▼▲▼
▲▼▲
▲▼▲
▲▼▲
▲▼▲
To Be Announced
▼▲▼
Shamik Dasgupta is Associate Professor of Philosophy (Ph.D., New York University). He works primarily in metaphysics and the philosophy of science, with additional research interests in epistemology and ethics.
▲▼▲
Cristina Nencha is a research fellow at the University of Bergamo. She earned her PhD in Philosophy from the University of Turin and has held postdoctoral research positions at the University of Naples Federico II, the University of Bologna, and the University of L’Aquila. She has conducted research as a visiting scholar at both the University of Leeds and Trinity College Dublin. Her work primarily focuses on modal metaphysics. After exploring themes related to the necessitism and contingentism debate, with particular attention to David Lewis’s work, she is now primarily engaged with the topic of essentialism, within the framework of contemporary analytic metaphysics
▼▲▼
Christof Rapp studied Philosophy, Ancient Greek and Logic. From 1993 to 2000, he was Assistant Professor at the University of Tübingen. From 2001 to 2009, he held the Chair for Ancient and Contemporary Philosophy at Humboldt-Universität in Berlin. From 2007 to 2009 he was Spokesperson of the Cluster of Excellence Topoi. In 2009, he assumed the Chair for Ancient Philosophy at LMU Munich. He has been Director of the Center for Advanced Studies since 2019. He has also held visiting positions in Berkeley (2000), Oxford (2008) and Paris (2014). His main field of research is ancient philosophy; he has broadly published on Aristotle, especially on Aristotle’s rhetoric, dialectic, metaphysics and ethics. From 2008 to 2015 he was co-editor of Phronesis: A Journal for Ancient Philosophy.
▼▲▼
Vassilis Politis specializes in Ancient Greek Philosophy. With the publication of The Structure of Enquiry in Plato’s Early Dialogues (Cambridge, 2015), and following numerous papers in leading journals and presses, he recently completed a major research project, on the function of aporia—puzzlement and particular puzzles—in the method of argument and enquiry of Plato and Aristotle. The significance of this project has been recognized not least through the collection of papers due to appear on this topic, and covering the whole of Ancient Philosophy, by fourteen eminent scholars worldwide: The Aporetic Tradition in Ancient Philosophy (Cambridge, 2017), edited by Professor Politis and George Karamanolis of Vienna. He believes that this topic—the function of aporia in intellectual enquiry—is of great interest for philosophy generally and indeed beyond academic enquiry.
▼▲▼
Jeffrey E. Brower is Professor of Philosophy at Purdue University. He specializes in medieval philosophy, metaphysics, and philosophical theology and especially enjoys working at the intersection of all three areas. He is the author of Aquinas’s Ontology of the Material World (OUP 2014), as well as co-editor of The Cambridge Companion to Abelard (CUP 2004) and Reason and Faith (OUP 2016). He has published broadly on Aquinas’s natural philosophy, especially on his views about matter, form, and change, and is currently working on Aquinas’s views about place and time.
▼▲▼
Andreas Ditter is a Lecturer in Philosophy at UCL. He previously held positions as a Career Development Fellow in Philosophy at The Queen’s College, Oxford, and as a Stalnaker Postdoctoral Associate in the Department of Linguistics and Philosophy at MIT. He earned his PhD in Philosophy from New York University. His research focuses on metaphysics and logic, especially questions about essence and modality. He has additional research interests in the philosophy of language, epistemology, and the history of logic.
There is no registration fee. However, registration is required through the link below. Registration closes TBA.
A limited number of hotel rooms are available at Element St. Louis Midtown at the conference rate.
If you would like to make a reservation, please contact the hotel directly.
▼▲▼
Conference Venue: Il Monastero