May 12-14, 2011
Boston University
Sponsored by the Boston University Humanities Foundation
Matthew Burch (University of Arkansas Fayetteville)
Contextualizing Weakness of Will
Burt Hopkins (Seattle University)
The Historical-Philosophical Presupposition of Heidegger’ Critique of Husserl: Plato’ Socratic Seeing of the Elon
Michael Shim (California State University, Los Angeles)
Concepts, Content and Perception in Husserlian Phenomenology
Will Smith (Seattle University)
Phenomenology of the Second-Person Standpoint: Why Darwall Needs Levinas (And Vice Versa)
Irene McMullin (University of Arkansas Fayetteville)
Perspectival Harmony and the Flourishing Self
Steven Crowell (Rice University)
Being Answerable: Reason-Giving and Authentic Discourse
Abe Stone (UC Santa Cruz)
What Did Kant Really Mean by “Phenomenon”?
Anne Ozar (Creighton University)
Professional Trusthworthiness and the Phenomena of Fitting Trust
Claudio Majolino (University of Lille, France)
Manifolds and Varieties Constitution. An Attempt in Redefining Phenomenology
John Drummond (Fordham University)
Intentionality without Representationalism
Walter Hopp (Boston University)
The (Many) Foundations of Knowledge