Author archive

New Book: Emotion and Cognitive Life in Medieval and Early Modern Philosophy

by Rachel Barney .

9780199579914_140To quote from the cover: “Thirteen new essays investigate the continuities between medieval and early modern thinking about the emotions, and open up a contemporary debate on the relationship between emotions, cognition, and reason, and the way emotions figure in our own cognitive lives. A team of leading philosophers of the medieval, renaissance, and early modern periods explore these ideas from the point of view of four key themes: the situation of emotions within the human mind; the intentionality of emotions and their role in cognition; emotions and action; the role of emotion in self-understanding and the social situation of individuals.”
The volume contains chapters by three CPAMP members: Peter King, Ian Drummond, and Martin Pickavé – and also a paper by this year’s CPAMP faculty visitor Dominik Perler! For more information see here.

Large CPAMP Contingent at the International Plato Society Regional Meeting at the University of Michigan

by Rachel Barney .

CPAMP is very well presented at the upcoming International Plato Society Regional Meeting at the University of Michigan (4-7 October 2012). Lloyd Gerson, Robert Howton, Bryan Reece, Matthew Siebert, and Jacob Stump will all present papers, as will CPAMP alumni Emily Fletcher and Nicholas Riegel! See here for a detailed program and more information about the event.

Two Faculty Visitors in the Fall term

by Rachel Barney .

The Collaborative Program is very happy to welcome to faculty visitors this term: Prof. George Boys-Stones (Durham University) and Prof. Dominik Perler (Humboldt University, Berlin). A warm welcome to both of them.

Prof. Boys-Stones is here for the whole Fall term. He will also co-teach a graduate seminar with Brad Inwood; Prof. Perler will be with us for six weeks until the middle of October. Both will give talks at the beginning of their stay and I hope everyone will all take up the occasion to meet them while they are here.

UTCMP 2012

by Rachel Barney .

The University of Toronto Colloquium in Mediaeval Philosophy 2012

Friday, September 21

Session I (3:15 – 5:15)
Chair:  Gyongyi Hegedus (King’s University College, London, ON)
Speaker:  Charles Manekin (University of Maryland): “Belief, Knowledge, and Scientia (‘True Knowledge’) in the Hebrew Aristotelian Tradition”
Commentator:  Sarah Pessin (University of Denver)

Saturday, September 22

Session II (10:00 – 12:00)
Chair:  Carlos Bazán (University of Ottawa)
Speaker:  Eileen Sweeney (Boston College): “Albert the Great, Aquinas, and Bonaventure on Science”
Commentator:  Edward Houser (University of St. Thomas, Houston)

Session III (2:00 – 4:00)
Chair:  Brian Embry (University of Toronto)
Nate Bulthuis (Cornell University): “Walter Burley on the Language of Thought”
JT Paasch (Georgetown University): “Medieval Theories of Causal Powers”
Matthew Siebert (University of Toronto): “Second-Hand Knowledge”

Session IV (4:15 – 6:15)
Chair:  Dominik Perler (Humboldt University, Berlin)
Speaker:  Stephen Dumont (University of Notre Dame): “Intension and Remission of Forms: The Debate between Thomas Wylton and Walter Burley”
Commentator:  Robert Pasnau (University of Colorado, Boulder)

All sessions will be held in Room 100 of the Jackman Humanities Building (170 St. George Street).

All sessions are free and open to the public.

Registration and inquiries: medieval_dot_philosophy_at_utoronto_dot_ca

The colloquium is sponsored by the Department of Philosophy, the Collaborative Program in Ancient and Medieval Studies, and the Centre for Medieval Studies.

Organizers: Deborah Black, Peter King, Martin Pickavé

New Book co-edited by Rachel Barney

by Rachel Barney .

plato-divided-self-rachel-barney-hardcover-cover-artPlato and the Divided Self, a book that Rachel Barney co-edited with Tad Brennan and Charles Brittain, just came out. The volume, which also contains a chapter by Jennifer Whiting, originated from an exciting conference that took place at the University of Toronto in 2005.

The book is a must-read for everyone interested in Plato’s moral psychology and in the influence Plato’s account of the tripartite soul had on later authors such as Galen, Plutarch, and Plotinus. For more information about the volume check the publisher’s website.

New issue of Oxford Studies in Ancient Philosophy

by Rachel Barney .

Fresh from the press: a new issue of Oxford Studies in Ancient Philosophy (OSAP) has just appeared in print! Contributors to vol. 42 comprise Matt Evans, James Doyle, Suzanne Obdrzalek, Karel Thein, Timothy Clarke, Jacob Rosen and Marko Malink, Zena Hitz, Sean McConnell, and Jaap Mansfeld. OSAP is edited by Brad Inwood.

CPAMP at the First Canadian Colloquium for Ancient Philosophy

by Rachel Barney .

CPAMP is well represented at the First Canadian Colloquium for Ancient Philosophy, University of Alberta, Edmonton, 3-5 May 2012. Rachel Barney, Lloyd Gerson, and Brad Inwood present papers at the meeting, and CPAMP student Willie Costello has a poster presentation. For more information go to the colloquium website.

Peter Hartman hired by Loyola University Chicago

by Rachel Barney .

Peter Hartman, who in October successfully defended his dissertation on “Durand of St.-Pourçain on Cognitive Acts: Their Cause, Ontological Status, and Intentional Character”, has accepted a tenure-track position in the Philosophy Department of Loyola University Chicago. He will start at Loyola in the Fall 2013 after spending next year as a postdoc at the Université du Québec à Montréal (with Claude Panaccio). Congratulations Peter!

Emily Fletcher hired by the University of Wisconsin, Madison

by Rachel Barney .

Emily Fletcher has just accepted a tenure-track position at the University of Wisconsin at Madison. She will start there in the Fall. Well done, Emily. Congratulations!! Emily is currently finishing her dissertation on “Plato’s Reevaluation of Pleasure: Hedonism, Cognition and the Human Good in the Philebus” under the supervision of Rachel Barney. She will defend in May.