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MAY 10-11, 2018

POLITICAL EPISTEMOLOGY

SENATE HOUSE

UNIVERSITY OF LONDON

Event Photos

Keynote Speakers

                     

 

 

                

Additional Talks

Propaganda, Misinformation and the Epistemic Value of Democracy

Étienne Brown 

Postdoctoral Researcher at the Centre de recherche en éthique in Montreal. 

(Commentator: Emily Sullivan)

Self-Fulfilling Epistemic Injustice

Boudewijn de Bruin

Professor of Financial Ethics at the University of Groningen

(Commentator: Han van Wietmarschen)

The Epistemic Pathologies of Elections and the Lottocratic Alternative

Alexander Guerrero

Henry Rutgers Term Chair and Associate Professor of Philosophy at Rutgers University

(Commentator: Jeroen de Ridder)

Deweyan Democratic Deliberation

Catherine Elgin

Professor of the Philosophy of Education at Harvard University

(Commentator: Jonathan J. Ichikawa)

 

Epistemic Constraints on Political Justification

Fabienne Peter

Professor of Philosophy and Head of Department at the University of Warwick

(Commentator: Elizabeth Edenberg)

The term "political epistemology" is fairly new, but we think it captures an important intersection between political philosophy and epistemology that has become especially important in the current political climate, where broad challenges to the notion of truth threaten the social fabric of our democracy.

This conference will bring together scholars working at the intersection of political philosophy and epistemology. The conference theme, Political Epistemology, is deliberately broad because there many ways in which epistemologists can learn from political philosophers and vice versa. For example, political philosophers have long been interested in reasonable disagreements, or what Rawls called “the fact of reasonable pluralism,” while disagreement has only recently become widely discussed in epistemology. There are also many unexplored ways in which theorizing about politics might benefit from the conceptual tools of epistemology; for instance, contemporary epistemology has focused on the social dimensions of knowledge, the epistemology of testimony, the norms governing assertion, and group belief. 

This event is supported by generous contributions from the Institute of Philosophy, the Mind Association, the Society for Applied Philosophy, and the Aristotelian Society. 

The Case for Modelled Democracy

Kristoffer Ahlstrom-Vij

Reader in Philosophy 

Birkbeck College, University of London 

Epistemic Bubbles and Authoritarian Politics​

Elizabeth Anderson 

Arthur F. Thurnau Professor and John Dewey Distinguished 

University Professor of Philosophy and Women's Studies

University of Michigan   

The Real Problem with Polarization

Robert Talisse

W. Alton Jones Professor of Philosophy

Vanderbilt University

Space is limited so RSVP early

Funding

Organizers

Michael J. Hannon

Deputy Director, Institute of Philosophy

michael.hannon@sas.ac.uk 

Robin McKenna

Postdoctoral Researcher, University of Vienna

robert.mckenna@univie.ac.at

(Thanks to Jonathan J. Ichikawa)
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