The Institute of Philosophy of the Research Centre for the Humanities of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences kindly invites you to the upcoming talk of its seminar series
Zoltán Barta:
The evolutionary effects of individual heterogeneity (given in Hungarian)
Date and Venue of the lecture: 5th April 2016, 4.00 pm, Institute of Philosophy, Research Centre for the Humanities, Hungarian Academy of Sciences, 30. Országház Street, 2. floor, "Pepita" room.
Seminar Series: Ákos Cseke
The Institute of Philosophy of the Research Centre for the Humanities of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences kindly invites you to the upcoming talk of its seminar series
Ákos Cseke (PPKE BTK):
The aesthetics of history. Foucault as a historian (given in Hungarian)
Date and Venue of the lecture: 3rd May 2016, 4.00 pm, Institute of Philosophy, Research Centre for the Humanities, Hungarian Academy of Sciences, 30. Országház Street, 2. floor, "Pepita" room.
A lecture by Dr. Robin Harris
An invitation to a lecture - registration is required, please register
here: http://danubeinstitute.hu/
What is a conservative?
A lecture by Dr Robin Harris
What does it mean to be a conservative in the 21st century? What distinguishes conservatism from other philosophies and intellectual approaches to political questions, and what are its implications for policy?
These questions will be posed by the historian and writer Robin Harris in the second in the series of lectures on conservatism staged by the Danube Institute.
Dr Robin Harris is a former member of Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher’s Downing Street Policy Unit, and the author of The Conservatives – A History, and Not for Turning – The Complete Life of Margaret Thatcher.
In his lecture, Robin Harris argues that conservatism should be taken seriously as a philosophical position and, indeed, as the grounding for modern Right-of-Centre politics. Conservatism’s two key elements – economic liberalism and social traditionalism – which were effectively combined under Margaret Thatcher and Ronald Reagan, have recently been under strain. Yet they are mutually compatible, and equally necessary. Ideological muddle in the Anglo-Saxon world, and the corrosive ambitions of the European Union in mainland Europe have made the time-honoured conservative formula seem less relevant. That is mistaken. It is time to take a fresh look.
The lecture is being jointly organised by the Danube Institute and the Arts Faculty of Pázmány Péter Catholic University.
Ferenc Hörcher, Professor of Aesthetics and Political Theory at Pázmány Péter Catholic University and director at the Insitute of Philosophy of the Hungarian Academy of Scieences, will respond.
Registration is required, please register here:
http://danubeinstitute.hu/
Date: 17:30, 19th April 2016
Venue: PPKE, BTK Sophianum 112,1088 Budapest, Mikszáth Kálmán tér 1.
Political Realism and Practical Morality
Political Realism and Practical Morality: Historical and Theoretical Perspectives
A workshop at the Institute of Philosophy of HAS for political philosophers and historians of early modern political thought
Call for Papers
The Research Group on Practical Philosophy and the History of Ideas of the Institute of Philosophy, HAS announces its plan to organise a workshop on 18-19. November 2016 on an emerging field of common interest for political philosophers and historians of political thought. The recent boom of political realism both in an international and in a national dimension provokes new or newly formulated research questions for both scholars of international relations, political theory and the early modern history of political thought. The Institute of Philosophy will provide a friendly atmosphere for a research workshop on this theme, with plans of working out the framework for further potential common research programmes.
The Agenda
Seminar Series: Peter Schroder
The Institute of Philosophy of the Research Centre for the Humanities of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences kindly invites you to the upcoming talk of its seminar series
Prof. Peter Schroder (UCL and IAS/CEU):
Fidem observandam esse - Trust and Fear in Hobbes and Locke
Date and Venue of the lecture: 19th April 2016, 4.00 pm, Institute of Philosophy, Research Centre for the Humanities, Hungarian Academy of Sciences, 30. Országház Street, 2. floor, "Pepita" room.
Abstract:
This paper aims to demonstrate that trust commanded an important place among the concepts of seventeenth-century political thought. Understanding the place of trust within the political thought of Hobbes and Locke helps to comprehend the fundamental differences of their positions. A focus on trust permits better understanding of their different uses and connotations of more explicit political and juridical concepts such as punishment, sovereignty, or resistance. Engaging with Hobbes’s argument, Locke tried to advance the discussion of trust in a distinctively different direction.
Sociological Overtones in Logical Empiricism
The Resarch Group for the History and Philosophy of Science,
Research Centre for the Humanities,
Hungarian Academy of Sciences
cordially invites you to its two-day workshop to be held on the 11th and 12th of April 2016:
Seminar Series: Zoltán Barta
Seminar Series: Miklós Márton
The Institute of Philosophy of the Research Centre for the Humanities of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences kindly invites you to the upcoming talk of its seminar series
Miklós Márton:
What does the Zombie-argument proove? (given in Hungarian)
Date and Venue of the lecture: 29th March 2016, 4.00 pm, Institute of Philosophy, Research Centre for the Humanities, Hungarian Academy of Sciences, 30. Országház Street, 2. floor, "Pepita" room.
Local Causality and Causal Graphs
The Philosophy of Physics research group of the Institute of Philosophy (RCH, HAS) cordially invites you to its upcoming mini-symposium:
Local Causality and Causal Graphs
Speakers:
Daniel Malinsky (Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh)
Péter Vecsernyés (Wigner Research Center for Phsyics, Budapest)
Gábor Hofer-Szabó (Research Centre for the Humanities, Budapest)
Venue: Institute of Philosophy, Research Center for the Humanities, Budapest, 1014 Országház u. 30, Room 026
Date: March 21, 2016, 4 pm.
For further information, see the website of the Research Group.
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