Colloquium 2021
Professors Liam Murphy and Samuel Scheffler
September 2nd
Kim Ferzan, University of Pennsylvania, Law
Rethinking Credit for Time Served
September 9th
Liam Murphy, ÈâÂþÎÝ
International Responsibility for Global Environment Harm: Collective and Individual
September 17th ( Friday 2.00-5.00)
Moshe Halbertal, ÈâÂþÎÝ
On Being Human
September 23rd
Jeff McMahan, Oxford
"It Might Have Been!": What Matters in Alternative Possible Lives
September 30th
Emma Kaufman, ÈâÂþÎÝ Law
Territoriality in American Criminal Law
October 7th
Rick Pildes, ÈâÂþÎÝ Law
Political Fragmentation in Democracies of the West
October 14th
Samuel Scheffler, ÈâÂþÎÝ
The Lives We Lead
Lecture 1 - Against Temporal Neutrality : The Significance of Future Bias
Lecture 2 - Against Personal Neutrality: The Significance of Partiality
October 21st
Steve Darwall, Yale, Philosophy
Why Obligations Can' Be Relational (Bipolar) All The Way Down
Below are two papers that might provide useful background:
Bipolar Obligation
and
What Are Moral Reasons?
October 28th
Chris Kutz, University of California, Berkeley, Law
November 4th
Anthony Appiah, ÈâÂþÎÝ
Pandemic Lessons: The Philosophy of Work and the Modularity of Professional Ethics
November 11th
Johann Frick, University of California, Berkeley, Philosophy
Dilemmas, Luck, and the Two Faces of Morality
November 18th
Teresa Bejan, Oxford
Peers and Equals
December 2nd
Ruth Chang, Oxford