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philosophy

Journey of a Molecular Detective; David Sherratt

On the very idea of criteria for personhood (4 Nov 2010)

Timothy Chappell, Professor of Philosophy, Open University, gives a talk for the Ian Ramsay Seminar series on 4th November, 2010.
Journey of a Molecular Detective; David Sherratt

Reconciling Islam and Modern Science: from schizophrenia to harmony (18 Nov 2010)

Nidhal Guessoum, Professor of Physics, American University of Sharjah, gives a talk for the Ian Ramsay Seminar series on 18th November 2010.
Journey of a Molecular Detective; David Sherratt

The Master and his Emissary: The Divided Brain and the Making of the Western World (10 Feb 2011)

Iain McGilchrist gives a talk for the Ian Ramsay Seminar series on 10th February 2011.
Journey of a Molecular Detective; David Sherratt

Cistercian Monks as Metallurgists - Iron Technology at Rievalx Abbey c. 1130-1600 AD (24 Feb 2011)

Gerry McDonnell gives a talk for the Ian Ramsay Seminar Series on 24th February 2011.
Journey of a Molecular Detective; David Sherratt

Cosmology and Creation: From Hawking to Aquinas (10 Mar 2011)

William Carroll, Aquinas Fellow, Blackfriars College, Oxford, gives a talk for the Ian Ramsay Seminar Series on 10th March, 2011.
Journey of a Molecular Detective; David Sherratt

Politics in Strange Places Opening Remarks

Professor Michael Freeden introduces the Politics in Strange Places conference, held in Oxford in September 2010.
Uehiro Oxford Institute

Prioritarianism, Levelling Down and Welfare Diffusion

Lecture and discussion from Professor Ingmar Persson (Gothenburg University), the discussant is Derek Parfit (Oxford).
Uehiro Oxford Institute

New Imaging Evidence for the Neural Bases of Moral Sentiments: Prosocial and Antisocial Behaviour

2nd Annual Wellcome Lecture in Neuroethics, given by Professor Jorge Moll on 18th January 2011 on the subject of new evidence for Neural bases for moral sentiments.
Uehiro Oxford Institute

Hug me daddy I hate you: the ethical challenges of a C21 business

Dr Mick Blowfield, Fellow of St Cross College, gives the second St Cross Special Ethics Seminar on The Ethical Challenges of 21st Century Businesses.
Kant's Critique of Pure Reason

The discipline of reason: The paralogisms and Antinomies of Pure Reason.

Lecture 8/8. Reason, properly disciplined, draws permissible inferences from the resulting concepts of the understanding. The outcome is knowledge.
Kant's Critique of Pure Reason

The "Self" and the Synthetic Unity of Apperception

Lecture 7/8. Kant argues that: "The synthetic unity of consciousness is... an objective condition of all knowledge.
Kant's Critique of Pure Reason

Concepts, judgement and the Transcendental Deduction of the Categories

Lecture 6/8. Empiricists have no explanation for how we move from "mere forms of thought" to objective concepts. The conditions necessary for the knowledge of an object require a priori categories as the enabling conditions of all human understanding.
Kant's Critique of Pure Reason

Idealisms and their refutations

Lecture 5/8. The very possibility of self-awareness (an "inner sense" with content) requires an awareness of an external world by way of "outer sense". Only through awareness of stable elements in the external world is self-consciousness possible.
Kant's Critique of Pure Reason

How are a priori synthetic judgements possible?

Lecture 4/8. Kant claims that, "our sense representation is not a representation of things in themselves, but of the way in which they appear to us.
Kant's Critique of Pure Reason

Space, time and the "Analogies of Experiences"

Lecture 3/8. Kant's so-called "Copernican" revolution in metaphysics begins with the recognition of the observer's contribution to the observation.
Kant's Critique of Pure Reason

The broader philosophical context

Lecture 2/8. The significant advances in physics in the 17th century stood in vivid contrast to the stagnation of traditional metaphysics, but why should metaphysics be conceived as a "science" in the first place?
Kant's Critique of Pure Reason

Just what is Kant's "project"?

Lecture 1/8. Both sense and reason are limited. Kant must identify the proper mission and domain of each, as well as the manner in which their separate functions come to be integrated in what is finally the inter-subjectively settled knowledge of science.
Aesthetics and Philosophy of Art lectures

8. Defining Art

James Grant, lecturer in philosophy, University of Oxford gives his eight and final lecture in the Aesthetics series on Defining Art.
Aesthetics and Philosophy of Art lectures

6. Literary Interpretation

James Grant, lecturer in philosophy, University of Oxford gives his sixth lecture in the Aesthetics series on the interpretation of literature.
Aesthetics and Philosophy of Art lectures

5. Kant's Critique of Judgement: Lecture 2

James Grant, lecturer in philosophy, University of Oxford concludes his discussion of Kant's Critique of Judgement in the fifth lecture of the Aesthetics series.

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