10 March 2025
Historical Perspectives
Historical Perspectives
H 11.00 - 11.30 WELCOME AND REGISTRATION
H 11.30 - 12.30 Prof. TAMER NAWAR University of Barcelona - ICREA
Modal Mistakes, Non-Sequiturs, and Determinism in Ancient Philosophy
H 12.30 - 14.30 LUNCH BREAK
H 14.30 - 15.05 ZIHAO GUO University of Oslo
Attentional Lapses as Cause of Akrasia: Aristotle's Nicomachean Ethics VII.3
H 15.05 - 15.40 SAMUEL PELL University of Notre Dame, Indiana
You Won't Believe your Eyes: Latin Transformations of Avicenna's Visual Theory
H 15.40 - 16.10 COFFEE BREAK
H 16.10 - 16.45 GABRIELE BARATELLI Husserl-Archiv, University of Cologne
Frege as a Scholastic: On Errors and Mistakes in the History of Logic
H 16.45 - 17.20 NICOLA GIANOLA University of Rome Tor Vergata
Moore and Wittgenstein: Antiskeptic Strategies and Impossible Errors
H 11.00 - 12.00 Prof. OFRA MAGIDOR University of Oxford
Category Mistakes and Copredication
H 14.30 - 15.05 GIADA COLESCHI FINO Consortium
Ungrammaticality, Semantic Anomaly, and Logicality
H 12.35 - 14.30 LUNCH BREAK
H 14.30 - 15.05 JORGE BONET GÓMEZ USI Lugano
Mistakes Are Not a Matter of Agreement: How to Accommodate Wrong Interpretations Within
Collaboration Theory
H 15.05 - 15.40 ROMAIN BOURDONCLE Collège de France
Misaligned Communication
H 15.40 - 16.10 COFFEE BREAK
H 16.10 - 16.45 SOFIA KOUKIA Binghamton University
She Was asking For It: Blame Shifting and Guilt-Tripping
H 16.45 - 17.20 IGOR WYSOCKI Nicholaus Copernicus University in Toruń & CLAUDIO MICHELI Roma Tre University
Effects of Circular Validity on Persuasiveness: Revisiting the Problem of Begging the Question
H 11.00 - 12.00 Prof. LISA BORTOLOTTI University of Birmingham
Is It a Mistake to Attribute Responsibility or Blame to People Seeking Support During a Mental Health Crisis?
H 14.30 - 15.05 MATTEO MICHELINI Ruhr University of Bochum, Technological University of Eindhoven
How Biased and Lazy Reasoners Can Enhance Deliberation
H 12.35 - 14.30 LUNCH BREAK
H 14.30 - 15.05 SERIJ KIŠ University of Pardubice
Is Argumentation Always the Best Way to Correct Mistaken Beliefs? Research on Cognitive Biases Suggests Otherwise
H 15.05 - 15.40 MARTIN JUSTIN University of Maribor
More Hope for Conciliationism
H 15.40 - 16.10 COFFEE BREAK
H 16.10 - 16.45 MARTINA CALDERISI FINO Consortium
Probability, Confirmation, and the Base-rate Fallacy
H 16.45 - 17.20 SARA WOOD University of York
Trusting Oneself as an Epistemic Agent When One Has Dementia