Justice,
Rights and Institutions:
Themes from the Political Philosophy of T. M. Scanlon
Friday 22 - Saturday 23 May 2009Time: 9am - 6pm each day Venue: John Casken Lecture Theatre,
Martin Harris Centre, Speakers:
The
event is
co-sponsored by MANCEPT
(the Manchester Centre for
Political Theory)
The conference fee for participants is £60 per
person
(this price includes tea/coffee, refreshments and lunch on both days).
Accommodation is now all booked-up, but the
conference office would be happy to supply you with a list of
Manchester hotels.
To register for the conference, follow the link below:
Conference
Registration and Booking form Conference Aims and Description: ![]() T. M. Scanlon, the Alford Professor of Natural Religion, Moral Philosophy, and Civil Polity at Harvard University, is one of the most significant moral and political philosophers of the past thirty years. His development of contractualism as a general view explaining the content of "what we owe to each other" represents one of the great systematic projects in recent moral and political philosophy This conference will take advantage of Scanlon's presence in the UK to give the 2009 Locke Lectures at the University of Oxford, in order to bring him to Manchester for an intensive two-day exploration of themes from his political philosophy. Although Scanlon's contractualist moral philosophy has received a significant degree of critical attention, there has perhaps not been the same degree of attention given to the distinctively political aspects or implications of Scanlon's project. The conference will aim to remedy this gap through a detailed exploration both of Scanlon's work in political philosophy, and of the implications for political philosophy of other aspects of Scanlon's work on topics in moral philosophy. Papers at the conference will thus be of two broad types: (a) papers relating to Scanlon's treatment of issues such as freedom of expression, human rights, equality, punishment, contract, and the idea of tolerance, as collected in his book The Difficulty of Tolerance (Cambridge: CUP, 2003); and (b) papers that address the connections between issues in political philosophy and Scanlon's treatment of topics such as choice, responsibility, blame, intention, value, promising, and well-being in his books What We Owe to Each Other (Cambridge, Mass.: HUP, 1998) and Moral Dimensions (Cambridge, Mass.: HUP, 2008).
For any queries about this conference, please contact the
conference organizer, Martin
O'Neill
This conference has a Facebook 'Event' page, accessible if you click
here
The Conference Registration and Accommodation form is here
The
Difficulty of Tolerance: Essays in Political Philosophy (2003) Moral
Dimensions: Permissibility, Meaning and Blame (2008)
The
Significance of Choice (1986, published 1988) The
Status of Well-Being (1996, published 1998) Miscellaneous: Alex
Voorhoeve
Interview (2001) with Scanlon, "Kant on the Cheap"
[from The Philosophers' Magazine] Scanlon
interview with Harry Kriesler (2007),
part of UC Berkeley's "Conversations
with History" video interviews Thomas
Nagel, "One-to-One"
(Review of What We Owe to Each Other),
London Review of Books,
1999 Scanlon's Berkeley
Howison Lecture (2007) on
"The Ethics of Blame" (video) Elizabeth Ashford and Tim Mulgan, "Contractualism" (2007) in the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (focuses on Scanlon's views)
School of Social
Sciences, University of Manchester Philosophy
Discipline Area, University of Manchester Politics Discipline Area,
University of Manchester Manchester
Centre for Political Theory (MANCEPT)
Sponsors:
Royal
Institute of Philosophy
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