllen, Colin (Indiana University) .................................................................III-NAlmassi, Ben (Governors State University) ................................................GII-6Amaya, Santiago (Universidad de los Andes) ............................................. V-KAmbury, James (King’s College) ...............................................................GV-2Anderson, Douglas R. (Southern Illinois University Carbondale) ............GIV-1Anderson, Elizabeth Secor (University of Michigan) ......................................... ................................................................................... Presidential AddressAnderson, Luvell (University of Memphis) ..............................II-N, III-B, GII-13Anton, Audrey L. (Western Kentucky University) .....................................GIII-7Archer, Avery (University of Tennessee–Knoxville) ..................................... V-KArnold, Dan (University of Chicago) ....................................................I-C, VII-FAtkins, Richard Kenneth (Boston College) ................................................GII-8Austin, Emily (Wake Forest University) ........................................................V-GAuxier, Randall E. (Southern Illinois University Carbondale) ..................GII-12Axtell, Guy (Radford University) ................................................................. IV-K

BBaceski, Tina (Rockhurst University) .........................................................GIII-2Bach, Theodore (Bowling Green State University) .......................................V-JBacon, Andrew (University of Southern California) ....................................VI-CBaima, Nicholas (Washington University in St. Louis) .................................V-GBalay, Anne (Independent Scholar and Over-the-Road Trucker) .............GIII-1Ballantyne, Nathan (Fordham University) ...................................................IV-GBan, Sophie (Mercer County Community College) .....................................IV-JBang, In (Kyungpook University (South Korea)) ..........................................II-OBarker, Jonathan (University of Virginia) .....................................................III-LBarnes, Corey (University of Memphis) .......................................................III-J

54

Main and Group Program Participants

Barry, Galen (University of Virginia) .......................................................... VII-LBaxley, Anne Margaret (Washington University in St. Louis) ............................ ................................................................................................... IV-H, GIII-3Beabout, Gregory (Saint Louis University) .................................................VI-HBeach, Patrick (Coastal Carolina University) .........................................IV-H, V-IBeach, Sarah (University of Missouri–St. Louis) ......................................... VI-FBeck, Jacob (York University) ..................................................................... III-HBeddor, Bob (Rutgers University) ................................................................ III-IBehrends, Jeff (Illinois State University) ....................................................VI-HBeiser, Frederick (Syracuse University) ......................................................GI-1Bell, Macalester C. (Columbia University) .................................................. III-FBerker, Selim (Harvard University) ............................................................. VII-EBerman, Scott (Saint Louis University) ........................................................IV-JBhandary, Asha (University of Iowa)..........................................................GII-3Bien, Joseph (University of Missouri) .......................................................... II-DBierria, Alisa (Stanford University) .............................................................. III-EBirondo, Noell (Wichita State University) ....................................................V-GBishop, Jeffrey P. (Albert Gnaegi Center for Health Care Ethics, Saint Louis University) ........................................................................ VII-PBlack, Andrew (University of Missouri–St. Louis) ........................................ V-HBlanks, David (Ohio State University) .........................................................VI-GBlattner, William (Georgetown University) .................................................. II-DBlincoe, Adam (University of Virginia) ........................................................ IV-HBlock, Ned (New York University) ............................................................... IV-DBolinger, Renee (University of Southern California) .....................................I-FBollard, Mara (University of Michigan) ..........................................................I-FBonardi, Paolo (Université de Genève) .......................................................IV-LBowen, Adam (University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign) ..................GIII-10Boxill, Bernard (University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill) ...................GII-13Boyce, Kenneth A. (University of Missouri) ................................................ II-MBoyd, Kenneth A. (Dalhousie University) ......................................... GII-8, IV-KBozzo, Alexander Paul (Marquette University) .......................................... VI-MBradford, Gwen (Rice University) ............................................................... VI-ABradley, Peter (Ferris State University) .......................................................III-OBradner, Alexandra E. (Independent Scholar) ............................................III-OBrassfield, Shoshana R. (Frostburg State University) .................................III-OBrenner, Andrew (University of Notre Dame) .............................................IV-JBresnahan, Aili (University of Dayton) .....................................................GII-10Brink, David (University of California, San Diego) ......................................III-GBriscoe, Robert E. (Ohio University) ........................................................... VI-FBrodrick, Michael (Miami University (Ohio)) .............................................GII-7Brogaard, Berit (University of Miami) ........................................................ VII-BBronfman, Aaron (University of Nebraska) ................................................... I-BBrown, Eric A. (Washington University in St. Louis) ....................................IV-FBrunero, John (University of Nebraska–Lincoln) ........................................VI-H

55

Main and Group Program Participants

Bruno Niño, Teresa (Syracuse University) .................................................... III-IBryson, Annette (University of Michigan).................................................... III-IBuchanan, Lawrence R. (UJniversity of Texas at Austin) ...........................VII-HBuckareff, Andrei A. (Marist College) .......................................................... V-KBuckels, Christopher (University of California, Davis) ................................VI-KBungum, Donald (Saint Louis University) ................................................... V-MBuras, Todd (Baylor University) .................................................................. VI-MBurke, Teresa Blankmeyer (Gallaudet University) ....................................... II-CBurkett, Dan (Rice University) ................................................................... VII-MBusk, Larry (University of Oregon) .............................................................. II-NButnor, Ashby Lynne (Metropolitan State College of Denver) .................... I-CByrne, Alex (Massachusetts Institute of Technology) ................................ III-D

CCagle, Lisa (Washington University in St. Louis) ......................................... V-PCaie, Michael (University of Pittsburgh) .....................................................VI-CCamacho, Polo (University of Kansas) ........................................................ VI-ACamp, Elisabeth (Rutgers University) ......................................................... III-BCaouette, Justin (University of Calgary) .....................................................VI-HCapeillères, Fabien (Université de Caen and CEPA Paris I) ..............GI-1, GII-2Caplan, Ben (Ohio State) ............................................................................VII-DCapraru, Mihnea D. I. (Syracuse University) ................................................ II-HCard, Robert F. (SUNY Oswego and University of Rochester Medical Center) .................................................................................. VII-MCariani, Fabrizio (Northwestern University) ......................................... III-L, V-ACarley, Craig (Phoenix College) ................................................................GIII-9Caruso, Gregg (Corning Community College, SUNY) .............................GII-11Carver, Michael (Washington University in St. Louis) ................................. III-KChang, Ruth (Rutgers University) ............................................................... IV-AChaves, Maria P. (SUNY Binghamton) .......................................................GVI-1Cherlin, Paul B. (Southern Illinois University Carbondale) ............GIV-1, GVI-3Cherry, Myisha (University of Illinois at Chicago) ..................... IV-N, V-D, VI-OChong, Chaehyun (Sogang University (South Korea)) ....................II-O, GV-10Chow, Joel (University of Arizona) ...........................................................GIV-5Christensen, Anna (Washington University in St. Louis) .............................V-GChuard, Philippe (Southern Methodist University) ........................ V-C, GIII-10Cicovacki, Predrag (College of the Holy Cross) ........................................GV-8Clancy, Sean (Syracuse University)........................................................... VII-MClardy, Justin (University of Arkansas) ....................................................... IV-NCleary, John (Raritan Valley Community College) .....................................VII-OCobb, Larry R. (Foundation for Philosophy of Creativity) ........................GVI-2Code, Lorraine (York University) ................................................................GV-3Cogley, Zac (Northern Michigan University) ..................................VI-H, GII-11Cohoe, Caleb (Metropolitan State University of Denver) ...........................VI-K

56

Main and Group Program Participants

Colapietro, Vincent (The Pennsylvania State University) .........................GVI-3Coleman, Mary Clayton (Illinois Wesleyan University) ............................... IV-AConcepcion, David (Ball State University) ................................................... II-NConlon, James J. (Mount Mary College) ..................................................GIV-8Connelly, James (Trent University) ............................................................GV-1Connolly, Kevin (University of Pennsylvania) ............................................. III-HConroy, Christina (Morehead State University) ............................................ I-DCook, Ezra J. (Northwestern University) .............................................. II-L, III-LCorcilius, Klaus (University of California, Berkeley) ................................... III-ACorkum, Phil (University of Alberta) ...........................................................VI-KCortens, Andrew (Boise State University) .................................................VII-CCostello, Virginia (University of Illinois at Chicago) .................................GIII-1Couenhoven, Jesse (Villanova University) ..............................................GII-15Cowling, Sam (Denison University) .............................................................. I-DCrawford, Ryan (Webster University, Vienna) ..........................................GIV-4Cray, Wesley D. (Grand Valley State University) ......................................... VI-LCronin, Irena (University of California, Los Angeles) ................................. II-MCrookston, Emily M. (Coastal Carolina University) ................................... VII-MCrowell, Steven (Rice University) ................................................................. II-DCrummett, Dustin (University of Notre Dame) ........................................... V-MCudd, Ann E. (University of Kansas) .................................................. IV-I, GV-7Cullison, Andrew M. (DePauw University) ....................................... VII-B, GV-4Cunningham, Anthony (St. John’s University (Minnesota)) .....................GIV-2Cureton, Adam (University of Tennessee) ................................................... II-CCurry, Nick (University of Illinois at Chicago) ............................................. VI-L

DDacey, Michael (Washington University in St. Louis) ................................ IV-MDarby, Derrick (University of Michigan) ..................................................... IV-CDavies, James (University of Toronto) ........................................................ II-Mde Bres, Helena (Wellesley College) .........................................................VII-ADea, Shannon (University of Waterloo) ....................................................... II-NDembroff, Robin (Princeton University) ....................................................GII-3deRosset, Louis (University of Vermont) ................................................... III-MDershowitz, Naomi (Syracuse University) .................................................... IV-IDever, Joshua (University of Texas at Austin) ...........................................VII-HDiaz-Leon, Esa (University of Manitoba) ...........................................IV-L, GII-3Dieterle, Jill (Eastern Michigan University) ................................................ III-CDiFranco, Ralph (University of Connecticut) ............................................... VI-IDillon, Robin S. (Lehigh University) .................................................GII-3, GV-3Dimitriu, Cristian (University of Kansas) ....................................................VII-ADixon, Scott (University of California, Davis) ............................................. III-MDoan, Michael (Eastern Michigan University) ...........................................GV-3Dogramaci, Sinan (University of Texas at Austin) .........................................II-J

57

Main and Group Program Participants

Domski, Mary A. (University of New Mexico) ............................................. IV-BDonner, Wendy (Carleton University) .........................................................III-GDorsey, Dale (University of Kansas) ............................................................. V-IDorst, Kevin (Massachusetts Institute of Technology)............................... III-KDougherty, Trent G. (Baylor University) ...................................................... IV-EDowning, Lisa (Ohio State University) ....................................................... VI-MDreier, James (Brown University) ..................................................................I-FDriscoll, Catherine (North Carolina State University) ...................................V-LDriver, Julia (Washington University in St. Louis) ........................................ V-EDubljevic, Veljko (Institut de Recherches Cliniques de Montréal and McGill University) ................................................................................ VII-PDular, Nicole (Syracuse University) ...............................................................I-FDuncan, Taine (University of Central Arkansas) .......................................... VI-IDutant, Julien (University of Geneva) ........................................................ IV-K

EEaswaran, Kenneth (Texas A&M University) ....................................... III-K, IV-EEaton, Anne (University of Illinois at Chicago) ..........................................VII-DEbrey, David (Northwestern University) ..................................................... III-AEckenwiler, Lisa (George Mason University) .............................................IV-OEdwards, Adam D. (University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign) ............... II-KEdwards, Kevan (Syracuse University) ....................................................... III-HEgerstrom, Kirsten (Syracuse University) ..................................................... V-IElgat, Guy (Northwestern University) .......................................................GIII-6Elkind, Landon D. C. (University of Iowa) ................................................... VII-IElliott, Katie (University of California, Los Angeles) .....................................V-LEmbry, Brian (University of Toronto) ............................................................ V-HEmmerman, Karen (University of Washington) .........................................GII-6Enden, Lars (University of Washington) ....................................................... I-EEngell, James (Harvard University) ...........................................................GVI-2Engels, Kimberly (Marquette University) .................................................... VI-IEnglund, Kendall (Syracuse University) .....................................................VI-KErlenbusch, Verena (University of Memphis) ...................................... II-N, VI-I

FFair, Frank (Sam Houston State University) ...............................................GV-5Farr, Arnold (University of Kentucky)........................................................GIV-9Fatima, Saba (Southern Illinois University Edwardsville) ..........................GV-3Fazekas, Kathy (University of Connecticut) ............................................GIII-10Ferrin, Asia (University of Washington) ......................................................VI-HFigdor, Carrie (University of Iowa) ................................................................V-JFileva, Iskra (University of Colorado–Boulder) ...........................................II-LLFinocchiaro, Peter (University of Notre Dame) ............................................IV-JFisher, Justin C. (Southern Methodist University) ........................................V-L

58

Main and Group Program Participants

Fisher, Tyrus (University of California, Davis) .............................................. II-KFitelson, Branden (Rutgers University) ....................................................... III-KFletcher, Emily (University of Wisconsin–Madison) .................................... II-EFlocke, Vera (New York University) ............................................................. VII-IFlory, Dan (Montana State University) ......................................................GIV-8Folescu, Marina (University of Missouri) ................................................... VI-MForan, Sean (Independent Scholar) .............................................................IV-JForcehimes, Andrew (Vanderbilt University) .............................................. III-IFord, Anton (University of Chicago) .........................................................GVI-4Foreman, Elizabeth (Missouri State University) ...........................................V-JFrank, Devin (University of Missouri) ..........................................................IV-LFreiler, Christopher (Hinsdale Central High School, Hinsdale, IL) ............VII-OFrey, Christopher (University of South Carolina) ........................................VI-KFriedman, Michael (Stanford University) ...................................................VII-GFrise, Matthew J. (University of Rochester) ............................................... IV-KFritz, Allison (University of Nebraska–Lincoln) ........................................... VI-LFrost, Kim (Syracuse University) .................................................................. V-KFulkerson, Matthew (University of California, San Diego) ......................... VI-FFuller, Avril (Universty of Memphis) ............................................................III-JFuller, Lisa (University at Albany, SUNY) ...................................................VII-AFuller, Tim (Yonsei University, Underwood International College) ........... VII-LFulmer, Everett C. (Saint Louis University) ..................................................II-GFuqua, Jonathan (Purdue University) ..........................................................VI-J

GGallegos, Sergio (Metropolitan State University of Denver).....................GV-6Ganson, Dorit (Oberlin College) ...................................................................II-JGarcia, Juan (Ohio State University) ............................................................ V-HGardiner, Georgina (Rutgers University) ....................................................VII-JGardner, Jason (Washington University in St. Louis) ................................. VI-LGehrman, Kristina (University of Tennessee–Knoxville) ...............VII-M, GVI-5Gennaro, Rocco J. (University of Southern Indiana) ................................. VII-LGentry, Gerad (University of South Carolina) ..............................................V-NGertler, Brie (University of Virginia) ........................................................... III-DGiancola, Donna (Suffolk University) ........................................................GIV-5Gibson, Martha (University of Wisconsin–Madison) ................................. VII-LGillies, Anthony (Rutgers University)............................................................II-LGiordano, James (Georgetown University Medical Center) ..................... VII-PGoehring, Billy Dean (University of Oregon) ............................................GIV-5Goldberg, Sanford (Northwestern University) ........................................... III-DGoldman, Loren (Ohio University) ............................................................GIII-3Golub, Camil (New York University)...........................................................VII-KGonneman, Chad (University of Southern Indiana) ...................................IV-GGood, James (Lone Star College) .............................................................GVI-3

59

Main and Group Program Participants

Gottlieb, Paula (University of Wisconsin–Madison) ................................... IV-HGracyk, Theodore (Minnesota State University Moorhead) ............VI-L, GII-10Graham, Peter (University of California, Riverside) ..................................... V-BGreco, Daniel (Yale University) ..................................................................... I-BGreen, Alex (University of Buffalo) ...........................................................GIV-3Green, Keith (East Tennessee State University) .......................................GIII-5Greenlee, Andrew (University of Rochester) .............................................. V-KGriffith, Aaron (Central Michigan University) .............................................. IV-IGrigore, Nora (University of Texas at Austin) .............................................. III-IGroff, Ruth (Saint Louis University) .................................................. IV-I, GVI-4Guardiano, Nicholas (Southern Illinois University Carbondale) .................V-NGupta, Bina (University of Missouri–Columbia) .......................................GIV-5Gurley, S. West (Sam Houston State University) ......................................GIII-8

HHaffey, Brian (Bishop Kenny High School, Jacksonville, FL) .....................VII-OHagedorn, Eric W. (St. Norbert College) ...................................................... V-HHagengruber, Ruth (University of Paderborn) .............................................V-OHall, Chad Farish (University of Wyoming) ................................................ IV-MHall, Joshua (Muskingum University) ........................................................GII-1Halper, Aaron (Catholic University) ..........................................................GIV-3Halteman Zwart, Megan (Saint Mary’s College) .........................................III-OHamby, Benjamin (Coastal Carolina University) ........................................GV-5Hamilton, James R. (Kansas State University) ............................................ VI-LHanks, Peter W. (University of Minnesota Twin Cities) .............................VII-HHarbin, Ami (Oakland University) ..............................................................GV-3Harold, James (Mount Holyoke College) ................................................... VI-LHarper, Aaron (West Liberty Unversity) ............................................V-G, GIII-9Harris, Daniel I. (Hunter College, CUNY) ...................................................GIII-6Hartmann, Bill (St. Louis Community College-Forest Park) ................ V-P, VI-NHartmann, Stephan (Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München) .............. III-KHay, Carol (University of Massachusetts Lowell) ....................................... VI-EHayaki, Reina (University of Nebraska–Lincoln) ........................................... I-EHaybron, Daniel M. (Saint Louis University) ................................................. V-IHayes, Michael (University of Kansas) ......................................................... V-IHealy, Kieran (Duke University) ..................................................................III-NHedrick, Landon (University of Nebraska–Lincoln) .....................................VI-JHeide, Dai (Simon Fraser University) ...........................................................VI-JHeld, Jacob M. (University of Central Arkansas) ...............................V-J, GIV-2Helms, Andrew (University of Notre Dame) ...............................................VI-KHeney, Diana (Fordham University) ...........................................................GII-8Henke, Benjamin (University of Nebraska–Lincoln) ...................................VII-JHenry, Aaron (University of Toronto) .......................................................... III-HHerdova, Marcela (Florida State University) ................................................ V-K

60

Main and Group Program Participants

Hicks, Michael R. (Miami University) ..........................................................II-LLHiggins, Peter (Eastern Michigan University) ............................................GV-7Hill, Christopher (Brown University) ............................................................ V-BHimelright, Jack (University of Notre Dame).............................................. V-MHochstein, Eric (Washington University in St Louis) ..................................VI-GHogan, Brandon (Howard University) ..........................................................III-JHolland, Nancy J. (Hamline University) ....................................................GVI-6Holtzman, Geoffrey (The Graduate Center, CUNY) ....................................IV-GHorisk, Claire (University of Missouri) .........................................................IV-LHorowitz, Sophie (Rice University) ...............................................................II-JHorton, Michael B. (Harper College) ................................................... III-L, V-PHoward, Don (University of Notre Dame) .....................................................V-JHowat, Andrew (California State University, Fullerton) .......................I-E, GII-8Howell, Robert J. (Southern Methodist University) ................................... VII-LHuemer, Michael (University of Colorado) ..................................................VI-JHuenemann, Charles (Utah State University) .............................................. V-HHunter, M. A. (University of California, Davis) ............................................VI-OHussain, Nadeem J. Z. (Stanford University) ............................................. VII-EHüttemann, Andreas (University of Cologne) .............................................V-O

II’Anson, Chioke (Virginia Commonwealth University) .............................GIII-8Ibri, Ivo (Pontifícia Universidade Católica de São Paulo) .........................GIII-4Idris, Farhan M. (National University of Singapore) .................................GIV-5Immerman, Daniel (University of Notre Dame) .......................................... III-KInman, Ross (Saint Louis University) .........................................................VII-K

JJackson, Alexander (Boise State University) ..............................................VI-GJacobs, Jonathan D. (Saint Louis University) ............................................. VI-BJacobson, Anne Jaap (University of Houston) ........................................... III-HJagannathan, Dhananjay (University of Chicago) .......................................V-GJames, V. Denise (University of Dayton) .................................................... III-EJankunis, Frank (University of Calgary) .....................................................GII-6Janssen-Lauret, Frederique (University of Campinas (Brazil)) ...... GII-1, GVI-5Javier Castellanos, Amir Arturo (Syracuse University) .............................. III-MJeffcoat, Tanya (University of Central Arkansas) .......................................GV-9Jeffers, Chike (Dalhousie University) ............................................... V-D, GIV-9Jeffrey, Gideon (Saint Louis University) .......................................................V-LJenkins, Scott (University of Kansas) ...............................................V-N, GIII-6Jenny, Matthias (Massachusetts Institute of Technology) .........................III-LJhun, Jennifer (University of Pittsburgh) ................................................... III-KJimenez, Marta (Emory University) ............................................................GV-2Johnson, Christa (The Ohio State University) .............................................. V-K

61

Main and Group Program Participants

Johnson, Robert N. (University of Missouri–Columbia) ........................... VII-MJohnstone, Mark A. (McMaster University) .................................................V-GJones, Andrew (Saint Louis University) ...................................................... VII-IJones, Derek (University of Evansville) ..................................................... VII-LJorati, Julia (Ohio State University) .............................................................. I-AJotterand, Fabrice (Regis University) ........................................................ VII-PJoyce, James M. (University of Michigan) ...................................................II-JJun, Nathan (Midwestern State University) .....................................IV-G, GIII-1

KKallberg, Luke J. (Saint Louis University) ......................................................I-FKang, Li (Syracuse University) ................................................................... III-MKassor, Constance (Smith College) .............................................................. I-CKaufmann, Stefan (University of Connecticut) ............................................ V-AKauppinen, Antti (Trinity College Dublin) ................................................... VI-AKawall, Jason R. (Colgate University) .......................................................... IV-IKearns, Stephen (Florida State University) .................................................. V-EKeller, John A. (Niagara University) ............................................................IV-GKeller, Lorraine (Niagara University) ............................................................IV-LKeller, Pierre (University of California, Riverside) .....................................GII-2Kelsey, Matthew (Arizona State University) ................................................VI-JKendig, Catherine (Missouri Western State University) ............................ IV-MKhader, Serene (Brooklyn College, CUNY) ................................................GII-3Kim, Brian (Bowdoin College) .....................................................................VII-JKim, Halla (University of Nebraska Omaha) ................................................II-OKing, Jeffrey C. (Rutgers University) .........................................................VII-HKittay, Eva Feder (Stony Brook University) .................................................IV-OKivy, Peter (Rutgers University) ................................................................... II-BKleinschmidt, Shieva (University of Southern California) ............................II-FKoch, Anton (University of Heidelberg) ......................................................V-OKopec, Matthew C. (Northwestern University) ...........................................VII-JKorman, Daniel Z. (University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign) ............... VI-BKovacs, David Mark (Cornell University) ....................................................VI-GKozma, Melissa M. (University of Wisconsin–Barron County) ...................GII-3Krishnamurthy, Meena (University of Manitoba) ....................................... VI-EKurth, Charles B. (Washington University in St. Louis) ...............................VI-HKurtsal Steen, Irem (Boğaziçi University) .....................................................V-FKurtz, Roxanne (University of Illinois at Springfield) ......................... IV-C, VI-NKühle, Lana (Illinois State University) ..........................................................VI-JKüplen, Mojca (Research Centre for the Humanities, Hungarian Academy of Science) .........................................................................GIV-8

62

Main and Group Program Participants

LLaks, André (Université Paris-Sorbonne and Universidad Panamericana, Mexico D.F.) .......................................................................................... III-ALam, Barry (Vassar College) ........................................................................IV-GLandini, Gregory (University of Iowa) .......................................................GV-1Landrum, Kyle (University of Houston) ..................................................... IV-MLange, Marc B. (University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill) ..................... III-CLawson, Bill E. (University of Memphis) ............................................ VI-I, VII-DLayne, Chadwick (St. Edwards University) ...............................................GIV-9Lebron, Christopher (Yale University) ......................................................... IV-CLee, Carole (University of Washington) ......................................................VI-DLee, Geoffrey (University of California, Berkeley) .............................. III-H, V-CLee, Kok Yong (University of Missouri) ....................................................... IV-KLee, Matthew (Berry College) ..................................................................... III-KLee, Sukjae (Seoul National University) ....................................................... I-ALeite, Adam J. (Indiana University Bloomington) ....................................... III-DLennertz, Benjamin (Davidson College) ....................................................VII-KLevey, Samuel (Dartmouth College) ........................................................... IV-BLevy, David M. (George Mason University) ..............................................GIV-7Levy, Neil (University of Oxford and Florey Institute of Neuroscience and Mental Health) ..................................................................VI-D, GII-11Lewis, Court (Owensboro Community and Technical College) ...............GIV-9Lewis, Karen (Barnard College and Columbia University) .......................... V-ALewis, Stephanie (Municipal Capital Management, LLC) .................... II-K, V-LLin, Eden (Rutgers University) ...................................................................... V-ILin, Hanti (Australian National University) .................................................VII-KLindeman, Kathryn (Saint Louis University) ................................................ III-ILindemann, Hilde (Michigan State University) ..................................III-N, IV-OListon, Michael (University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee) ............................... II-MLitland, Jon (University of Texas at Austin)................................................ III-MLizhu, Li (Hong Kong University of Science and Technology) ................GV-10Lockard, Matthew (Southern Methodist University) ..................................VII-JLofts, Steve G. (University of Western Ontario) ...............................GI-1, GII-2LoLordo, Antonia (University of Virginia) .................................................. VI-MLomelino, Pamela J. (Loyola University Chicago) .....................................GV-6Lottenbach, Hans (Kenyon College) ............................................................V-NLove, Alan C. (University of Minnesota) .................................................... IV-MLudlow, Peter (Northwestern University) .................................................. VII-BLuft, Sebastian (Marquette University) ..............................................V-O, GII-2

MMachery, Edouard (University of Pittsburgh) .............................................VI-DMacKay, Douglas (University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill) ..................III-JMacKenzie, Matt (Colorado State University) ........................................... VII-F

63

Main and Group Program Participants

Magnell, Thomas (Drew University) ..........................................................GII-9Mahlan, John (University of Virginia) ......................................................... IV-KMaley, Corey J. (University of Kansas) ......................................................... V-IMallon, Ron (Washington University in St. Louis) ...............................IV-I, VI-DMalm, Heidi (Loyola University Chicago) ..................................................GV-7Manne, Kate (Cornell University) ................................................................ IV-AMarasoiu, Andrei (University of Virginia) .................................................... II-HMarchal, Kai (Soochow University, Taipei, Taiwan) ...................................VII-NMarkovits, Julia (Cornell University) ............................................................ V-EMarshall, Eugene J. (Florida International University) .............................GIII-5Marshall, Sarah (University of Memphis) .................................................... VI-IMartin, Christopher S. (Hillsdale College) ................................................GIV-7Mason, Michelle (University of Minnesota Twin Cities) ............................. III-FMason, Sharon (Indiana University Bloomington) .....................................VII-JMatheis, Christian (Virginia Tech) .............................................................GIII-8Matheson, Carl (University of Manitoba) ..................................................VII-DMaurin, Anna-Sofia (University of Gothenburg) ........................................VII-CMay, Simon (Florida State University) ........................................................ IV-CMcAninch, Andrew James (University of Pennsylvania) ............................ IV-HMcCall, Corey (Elmira College) .........................................................V-N, GVI-2McCready-Flora, Ian (Saint Louis University)............................................... II-EMcDaniel, Brannon (University of Richmond) .............................................IV-JMcDonald, Fritz J. (Oakland University) ...................................................GIII-7McFarland, Andrew (Kansas State University) .............................................V-FMcGary, Howard (Rutgers University) .........................................................III-JMcGill-Rutherford, Emily (Vanderbilt University) ..................................... VII-MMcGinnis, Jon (University of Missouri–St. Louis) ........................................II-GMcGrath, Matthew (University of Missouri–Columbia) ...............................IV-LMcKenna, Erin (Pacific Lutheran University) ............................................GII-12McKitrick, Jennifer (University of Nebraska–Lincoln) ................................VI-GMcLaughlin, Brian P. (Rutgers University) ................................................... V-BMcLeod, Alexus (Colorado State University) ...........................................GV-10McReynolds, Phillip A. (University of North Carolina at Charlotte) ............. IV-IMcSweeney, Michaela (Princeton University) ............................................ VI-BMedina, José (Vanderbilt University) ........................................................GV-3Melnyk, Andrew (University of Missouri) .................................................. VII-LMelton, Desiree (Notre Dame of Maryland University) ............................... V-DMenge, Torsten (Georgetown University) ................................................... IV-IMerino-Rajme, Carla (Arizona State University) .......................................... V-CMerritt, Christiane (Washington University in St. Louis)..............................VI-JMeyerson, Gregory (North Carolina A&T State University) ......................GVI-4Mi, Chienkuo (Soochow University) ..........................................................VII-NMilam, Per-Erik (University of California, San Diego) ............................... VII-MMiller, Steven A. (Southern Illinois University Carbondale) .....................GIV-1

64

Main and Group Program Participants

Miller, Zachary (University of Oklahoma) ....................................................IV-LMills, Andrew P. (Otterbein University) .............................................V-L, GVI-5Mineau, André (University of Quebec at Rimouski) .......................GII-4, GIV-4Miracchi, Lisa (New York University)............................................................. I-BMontes, Leonidas (Duke University) ........................................................GIV-7Montgomery, Nickolas (Indiana University) ..............................................GII-1Morphew, David (University of Michigan) .................................................GII-5Morris, Kevin M. (Tulane University) ............................................................. I-DMorrissey, Clair (University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill) ...................GII-3Mortensen, Kaija (Randolph College) ........................................................IV-GMorton, Adam (University of British Columbia) ........................................GV-5Mouroutsou, Georgia (University of Western Ontario, Kings University College) ................................................................................ II-EMueller, Axel (Northwestern University) ................................................... III-MMueller, Laura (Southern Illinois University Carbondale) ............GII-12, GVI-3Muntean, Ioan (University of Notre Dame) ..................................................V-JMurphy, Colleen (University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign) ...................V-JMurray, Samuel (Saint Louis University) ...................................................GIII-2

NNagel, Jennifer (University of Toronto) ..................................................... VII-BNarveson, Jan (University of Waterloo) .....................................................GV-8Navin, Mark C. (Oakland University) ..........................................................GV-7Neal, Anthony (Paine College) ..................................................................... VI-INeander, Karen (Duke University) ............................................................... V-BNemil, Osman (Emory University) .............................................................GII-4Newhard, Jay M. (East Carolina University) .................................................III-LNewlands, Samuel (University of Notre Dame) ...........................................IV-JNewman, Lex (University of Utah) ...............................................................II-GNey, Alyssa (University of Rochester) ........................................................VI-GNinan, Dilip (Tufts University) ....................................................................VII-KNutting, Eileen (University of Kansas) ........................................................ II-MNya, Nathalie (The Pennsylvania State University) ..................................... VI-ENye, Howard (University of Alberta) ............................................................. V-I

OOlfert, Christiana (Tufts University) ............................................................. III-AOlin, Lauren (Washington University in St. Louis) ..................................... IV-MOlsson, Erik J. (Lund University) ................................................................ VII-BOxley, Julinna (Coastal Carolina University) ......................................III-O, VI-H

PPaakkunainen, Hille (Syracuse University) .................................................. III-IPaquette, Elisabeth (York University)........................................................GVI-1

65

Main and Group Program Participants

Parent, T. (Virginia Tech).............................................................................. II-MPatton, Lydia (Virginia Tech) .......................................................................GI-1Paytas, Tyler (Washington University in St. Louis) .................................... VII-MPeart, Sandra (JUniversity of Richmond) ..................................................GIV-7Penner, Sydney (Cornell University) ............................................................ V-HPereboom, Derk (Cornell University) .......................................................GII-15Perovic, Katarina (University of Iowa) ...............................................VI-G, GV-1Pettigrew, David (Southern Connecticut State University) .......................GII-4Pfeifer, Geoffrey (Worcester Polytechnic Institute) .................................GIII-8Phillips, Luke P. (Auburn University) ........................................................... IV-HPiccinini, Gualtiero (University of Missouri–St. Louis) ............................... IV-MPincock, Christopher (Ohio State University) ............................................. III-CPiper, Mark (James Madison University) ..................................................GIII-2Pitt, David (California State University, Los Angeles) ................................ VII-LPitts, Andrea (Vanderbilt University) ..............................................GV-3, GVI-1Poe, Danielle (University of Dayton) ..........................................................GV-8Pollok, Konstantin (University of South Carolina) ............................. VI-J, VII-GPoston, Ted (University of South Alabama) ................................................VII-JPovich, Mark (Washington University in St. Louis) ....................................... II-IPowell, Lewis (University at Buffalo) ......................................................... VI-MPowell, Russell (Boston University) ..............................................................V-LPratt, Aaron (Emory University) ..................................................................GV-9Prettyman, Adrienne (Bryn Mawr College) ................................................. IV-DPrince, Brian D. (Independent Scholar) ......................................................VI-KPryor, Mark (Tulane University) .................................................................GIV-3Purves, Duncan (University of Wyoming) ....................................................III-JPust, Joel (University of Delaware) .................................................... IV-E, VII-JPynn, Geoffrey (Northern Illinois University) ............................................VII-K

RRaffman, Diana (University of Toronto) ......................................................VI-CRagland, Scott (Saint Louis University) ................................................. I-A, II-GRaibley, Jason R. (California State University, Long Beach) ........................ V-IRailton, Peter (University of Michigan) ........................................................ II-ARaskoff, Sarah (University of Arizona) ......................................................... III-IRea, Michael (University of Notre Dame) .....................................................II-FReed, Douglass (University of Virginia) .......................................................IV-FReibsamen, Jonathan (Saint Louis University) ........................................... IV-KReiheld, Alison (Southern Illinois UIniversity Edwardsville) .....................GV-6Reiland, Indrek (Rice University) .................................................................IV-LRepetti, Rick (Kingsborough Community College-CUNY) ........................... V-PReshotko, Naomi (University of Denver) ...................................................GV-2Rettler, Bradley (Baylor University) ............................................................GV-4Rice, Collin (Lycoming College) ................................................................... II-I

66

Main and Group Program Participants

Richardson, Robert C. (University of Cincinnati) ......................................... II-HRiggs, Wayne (University of Oklahoma) ....................................................GV-5Rind, Miles (Brandeis University) ................................................................. II-BRoberts, John (University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill) .........................V-LRobichaud, Philip J. (Delft University of Technology) .............................GII-11Robins, Sarah (University of Kansas) .......................................................... III-HRobinson, Michael (Washington & Jefferson College) .............................. IV-HRobitzsch, Jan Maximilian (University of Pennsylvania) .............................V-GRoche, Timothy D. (University of Memphis) ................................................IV-FRohloff, Waldemar (University of Missouri–St. Louis) .......................IV-B, VI-MRollins, Mark (Washington University in St. Louis) ....................................VII-DRomero, Felipe (Washington University in St. Louis) ................................. III-KRosati, Connie S. (University of Arizona) .............................................II-A, VI-ARoss, Sheryl Tuttle (University of Wisconsin–La Crosse)..........................GIV-8Ross, Stephanie (University of Missouri–St. Louis) .........................VI-L, GII-10Rubio, Daniel (Rutgers University) ................................................................ I-ERudd, Anthony (St Olaf College) .................................................................V-NRuetenik, Tadd (Saint Ambrose University) ..............................................GVI-3Ruiz, Elena (Florida Gulf Coast University) ................................................. III-ERyg, Matthew (Southern Illinois University Carbondale) ................III-O, GIV-1

SSalerno, Joe R. (Saint Louis University) .....................................................VII-KSalm, Joao (Governors State University) ...................................................GII-6Sanson, David (Illinois State University) ....................................................... I-ESantorio, Paolo (University of Leeds) .......................................................... V-ASartorio, Carolina (University of Arizona) ..................................................... V-KSchaffer, Jonathan M. (Rutgers University) ............................................... III-MSchechtman, Anat (University of Wisconsin–Madison) .............................. IV-BSchellekens, Elizabeth (University of Uppsala) .........................................VII-DScholz, Sally (Villanova University) .................................................... III-N, IV-GSchouten, Gina (Illinois State University) ..................................................VII-ASchroeder, Timothy (Ohio State University) ................................................ V-BSchroer, Jeanine Weekes (University of Minnesota Duluth) ...........VI-O, GII-3Schwenkler, John (Florida State University) ............................................... VI-FSealey, Kris (Fairfield University) ................................................................. VI-ISeifried, Michael (College of Wooster) ....................................................GVI-5Senor, Thomas D. (University of Arkansas and University of Notre Dame) ..............................................................................................................VII-JSfendoni-Mentzou, Demetra (Aristotle University of Thessaloniki) ........GIII-4Shaikh, Umer (University of Michigan) ......................................................GII-5Sharadin, Nathaniel (University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill)................V-JShen, Hsiang-Min (Soochow University, Taipei, Taiwan) ...........................VII-NShields, Jannai (University of Rochester) .................................................. IV-M

67

Main and Group Program Participants

Shields, Kenneth (University of Missouri) .....................................................I-FShiver, Anthony (University of Georgia) .......................................................II-FShrumm, Kate (Washington University in St. Louis) ................................... III-FSiderits, Mark (Illinois State University) .................................................... VII-FSimon, Jonathan (New York University) ..................................................... III-HSimpson, Matthew (Luther College) ............................................................ V-HSingleton, Gregory (Northeastern Illinois University) ...............................GV-9Skibra, Daniel (Northwestern University) ..................................................VII-KSlote, Michael (University of Miami) .........................................................VII-NSmart, J. A. (University of Missouri)............................................................. V-KSmeenk, Christopher (University of Western Ontario) ..............................VII-GSmith, Michael (Princeton University) ....................................................... VII-ESmith, Renée (Coastal Carolina University) ...............................................VII-OSmith, Robin (Texas A&M University) .........................................................VI-KSmithies, Declan (Ohio State University).................................................... IV-DSnow, Nancy E. (Marquette University) ....................................................GIV-2Snyder, Eric (Ohio State University) ............................................................III-LSnyder, Jeremy (Simon Fraser University) .................................................IV-OSnyder, Joel (University of Chicago) ........................................................... II-BSoames, Scott (University of Southern California) ....................................VII-HSobel, David (Syracuse University) .............................................................. V-ESorensen, Roy (Washington University in St. Louis) ..................................VI-CSoutor, Milan (Charles University in Prague and University of Iowa) .......GV-1Speaks, Jeffrey (University of Notre Dame) ..............................................VII-HSpeliotis, Evanthia (Bellarmine College) ..................................................GIV-3Spencer, Joshua (University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee)..............................III-LSpencer, Quayshawn (University of San Francisco) .................................... V-DSripada, Chandra (University of Michigan) ..............................................GII-11Staffel, Julia (Washington University in St. Louis) ........................................ I-BStaley, Kent (Saint Louis University) ..........................................................VII-GStar, Daniel (Boston University) .................................................................. IV-AStarkey, Charles (Clemson University) ............................................. IV-H, GV-6Starr, Dawn (Ohio State University) ............................................................ III-BStarr, William B. (Cornell University) ........................................................... III-BSteen, Mark (Bogazici University) ............................................................... VII-IStencil, Eric (Utah Valley University) ............................................................ V-HStepien, Rafael (Columbia University) .......................................................GII-1Steward, Stephen (Syracuse University) ............................................. II-C, IV-JStikkers, Kenneth (Southern Illinois University Carbondale) .........GII-9, GIV-1Stone, Caroline (Washington University in St. Louis) ..................................III-LStotts, Megan (University of California, Riverside) .....................................IV-LStump, Eleonore (Saint Louis University) ..................................................GV-4Suffis, Maxwell (Rice University) ............................................................... VII-LSullivan, Emily (Fordham University) ............................................................ II-I

68

Main and Group Program Participants

Sussman, David (University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign) .................. III-FSutton, Catherine (Virginia Commonwealth University) ..............................V-FSwanson, Kamran (Harold Washington College) .......................................III-O

TTalbot, Brian (Washington University in St. Louis) .......................................VI-JTalbott, William J. (University of Washington) ............................................ IV-ETaylor, Paul C. (The Pennsylvania State University) ..................................... V-DTetzlaff, Mary (Catholic University) ...........................................................GIV-3Thomas, Alan (Tilburg University) ................................................................ V-CThomason, Krista (Swarthmore College) .........................................VI-H, GIV-2Thompson, Brad (Southern Methodist University) ..................................... III-HThornton, Allison (Baylor University) ............................................................ I-EThorson, Juli K. (Ball State University) ........................................................ IV-KThurow, Joshua (University of Texas at San Antonio) ................................ V-MThuy, Van (University of Michigan) ............................................................GII-5Timpe, Kevin (Northwest Nazarene University) ............................GII-15, GV-4Titelbaum, Michael (University of Wisconsin–Madison) ............................ IV-ETomaszewski, Christopher (University of Connecticut).................................I-FTomlinson, David (University of Chicago) .................................................... I-CTorrey, John (University of Memphis) ......................................................... VI-ITrogdon, Kelly (Virginia Tech) .....................................................................VI-GTrotter, Griffin (Gnaegi Center for Health Care Ethics, Saint Louis University) .............................................................................................................GII-7Truwant, Simon (KU Leuven, Belgium) .......................................................GI-1Tsai, Cheng-Hung (Soochow University, Taipei, Taiwan) ...........................VII-NTubert, Ariela (University of Puget Sound) ......................................... IV-I, VII-ETucker, Chris (College of William and Mary) ............................................. IV-MTucker, Ericka (Marquette University) ......................................................GIII-5Turner, Jason (Saint Louis University) ............................................... IV-J, VII-CTurner, Piers Norris (Ohio State University) ................................................III-GTweedt, Chris (Baylor University) ...............................................................VII-K

UUrban, Thomas (Houston Community College) ................................. V-P, VI-NUzquiano, Gabriel (University of Southern California) ..............................VII-C

VVelásquez, Ernesto Rosen (University of Dayton) ....................................GVI-1Vicens, Leigh (Augustana College) ................................................ V-M, GII-14Victor, Elizabeth (William Paterson University)........................................... IV-HVincent, Nicole (Georgia State University) ................................................ VII-PVineberg, Susan (Wayne State University) ................................................. III-CVladova, Marina (Andrews Osborne Academy, Willoughby, OH) .............VII-O

69

Main and Group Program Participants

Vogt, Erik (Trinity College (Hartford)) .......................................................GIV-4

WWaligore, Timothy (Pace University) .........................................................GIII-3Wallace, Meg (University of Kentucky)..............................................III-M, VI-BWalsh, Julie (Université du Québec à Montréal)....................................... VI-MWang, Zhi-Hue (Soochow University, Taipei, Taiwan)................................VII-NWaterman, John (Colby College) ................................................................IV-GWatson, James R. (Loyola University New Orleans) .......................GII-4, GIV-4Watson, Jeffrey (Arizona State University) ..................................................III-JWeaver, Christopher Gregory (Rutgers University) ....................................VI-OWeber, Eric (University of Mississippi) ......................................................GII-9Wedgwood, Ralph (University of Southern California) ..............................II-LLWeinberg, Shelley (University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign).............. VI-MWelch, Dwight (University of Oklahoma) ..................................................GV-9Welch, Shay (Spelman College) ...................................................... III-J, GII-13Wellman, Kit (Washington University in St. Louis) ..................................GII-13Werner, Dan (SUNY New Paltz) ....................................................................V-GWerner, Donna (St. Louis Community College–Meramec) ................. V-P, VI-NWest, Henry R. (Macalester College) ..........................................................III-GWestfall, Mason (University of Toronto) ..................................................... IV-DWheeler, Mark (San Diego State University) .............................................GV-2Whipple, John (University of Illinois at Chicago) ......................................... I-AWhite, Amy E. (Ohio University Zanesville) ..................................................V-JWiegman, Isaac (Washington University in St. Louis) ..................................V-LWiland, Eric (University of Missouri–St. Louis) ............................................ III-IWilkins, Shane (Fordham University) .......................................................... V-MWiller, Malte (University of Chicago) ............................................................II-LWills, Vanessa (St. Joseph’s University) ............................... VI-E, GIV-9, GVI-4Witmer, D. Gene (University of Florida)............................................ III-M, VI-GWodak, Daniel (Princeton University) ............................................................I-FWoods, Mark (University of San Diego) .....................................................GV-6Worth, Sarah E. (Furman University) ........................................................GII-10Wright, David (Sam Houston State University) ..........................................GV-5Wysocki, Tom (Washington University in St. Louis) ....................................IV-G

YYan, Karen (National Yang-Ming University) ...............................................IV-GYoung, James O. (University of Victoria) .................................................GII-10

70

Main and Group Program Participants

ZZbikowski, Kristen (Hibbing Community College) ............................. V-P, VI-NZhang, Xiaoxing (Paris-Sorbonne University) ............................................GII-1Zylstra, Stephen (University of Toronto) ...................................................... V-H

71

Sessions Sponsored by APA Committees

COMMITTEE ON THE STATUS OF ASIAN AND ASIAN-AMERICAN PHILOSOPHERS AND PHILOSOPHIES

Buddhahood as a Type of Knowing How (I-C)Wednesday, February 18, 6:00–9:00 p.m.

The Yijing Studies in Korean Philosophy (II-O)Thursday, February 19, 12:10–2:10 p.m.

COMMITTEE ON INCLUSIVENESS IN THE PROFESSION

Inclusive Philosophy Pedagogy: What Is It and How Do We Achieve It? (Part One: Theorizing Inclusiveness) (II-N)Thursday, February 19, 12:10–2:10 p.m.

COMMITTEE ON INTERNATIONAL COOPERATION

Virtues: Intellectual and Moral (VII-N)Saturday, February 21, 2:30–5:30 p.m.

Newer Research from Germany (V-O)Friday, February 20, 1:30–4:30 p.m.

COMMITTEE ON LECTURES, PUBLICATIONS, AND RESEARCH

Newer Research from Germany (V-O)Friday, February 20, 1:30–4:30 p.m.

COMMITTEE ON PHILOSOPHY AND MEDICINE

Long-Term Care for the Elderly (IV-O)Co-sponsored by the APA Committee on the Status of WomenFriday, February 20, 9:00 a.m.–noon

Moral Enhancement: A Critical Assessment (VII-P)Saturday, February 21, 2:30–5:30 p.m.

72

Sessions Sponsored by APA Committees

COMMITTEE ON PHILOSOPHY IN TWO-YEAR COLLEGES

How Do I Obtain and Keep a Full-Time Community College Faculty Position? (V-P)Friday, February 20, 1:30–4:30 p.m.

Under What Conditions Does Adherence to Strict Faculty Credentialing Guidelines Doom a Two-Year Philosophy Program, or Will It? (VI-N)Saturday, February 21, 9:00 a.m.–noon

COMMITTEE ON PRE-COLLEGE INSTRUCTION IN PHILOSOPHY

High School Philosophy Teaching as an Alternative Career Path (VII-O)Saturday, February 21, 2:30–5:30 p.m.

COMMITTEE ON PUBLIC PHILOSOPHY

Ferguson, Missouri and Social Justice (GII-13)Thursday, February 19, 9:00 a.m.–noon

COMMITTEE ON THE STATUS OF BLACK PHILOSOPHERS

Eloquent Peasant: Priming the Canon (GIV-9)Co-sponsored by Concerned Philosophers for PeaceThursday, February 19, 7:40–10:40 p.m.

Love and the State (IV-N)Friday, February 20, 9:00 a.m.–noon

Empirical Studies and the Future of Philosophy (VI-O)Saturday, February 21, 9:00 a.m.–noon

COMMITTEE ON THE STATUS OF WOMEN

Committee Meeting (GII-14)Thursday, February 19, 9:00 a.m.–noon

Best Practices in Publishing (III-N)Thursday, February 19, 2:20–5:20 p.m.

Long-Term Care for the Elderly (IV-O)Co-sponsored by the APA Committee on Philosophy and MedicineFriday, February 20, 9:00 a.m.–noon

73

Sessions Sponsored by APA Committees

COMMITTEE ON THE TEACHING OF PHILOSOPHY

Experiential Learning in Philosophy (III-O)Co-sponsored by the American Association of Philosophy TeachersThursday, February 19, 2:20–5:20 p.m.

74

Group Sessions

Sessions sponsored by affiliated groups are listed below in alphabetical order of sponsoring group. Sessions sponsored jointly by more than one group are listed once for each sponsor.

AAMINTAPHIL: GV-7, Fri, 7:00–10:00 p.m.Adam Smith Society: GIV-7, Thu, 7:40–10:40 p.m.American Association of Philosophy Teachers: II-N, Thu, 12:10–2:10 p.m.; GVI-5, Sat, 12:15–2:15 p.m.American Society for Aesthetics: GII-10, Thu, 9:00 a.m.–noonAmerican Society for Value Inquiry: GII-9, Thu, 9:00 a.m.–noonAssociation for Informal Logic and Critical Thinking: GV-5, Fri, 7:00–10:00 p.m.

BBertrand Russell Society: GV-1, Fri, 7:00–10:00 p.m.

CCharles S. Peirce Society: GIII-4, Thu, 5:30–7:30 p.m.Committee on Institutional Cooperation: GIV-6, Thu, 7:40–10:40 p.m.Concerned Philosophers for Peace: GIV-9, Thu, 7:40–10:40 p.m.; GV-8, Fri, 7:00–10:00 p.m.Conference of Philosophical Societies: GIII-7, Thu, 5:30–7:30 p.m.

EEvangelical Philosophical Society: GII-15, Thu, 9:00 a.m.–noon

GGeorge Santayana Society: GII-7, Thu, 9:00 a.m.–noon

HHume Society: GIII-2, Thu, 5:30–7:30 p.m.

IInternational Association for the Philosophy of Sport: GIII-9, Thu, 5:30–7:30 p.m.International Ernst Cassirer Society: GI-1, Wed, 6:00–9:00 p.m.; GII-2, Thu, 9:00 a.m.–noonInternational Society for Buddhist Philosophy: GII-1, Thu, 9:00 a.m.–noonInternational Society for Environmental Ethics: GII-6, Thu, 9:00 a.m.–noon; GV-6, Fri, 7:00–10:00 p.m.

75

Group Sessions

International Society for Neoplatonic Studies: GII-5, Thu, 9:00 a.m.–noonInternational Society of Chinese Philosophy: GV-10, Fri, 7:00–10:00 p.m.

JJosiah Royce Society: GV-9, Fri, 7:00–10:00 p.m.

MMarxism and Philosophy Association: GVI-4, Sat, 12:15–2:15 p.m.

NNorth American Kant Society: GIII-3, Thu, 5:30–7:30 p.m.North American Nietzsche Society: GIII-6, Thu, 5:30–7:30 p.m.North American Society for Social Philosophy: GIV-2, Thu, 7:40–10:40 p.m.North American Spinoza Society: GIII-5, Thu, 5:30–7:30 p.m.

PPersonalist Discussion Group: GII-12, Thu, 9:00 a.m.–noonPhilosophy of Time Society: GIII-10, Thu, 5:30–7:30 p.m.

RRadical Philosophy Association: GIII-1, Thu, 5:30–7:30 p.m.; GVI-1, Sat, 12:15–2:15 p.m.

SSociety for Analytical Feminism: GII-3, Thu, 9:00 a.m.–noon; GV-3, Fri, 7:00–10:00 p.m.Society for Ancient Greek Philosophy: GV-2, Fri, 7:00–10:00 p.m.Society for Asian and Comparative Philosophy: GIV-5, Thu, 7:40–10:40 p.m.Society for Philosophy in the Contemporary World: GIII-8, Thu, 5:30–7:30 p.m.Society for the Advancement of American Philosophy: GVI-3, Sat, 12:15–2:15 p.m.Society for the History of Political Philosophy: GIV-3, Thu, 7:40–10:40 p.m.Society for the Philosophic Study of Genocide and the Holocaust: GII-4, Thu, 9:00 a.m.–noon; GIV-4, Thu, 7:40–10:40 p.m.Society for the Philosophic Study of the Contemporary Visual Arts: GIV-8, Thu, 7:40–10:40 p.m.Society for the Philosophy of Agency: GII-11, Thu, 9:00 a.m.–noonSociety for the Philosophy of Creativity: GVI-2, Sat, 12:15–2:15 p.m.Society for the Study of the History of Analytical Philosophy: GII-8, Thu, 9:00 a.m.–noonSociety of Christian Philosophers: GV-4, Fri, 7:00–10:00 p.m.

WWilliam James Society: GIV-1, Thu, 7:40–10:40 p.m.

76

List of Advertisers, Exhibitors, and Sponsors

APA Central 2015 Meeting Sponsors

Advertisers and ExhibitorsBloomsbury AcademicCambridge University PressDuke University PressJournal of Moral EducationPhilosopher’s Information CenterPhilosophy Documentation CenterProgram in the Humanities and Human Values (UNC)SUNY PressWilliams CollegeWiley-Blackwell

77

78

79

80

Philosophy Titlesfrom Duke University Press

The Philosophical ReviewEdited by the faculty of the Sage School of Philosophy at Cornell University

The journal aims to publish original scholarly work in all areas of analytic philosophy, with an emphasis on material of general interest to academic philosophers, and is one of the few journals in the discipline to publish book reviews.

dukeupress.edu/philreview

Common KnowledgeWhere peace and mind meet

Jeffrey M. Perl, editordukeupress.edu/ck

Notre Dame Journal of Formal LogicMichael Detlefsen and Peter Cholak, editorsdukeupress.edu/ndjfl

To order, please call 888-651-0122 or 919-688-5134,

or e-mail [email protected].

dukeupress.edu | @DUKEpress

TikkunTo heal, repair, and transform the worldMichael Lerner, editordukeupress.edu/tikkun

81

Essay PrizesAn annual prize of $5,000 is offered for the best essay--already published in or under review with a recognized journal--on some aspect of Miller’s philosophy. Authors are welcome to send a letter of application with the manuscript of the essay to the Miller Fund.

Research FellowshipsCandidates working on a book-length project addressing Miller’s philosophy are encouraged to send applications (including a proposal, CV, writing samples, and no fewer than two letters of recommendation) to the Miller Fund for awards up to $45,000.

Complete information on essay prizes and fellowships, as well as the basic texts of and secondary commentary on Miller’s philosophy, can be found at the Website for the Fellowship Fund: http://sites.williams.edu/miller/

Send inquiries to: Librarian, Williams College, Williamstown MA 01267. Applications can also be sent electronically courtesy of Sue Galli

([email protected]).

Y Y

Y YWilliams College, in conjunction with the John William Miller Fellowship Fund, announces essay prizes and research

fellowships to advance the study of the philosophy of John William Miller.

q

The Journal of Moral Education provides a unique interdisciplinary forum for the discussion and analysis of moral education and development throughout the lifespan. The journal encourages submissions across the human sciences and humanities that use a range of methodological approaches and address aspects of moral education.

EDITOR-IN-CHIEF: Darcia Narvaez, University of Notre Dame, USA

The Journal of Moral Education provides a unique interdisciplinary forum for the discussion and analysis of moral education and development throughout the lifespan. The journal encourages submissions across the human sciences and humanities that use a range of methodological approaches and address aspects of moral education.

EDITOR-IN-CHIEF:Darcia Narvaez, University of Notre Dame, USA

Visit the website to read more, or to submit your paper online today:

www.tandfonline.com/cjme

INCLUDED IN THE SOCIAL SCIENCES

CITATION INDEX®

BIG_5190-CJME_advert_4.25" x 3.5"_BW_final.indd 1 16/09/2013 14:49

82

www.bloomsbury.com • 1-888-330-8477

NEW IN PAPERBACK!

MetaphysicsA Critical Translation with Kant’s Elucidations, Selected Notes, and Related MaterialsBy Alexander BaumgartenPB 9781472570130 • $29.95

Understanding Asian PhilosophyEthics in the Analects, Zhuangzi, Dhammapada and the Bhagavad Gita By Alexus McLeodHB 9781780936314 • $120.00PB 9781780935737 • $29.95

Encyclopedia of the American EnlightenmentEdited by Mark G. SpencerHB 9780826479693 • $485.00

Pragmatist NeurophilosophyAmerican Philosophy and the BrainBy John R. Shook and Tibor SolymosiHB 9781472511058 • $112.00

The Cultural Promise of the AestheticBy Monique RoelofsHB 9781472530134 • $112.00

The Philosophy of PerceptionPhenomenology and Image TheoryBy Lambert WiesingHB 9781780937595 • $120.00

BLOOMSBURY COMPANIONS

NEW IN PAPERBACK!

The Bloomsbury Companion to the Philosophy of ScienceBy Steven FrenchPB 9781472527592 • $39.95

The Bloomsbury Companion to Analytic PhilosophyEdited by Barry Dainton and Howard RobinsonHB 9781441126283 • $190.00

NEW IN PAPERBACK!

The Bloomsbury Companion to Philosophical LogicBy Leon HorstenPB 9781472523020 • $39.95

NEW IN PAPERBACK!

The Bloomsbury Companion to the Philosophy of LanguageBy Manuel Garcia-CarpinteroPB 9781472578235 • $39.95

BLOOMSBURY CRITICAL INTRODUCTIONS TO CONTEMPORARY EPISTEMOLOGYSeries Editor: Stephen Hetherington, University of New South Wales, Australia

A Critical Introduction to TestimonyBy Axel GelfertHB 9781441186362 • $130.00PB 9781441193506 • $39.95

A Critical Introduction to SkepticismBy Allan HazlettHB 9781441138323 • $130.00PB 9781441140531 • $39.95

ADVANCES IN EXPERIMENTAL PHILOSOPHYSeries Editor: James R. Beebe, University at Buffalo, USA

Advances in Experimental EpistemologyBy James R. BeebeHB 9781472507372 • $120.00

Advances in Experimental Moral PsychologyBy Hagop Sarkissian and Jennifer Cole WrightHB 9781472509383 • $112.00

Advances in Experimental Philosophy of MindBy Justin SytsmaHB 9781472514806 • $112.00

Please sign up to our

e-newsletters here:

83

New from Wiley-Blackwell

CONTEMPORARY MORAL AND SOCIAL ISSUES: An Introduction Through Original Fiction, Discussion, and Readings

By Thomas D. Davis

Author of Philosophy: An Introduction Through Original Fiction, Discussion, and Readings Contemporary Moral and Social Issues is a uniquely entertaining introduction that brings ethical thought to life. It makes use of engaging, topically oriented original short fiction, together with classic and contemporary readings and editorial discussion to help students think about ethical theory and practical ethical problems. The stories include:

“The Trainers,” where it turns out an alien race that saved humans from extinction is now raising those humans for food, using the same justifications we use with animals;

“People of the Underground,” where people holding out

against the genetically engineered “Clenes” make the preservation of “true humanity” seem of dubious value;

“The River,” where a Westerner in an isolated outpost is faced

with a steady stream of people who will die unless he makes Peter-Singer-style sacrifices to save them; and

“The Divided States of America,” a satire in which the mid-

twentieth-century United States is dividing up into four separate countries based on caricature versions of liberalism, conservatism, libertarianism, and socialism.

“THOMAS DAVIS’S BOOK IS AN ABSOLUTE JOY TO READ. His original fiction flows seamlessly into the philosophical discussions, masterfully guiding the study of ethics to where it really matters: life.” —Mark D. White, Professor and Chair, Department of Philosophy, College of Staten Island/CUNY “DAVIS HAS WRITTEN A FANTASTIC INTRODUCTION TO ETHICS TEXT. His unique blend of original fiction, clear analysis, and engaging primary sources provides a sure-fire way to get students talking and thinking about some of today’s most pressing moral issues.” —Matt Lawrence, Long Beach City College

84

Competition Announcement The Taylor Charitable Trust

in coordination with The Program in the Humanities and Human Values at The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Announces the opening of

The 2015 E.M. Adams Essay Competition on Philosophy and the Modern Mind(This faculty-only competition opens December 31, 2014, papers due December 31, 2015)

Faculty Competition PrizesFirst Prize, $30,000; Second Prize, $15,000; Third Prize, $5,000

Congratulationsto the Winners of the 2013 and 2014 E.M. Adams Essay Competitions on Adams’

Ethical Naturalism and the Modern World-View.

2013 Faculty Prize Michael Huemer, University of Colorado, Boulder

2014 Graduate Student Prizes First Place: Robert Patrick Reed, Texas A&M University

Second Place: Douglas Kremm, Harvard UniversityThird Place: Ryan Stringer, University of California, San Diego

For more information on Adams, complete transcripts of his work, and for competition registration, please visit emadams.unc.edu.

85

Hotel Diagrams

FIRST FLOOR

Lob

by

Leve

l

Mee

tin

g R

oo

ms

91900036.qxd:HBP_Fact_Sheet 9/5/07 1:46 PM Page 3

86

SECOND FLOOR

Lob

by

Leve

l

Mee

tin

g R

oo

ms

91900036.qxd:HBP_Fact_Sheet 9/5/07 1:46 PM Page 3

87