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Joint Session of the Mind Association and Aristotelian Society
York 2001, July 6 - 9
Call for papers
The Saturday and Sunday afternoon sessions at the York Joint Session
are being set aside for presentations of papers not previously invited
and published. These presentations will occur in parallel sessions (in
addition to the existing graduate sessions).
It is planned that each presentation should last no more than 30
minutes and will be followed by a further 30 minutes discussion.
Presented papers should therefore aim to introduce material involving
recent research for discussion. There are no restrictions on the areas
of philosophy which presented papers may address, but those selected
will be grouped thematically. The number of papers selected for
presentation is dependent upon the quality of those submitted though
the maximum possible is 18. Anyone may submit a paper for
presentation
in these sessions (including graduate students): the only condition is
eventual attendance at the Joint Session and thus membership then of
either the Aristotelian Society or the Mind Association.
How to submit:
Those wishing to make a presentation should submit, preferably by an
email attachment, a summary of their paper (c. 1000 words) together
with an abstract of no more than 250 words by 1 March 2001 to T.
Baldwin ([log in to unmask]). Submissions will be refereed and final
decisions made by the end of April 2001.
Unlike the invited papers, papers accepted for presentation at the
Joint Session will not be published in the Supplementary Volume of the
Aristotelian Society. They may, of course, be submitted for
publication in MIND, the Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society or
any other journal.
Programme of invited speakers:
Inaugural address: David Bell (Sheffield)
Symposia: Robert Stalnaker (MIT), Thomas Baldwin (York) -
Modality
Susan Hurley (Warwick), Richard Arneson (UCSD) - Equality
Michael
Ayers (Oxford), Paul Snowdon (Oxford) - Perception Axel Honneth
(Frankfurt), Avishai Margalit (Jerusalem) - Decision Theory Wilfred
Hodges (London), Erik Krabbe (Groningen) - Dialogue Foundations
John
Broome (Oxford), Christian Piller (York) - Practical Reasoning
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