Prof.Dr. Mircea Dumitru va susține pe data de 4 iunie o comunicare cu titlul Philosophy between Conceptual Analysis and Experiment în cadrul XXVI International Philosophical School ce are ca tematică „Applied and Experimental Philosophy in Knowledge Based Society East and West” și care se va desfășura între 4 și 6 iunie 2010 la Sofia, Bulgaria. Prof.Dr. Mircea Dumitru va prezida totodată pe data de 5 iunie una din secțiunile manifestării (The Linguistic and Psychology Turn of Applied and Experimental Philosophy).
Programul detaliat al manifestarii:
XXVI International Philosophical School
“APPLIED AND EXPERIMENTAL PHILOSOPHY IN KNOWLEDGE BASED SOCIETY EAST AND WEST”
(June 4th – 6th 2010, Sofia, Bulgaria)
PROGRAM
INSTITUTE FOR PHILOSOPHICAL RESEARCH –
BULGARIAN ACADEMY OF SCIENCES
„PHILOSOPHY” DEPARTMENT OF PHILOSOPHICAL FACULTY –
SOFIA UNIVERSITY „ST. KLIMENT OHRIDSKI”
4 JUNE 2010
HALL 1 (First Floor)
Sofia University “St. Kl. Ohridski”
8, 30 – 9, 00
Registration of the Participants and Guests
(Reception Desk in Hall 1)
9, 00 – 9, 30
OPENING SESSION
Welcoming Speech
By:
Organizing Committee of the
XXVI International Philosophical School;
Director of Institute for Philosophical Research – BAS;
Dean of Philosophical Faculty – Sofia University
Addresses
Addresses of foreign participants from Australia, Belgium, Germany, Great Britain, France, Hungary, Poland, Russia, Serbia, Turkey, etc.
4 JUNE 2010
HALL 1 (First Floor)
Sofia University “St. Clement Ohridski”
FIRST SECTION
Applied and Experimental Philosophy in Comparison with Traditional Philosophy
MORNING SESSION
MODERATOR: Vesselin Petrov
9, 30 – 10, 15
Key note speaker:
Timothy Williamson (University of Oxford)
Expertise and Experiment in Philosophy
10, 15 – 10, 45
Lucas Thorpe (St Andrews, Scotland/Boðaziçi University, Turkey)
Reid between Williamson and Bealer on Intuitions
10, 45 – 11, 00
COFFEE BREAK
11, 00 – 11, 30
Makoto Suzuki (Nanzan University, Japan; University of Cambridge, UK)
Can We Cross the Is-Ought Gap?
11, 30 – 12, 00
Mircea Dumitru (University of Bucharest)
Philosophy between Conceptual Analysis and Experiment
12, 00 – 12, 30
Tomasz Wysocki, Katarzyna Szubert (Poland)
Beyond questionnaires—the clash of intuitions as a new tool in methodology of experimental philosophy.
12, 30 – 14, 00
BREAK
AFTERNOON SESSION
MODERATOR: Timothy Williamson
14. 45 – 15, 15
Vesselin Petrov (Institute for Philosophical Research, BAS)
How much Theoretical can be Applied Philosophy?
15, 15 – 15, 45
Francois Beets (University of Liege, Belgium)
Philosophy of organism and our fractured world.
15, 45– 16, 15
Engelsina Tasseva (IPhR, BAS)
Experimental Philosophy – questions bordering on Problems
16, 15 – 16, 30
BREAK
16, 30 – 18, 30
CAFÉ PHILOSOPHIQUE
Keith Hammond (UK)
Philosophy and the New Medium of Electronic Communication
Michel Weber (Belgium)
The genocidal logic of capitalism
4 JUNE 2010
HALL 63 (Third Floor)
Sofia University “St. Clement Ohridski”
THIRD SECTION
Applied and Experimental Philosophy in Traditional Philosophical Fields (ontology, epistemology, logic, philosophy of science, etc.)
MORNING SESSION
MODERATOR: Hartley Slater
11, 00 – 11, 30
Max Seeger (University of Bielefeld, Germany)
Discussing the Details: Conceptual Divergence and the Gettier Intuitions
11, 00 – 11, 30
Marina Bakalova (IPhR – BAS)
Ryle’s Turn
11, 30 – 12, 00
Michel Weber (Centre for Philosophical Practice)
The Whiteheadian stakes of philosophical councelling
12, 00 – 12, 30
Christian Enchev (Institute for Philosophical Research, BAS )
The tension theory of metaphor and its metaphysical applicability
12, 30 – 14, 00
BREAK
AFTERNOON SESSION
MODERATOR: Max Seeger
14, 00 – 14, 45
Key Note Speaker
Hartley Slater (University of Western Australia)
Logical Responsibility
14, 45 – 15, 15
Doroteya Angelova (IPhR, BAS)
Some Logics for Vagueness
15, 15 – 15, 45
Markus Pantsar (University of Helsinki)
Perspectives to experimental philosophy of mathematics
15, 45 – 16, 15
Mincho Hadzhiyski (Chemical and Technological University, Sofia, Bulgaria), Rositsa Kaltenberg (Germany)
Ontology based approach to the analysis of formation and existence of groups of interests in Internet
16, 15 – 16, 30
COFFEE BREAK
16, 30 – 18, 30
CAFÉ PHILOSOPHIQUE
Keith Hammond (UK)
Philosophy and the New Medium of Electronic Communication
Michel Weber (Belgium)
The genocidal logic of capitalism
5 JUNE 2010
HALL 1 (First Floor)
Sofia University “St. Kl. Ohridski”
SECOND SECTION
Applied and Experimental Philosophy in Social Sciences and Humanities (social philosophy, ethics, philosophy of religion, philosophy of culture, philosophy of law, philosophy of politics, economics, etc.)
MODERATOR: Aneta Karageorgieva
10, 00 – 10, 30
Mateusz Froelich, Tomasz Wysocki (Poland)
Can a theodicy be morally dangerous? Moral assessment among believers and nonbelievers.
10, 30 – 11, 00
Dominik Dziedzic, Kamil Cekiera, Katarzyna Szubert (Poland)
Are exceptionally fragile bones less normal then exceptionally helpful neighbor—what does it mean to be normal?
11, 00 – 11, 30
Radmilo Petrovic (Serbia)
How are correlated: philosophy of religion, philosophy of culture and experimental philosophy
11, 30 – 11, 45
COFFEE BREAK
11, 45 – 12, 15
Tania Marincheshka (Institute for Philosophical Research, BAS)
Governmentality & Free Will: How is Homo Politicus Creativity Possible?
12, 15 – 12, 45
Veronika Ratseeva, PhD Student (Institute for Philosophical Research, BAS)
On specificity of methodological approaches for consumer behavior research in Philosophy, Economical Anthropology and Economics
12, 45 – 14, 00
BREAK
AFTERNOON SESSION
FIFTH SECTION
The Linguistic and Psychology Turn of Applied and Experimental Philosophy
MODERATOR: Mircea Dumitru
14, 45 – 15, 15
Tiziana Zalla (Institut Jean Nicod- CNRS, Ecole Normale Supérieure, Paris, France)
The concept of intentional action and moral evaluation in people with Asperger Syndrome and High-Functioning Autism
15, 15– 15, 45
Aneta Karageorgieva, D. Ivanov (SU “St. Kliment Ohridsky”)
Memory and Self-Knowledge
15, 45 – 16, 15
Loris Notturni (Univerite de Liege, Belgium)
Philosophy of Education: the current aporia of psychologizing school
16, 15 – 16, 30
COFFEE BREAK
16, 30 – 17, 00
Zoltan Wagner (CEU, Budapest, Hungary)
Caring and Action: A Common-Sense Theory of Agency
17, 00 – 17, 30
Valeri Lichev (IPhR, BAS)
An interdisciplinary approach to hypercoded texts
17, 30 – 18, 00
Evgeni Mitev (SU “St. Kl. Ohridski”)
“Philosophical and rhetorical perspectives of the advertising communication research”
18, 00 – 18, 30
Elena Zolotykh, PhD (Russian Philosophical Society)
Methods Construction. New Knowledge in Cross -Disciplinary Fields of both Geological and Technological Sciences
5 JUNE 2010
HALL 63 (Third Floor)
Sofia University “St. Kl. Ohridski”
THIRD SECTION
Applied and Experimental Philosophy in Traditional Philosophical Fields (ontology, epistemology, logic, philosophy of science, etc.)
(Continued from 4th June)
MORNING SESSION
MODERATOR: Makoto Suzuki
9, 00 – 9, 45
Key note speaker:
David Papineau (King’s College, London)
What exactly is the explanatory Gap?
9, 45 – 10, 15
Rosen Lutskanov (IPhR, BAS)
Category-theoretical methods for analysis and syntesis of logical systems
10, 15 – 10, 45
Milan Tasic (University of Nish)
On fifteen propositional type formal systems
10, 45 – 11, 15
Nikolay Obreshkov (IPhR, BAS)
Deontic Logic and experiments with philosophical instruments
11, 15 – 11, 30
COFFEE BREAK
11, 30 – 12, 00
Martin Tabakov (IPhR, BAS)
Logic – fundamental and applied
12, 00 – 12, 30
Vasil Penchev (IPhR, BAS)
Negative Probability in a Philosophical Interpretation
12, 30 – 14, 00
BREAK
AFTERNOON SESSION
FOURTH SECTION
Applied and Experimental Philosophy in the context of Education: Nelson-Heckmann, Socratic Dialogue, Philosophizing with Children, Philosophical Counseling and Other parallel Movements
MODERATOR: Markus Pantsar
Key note speaker:
14, 00 – 14, 45
Keith Hammond (University of Glasgow)
Philosophy as the Craft of Modern Life
14, 45 – 15, 15
Zorica Kuburic (University of Novi Sad, Serbia), Ana Kuburic (Serbia)
Empirical Reality of Philosophy in Schools, Between East and West – Case of Serbia and Croatia
15, 15 – 15, 45
Emeline Deroo (FNRS, University of Liege)
The Need for a Synoptical Vision: a Whiteheadian Reflection on Applied Philsophy in the Field of Education
15, 45 – 16, 00
COFFEE BREAK
16, 00 – 16, 30
Tsena Zhelyazkova, PhD Student (IPhR, BAS)
Philosophy with Children: an applied philosophy or a practice of philosophizing
16, 30 – 17, 00
Melek Zeynep Zafer (Uludag University, Turkey)
The Significance of Kierkegaardian Discource in Practical Philosophy via Socratic Education
17, 00 – 17, 30
Evelina Ivanova-Vardzhiyska (SU “St. Kliment Ohridsky”) Intersubjectivity as philosophical foundation of interactive teaching
17, 30 – 18, 00
Lyubomira Parizhkova (SVUBIT, Sofia, Bulgaria)
Social responsibility of contemporary philosophy
CONFERENCE END
6 JUNE 2010
(Optional)
One day Excursion with a microbus to the famous Bulgarian Rila Monastery
The Rila monastery lies in the very Rila mountain, at 1,147 meters above sea level. It is situated 117km away from Sofia to the south, and is no doubt the most popular tourist site among all monasteries in Bulgaria equally for its size, natural surroundings, architecture, wall paintings and ancient history. The monastery is flanked by the small mountain rivers of Rilska and Drushlyavitsa and is only 4 hours walking distance from the Malyovitsa peak, rising at 2,729 meters above sea level. The highest peak of the Rila mountain, Mousala (2925 meters), which is also the Balkan peninsula’s highest point, is further away at about 8 hours’ walk. The monastery offers a great view to the surrounding peaks of the mountain and represents a developed tourist sight with all the accompanying facilities such as souvenir shops, restaurants and inns. The monastery was declared a national historical monument in 1976, while in 1983 it was inscribed in UNESCO’s list of world heritage. The monastery offers accommodation while the area around it has grown into a developed tourist centre with plenty of restaurants and hotels. Once in the neighbourhood, it is worth trying the delicious mountain trout caught in the Rilska river or special breading pools by the river and offered in most of the restaurants around.
Price per bed at the monastery: 15 USD
Website: http://www.rilamonastery.pmg-blg.com/
For additional information, please contact Tania Marincheshka: projectphilosophyevents@gmail.com , GSM: (+359) (0) 896390572
The Proceedings of the School will be published in English.
Please, submit your paper ready for publication by July 31, 2010 to the Organizing Committee of XXVI International Philosophical School and indicate your name, position, and e-mail (or address for contact).
Address:
Institute for Philosophical Research: 6, Patriarh Evtimji Blvd., 1000 Sofia , Bulgaria
E-mails: projectphilosophyevents@gmail.com
(Send the paper as a Word 2003 attachment, please)
Papers submission requirements:
Requirements to the electronic form: WINDOWS’98, MILENIUM, or XP; Word for Windows 2003, or Open Office 3 – Windows XP compatible
Font: Times New Roman;
Length: max. 20 000 characters (with spaces);
Citation format as follows:
Stroud, B. (1984). The Significance of Philosophical Skepticism. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Stroud, B. (1981). “The Two Faces of Quine’s Naturalism.” Synthese, 94, 335-356.
Wetherick N.E. (1996). “Human Rationality”, in K. Manktelow and D. E. Over (Eds.). Rationality, Psychological and Philosophical Perspectives. London: Routledge, 83-109.
For additional information, please contact: e-mail: projectphilosophyevents@gmail.com,
Tania Marincheshka: GSM: (+359) (0) 896390572
ORGANIZING COMMITTEE:
- Vassil Prodanov, Head of the Organizing Committee; Director of the Institute for Philosophical Research – BAS.
- Vesselin Petrov, Scientific Secretary of the Institute for Philosophical Research – BAS.
- Aneta Karageorgieva, Head of the Department of Philosophy in Philosophical Faculty of Sofia University “St. Kl. Ohridski”.
- Rosen Lutskanov, Institute for Philosophical Research – BAS
- Doroteya Angelova, Institute for Philosophical Research – BAS
- Tania Marincheshka, Institute for Philosophical Research – BAS
- Lyubomir Vladimirov, Institute for Philosophical Research – BAS
- Ivan Mikov, Institute for Philosophical Research – BAS
PROGRAM COMMITTEE:
- David Papineau (UK)
- Keith Hammond (UK)
- Timothy Williamson (UK)
- Vassil Prodanov (Bulgaria)
- Vesselin Petrov (Bulgaria)
- Aneta Karageorgieva (Bulgaria)
Useful Information
* Money exchange: If you arrive during the day please, go to one of the Airport Banks’ desks, situated around the Exit of Terminal 2, or Exchange Desk at the Exit of Terminal 1. If you want to exchange a more money for a better rate, please, do this downtown, not at Terminal 1 or 2;
The same is equally recommended for those, arriving at the Central Railway station and Bus Terminal.
* Transport from the airport:
Sofia Airport Terminal 1
To the Sofia University and Hotels:
- Public Transportation: Bus 84 (due to construction works is currently with changed itinerary and travels longer. One way tickets price: 1 BGN (Lev) p. passenger + 1 BGN p. suitcase): You have to get out on Eagle’s Bridge stop and walk 5 min to the University;
- Taxi options (recommended for getting to your hotel): Please find and address at Terminal 1 Exit the Desks of either ‘OK SUPERTRANS’ or ‘91280’ Taxies. Normally, you will be charged less than 10 Euro (20 BGN) to the University & around 10 – 12 Euro (20- 24 BGN) to the hotels; Please, see below details of authentic Taxi logos.
ATTENTION: Please, do not search, or accept any offers for Taxi transportation but for the ‘OK SUPERTRANS’ (OK СУПЕРТРАНС-9732121) or ‘91280’ Desks’ offers and directions!
Sofia Airport Terminal 2:
To the Sofia University:
- Public Transportation: Bus 284 (One way tickets price: 1 BGN (Lev) p. passenger + 1 BGN p. suitcase): You have to get out on Eagle’s Bridge stop and walk 5 min to the University;
Direct public transportation to the recommended hotels is unavailable;
- Taxi options (recommended for getting to your hotel): Please find and address at Terminal 2 Exit the Desks of either ‘OK SUPERTRANS’ 9732121 or ‘91280’ Taxies. Normally, you will be charged less than 10 Euro (20 BGN) to the Sofia University & around 10 to 12 Euro (20-25 BGN) to the hotels; Please, see details of authentic Taxi logos:
ATTENTION: Please, do not search, or accept any offers for Taxi transportation but for the ‘OK SUPERTRANS’ (OK СУПЕРТРАНС-9732121) or ‘91280’ Desks’ offers and directions!
* Transport from the Central Bus Terminal and Central Railway Station:
To hotels ‘Amethyst’ and ‘Gloria Palace’ & L’Opera Hotels:
- Direct Public Transportation: Unavailable due to Sofia Metro Construction Works;
- Taxies from behind the Bus terminal: Preferably either ‘OK SUPERTRANS’ or ‘91280’ Taxies (for getting to L’Opera Hotel they should charge you around 5 Euro (10 BGN) and around 2.5 Euro (5 BGN) to Amethyst or Gloria Palace Hotels;
- Taxies from the Central Railway Station: Please, don’t accept any offers for Taxi transportation inside or outside the CRS and don’t take a Taxi, parked in front of the Central Railway Station. Please, take one of the taxies, passing by the Central Railway Station. Preferably either ‘OK SUPERTRANS’ or ‘91280’ Taxies (for getting to L’Opera Hotel they should charge you around 5 Euro (10 BGN) and around 2.5 Euro (5 BGN) to Amethyst or Gloria Palace Hotels;
* Hotels with IPhR reservation agreement:
- For more details, please see attached Hotel Information
- Amethyst Hotel, Sofia (Three Stars Hotel): 67 “Tsar Simeon” Str., Sofia 1000, Bulgaria; Tel: + (359 2) 983-63-63; + 359 (0) 895 449 495 http://www.hotelamethyst.com/services_eng.html
- L’Opera Hotel (Three Stars Retro Hotel of Quality): 8 “Paris” Str., Sofia 1000, Bulgaria; Tel : + 359 878 776 276 (Mr. Danailov); http://www.hotel-lopera.eu/Contacts/contacts.html
- Gloria Palace Hotel, (Four Stars Hotel): 20 “Maria Louisa” Blvd., Sofia 1000, Bulgaria; Tel : + (359 2) 980 78 95; + (359 2) 980 34 57; http://www.gloriapalacehotel.bg/