Conference on
Eastern and Western Philosophical
Themes
December 4th and 5th, 2009 - New York
At one time, there was lively dialogue between Western and Eastern philosophy. Schopenhauer, Nietzsche and William James were strongly influenced by Eastern philosophy. But, during recent years, Western philosophy has shown much less respect for the East than previous and there seems less awareness that issues like epistemology, time, and selfhood have been addressed very intelligently in the East.
The purpose of the conference is to reinvigorate
the dialog between Eastern and Western philosophy
(philosophy as distinct from religion), and a
galaxy of brilliant speakers from all over the
globe have agreed to participate.
The conference poster is here in high-quality pdf (2 MB)
format or low-quality pdf (0.4 MB)
format.
To get more information about the conference,
please click the information buttons below.
Speakers
Dates and Location
DAY ZERO
Title There are many ways to woo the muse mathematics, by David Mumford.
Date December 3 at Graduate Center, CUNY
Time 6.30 PM
Location Room number will be announced soon!
Map See below!
DAY ONE
Date December 4 at Brooklyn College, CUNY
Time 9 AM - 4.30 PM
Location Woody Tanger Audiotorium, Brooklyn College Library, Brooklyn College Campus, Brooklyn, New York
Map
How to Get There Check the Google Maps link above to get the directions including public transportation!
DAY TWO
Date December 5 at Graduate Center, CUNY
Time 10 AM - 5 PM
Location Segal Auditorium, Graduate Center, 365 Fifth Avenue, Manhattan, New York
Map
How to Get There Check the Google Maps link above to get the directions including public transportation!
Registration
Even if there is no registration fee, we ask the participants to register.
We have some funds (~ $25 per student) available as a grant for full-time students for conference participation.
In order to be able to eligible for that, please state your status as a student in the registration form, and bring your student ID with you to the conference.
Program
The tentative program is as follows.
DECEMBER 3 - Day Zero
Title: There Are Many Ways to Woo the Muse of Mathematics – David Mumford.
Time 6.30 PM.
Location: room C198, CUNY Graduate Center.
Related talk:
Title: Some fun ways to avoid the muse of mathematics: When equality trumps reciprocity - Cristina Bicchieri,
Time: 4:15 PM
Location: rooms 9204/9205, CUNY Graduate Center.
Her talk will be part of the Computer Science Colloquium.
Wine and cheese in the Mathematics lounge, 4th floor.
DECEMBER 4 - Day One
8:30 – 9:15: Breakfast/Sign-in
9:30- 9:45: Opening Remarks by Karen Gould (Brooklyn College President)
9:45 – 10:00 Critchley (short introduction)
10:00 – 10:45 Bilgrami
11:00-11:50 Strawson
11:50-12:20 Coffee Break
12:20-1:10 Ivry
1:15-2:30 Lunch
2:30-3:20 Priest
3:25 -4:15 Shun
4:30 - 5:30 Reception
7:15 PM Dinner
DECEMBER 5 - Day Two
10:00 - 10:45 Ram Prasad
10:50 - 11:40 Barendregt
11:45- 12:30 Patil
12:45 - 2:15 Lunch
2:15 - 3:05 Johnston
3:15 - 4:15 Rovane
4:15 - 5:15 Reception
Titles
Akeel Bilgrami The Wider Significance of Naturalism: A Genealogical Essay
Simon Critchley History of Philosophy in Relation to East West Issues
Alfred Ivry Al-Ghazali and Averroes: Two ways to Lose the Self in Acquiring Truth
Mark Johnston On the Illusion of a Self Worth Caring About
Kwong-Loi Shun On Anger
David Mumford "There are Many Ways to Woo the Muse of Mathematics"
Parimal Patil Motivation to the Means in the Philosopher's Stone.
C. Ram-Prasad Personhood, Ego and the Unity of Consciousness: A Classical Indian Perspective on the Elusive Self
Graham Priest All is One
Carol Rovane Situating the Buddhist Self in the West: Losing the Self vs. Making the Self
Galen Strawson ‘I and eye: thetic self-awareness’
Podcasts
Accommodation
Contact: Rohit
Parikh Tel: 212-817-8197
www.cs.gc.cuny.edu/~kgb
