Monthly Archives: November 2017

Peter Wolfendale, AUTONOMY AND AUTOMATION, November 29th, 6PM – 9PM,​ Workplace Gallery, 19-21 West Street, Gateshead, NE8 1AD

Newcastle Philosophy’s Peter Wolfendale, will be giving a talk at the excellent Future Shock Trauma Clinic (https://www.futureshocktraumaclinic.com/) in Newcastle on the 29th of this month:

‘What consequences will current and future developments in Artificial Intelligence have on our society and the way we live our lives? This is a question that many researchers and thinkers are currently grappling with, and answers to it are slowly starting to filter into public discourse in the form of political debates about the economic effects of increasing automation. This is very welcome, but it is important to recognise that these developments are not only challenging existing industrial formations, but also deeper cultural assumptions about what work is, and who does it. The aim of this talk is to show how we can frame these issues in terms of certain traditional philosophical concerns about freedom, and thereby to potential social and personal changes in terms of the contrast between the autonomous and the automatic’

November 29th

6PM – 9PM

Workplace Gallery

19-21 West Street

Gateshead

NE8 1AD

CfP: Journal 360° is looking for student submissions for issue on “home”

The interdisciplinary student journal “Journal 360°” welcomes student submissions for its next issue on the topic of “home” or “home country” (German: “Heimat”), broadly construed. Papers or essays should not exceed 28.000 characters (including spaces) and be written in either English or German.

Continue reading CfP: Journal 360° is looking for student submissions for issue on “home”

Philosophy, Winter Ball, 29th November

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Dear All,

We are having a Philosophy Ball, this Winter.

Please register for tickets by 19th November. Details of this are just here:

 

The first formal winter ball at the The Hancock pub on 29th November 2017, and that tickets are available online through the Students Union website until midnight on 19th November.

Tickets: https://www.nusu.co.uk/getinvolved/societies/society/7346/

 

and a reminder of some other things happening soon:

———Conference advice, Monday 20th November 3pm, conference advice session: BSTC3.31. Present your ideas at a conference: where to look, how to apply, get funding to attend, and what to present. Stephen Overy reveals all.

——— HELP WITH ESSAYS! Essay-writing workshop for people from Stages 2 and 3 (joint session): ‘Stepping Up: Enhancing your Work at the Next Level’

                                                       November 29th, 12-1

                                                       Room: BEDB.1.75

 

Ian Parker on philosophy and revolution, Blackwells, Tuesday 12th December 2017, 6:30pm

https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/philosophy-at-blackwells-ian-parker-philosophy-and-revolution-tickets-38432310074?aff=efbeventtix 

Tuesday 12th December 2017

18:30 – 20:30 GMT

What are the possibilities for revolution in our time? What, if any, realistic alternatives to the current world order may be achievable? Although Ian Parker’s Revolutionary Keywords for a New Left may not answer these questions directly, it sets out to address the conceptual densities of contemporary revolutionary keywords ranging from academicisation to neoliberalism, from fascism to feminisation, from postcolonialism to Zionism, while also focusing on thinkers including Alain Badiou, Judith Butler, Sigmund Freud, and Slavoj Žižek. In laying bare each concept, Parker provides the philosophico-historical lines of its formation and situates it within its broad social conditions. The book is a pioneering convergence of activist writings and philosophical inquiry.

Parker’s talk, ‘Philosophy and Revolution’, will consider the kinds of resources that philosophy, and related disciplines like psychoanalysis, critical theory, and critical psychology can bring to questions of revolution and political change. At a time when few on the left seem able to imagine, let alone provide the theoretical or practical resources to realise, a future that might be different from the present, this talk will offer an analysis of the pervasive cynicism in which we seem to be mired, and even hold out the prospect of an antidote. This event is a book launch for Revolutionary Keywords for a New Left.

The author:

Ian Parker is a world-renowned academic psychologist, an activist, and a practising psychoanalyst. He is most widely known as one of the most vociferous critics of the discipline of psychology. He has published numerous books including Slavoj Žižek: A Critical Introduction and Revolution in Psychology.

About the lecture series:

Local publisher Bigg Books (www.biggbooks.co.uk) and the Newcastle Philosophy Society (www.newphilsoc.org.uk) have teamed up with Blackwell’s Bookshop to launch this opening season of talks and book launches by world renowned philosophers alongside emerging local ones. The goal of these seasons is to promote innovative works of popular philosophy encompassing both the academic and the engaged, lived approaches to philosophy. All the invited speakers will be dealing with contemporary issues through a philosophical lens in an accessible and exciting way.

THE WRITING DEVELOPMENT CENTRE WEBSITE HAS MOVED

The Writing Development Centre website has moved

The Writing Development Centre website has moved to http://www.ncl.ac.uk/library/subject-support/wdc/.  There are re-directs in place from the old homepage and the tutorials page but please be aware that any other links will result in a page not found error.  There is also a link to the WDC from the Library homepage.

The student booking form for requesting one to one tutorials has also changed and now requires students to log in using their computer log-in e.g. A0123456.   If you have any queries please contact the Writing Development Centre using wdc@ncl.ac.uk

published on: 8th November 2017

More events, Mondays, including Football

An update on the philosophy events for this term:

The next event is 3 sided football on the 6th, next Monday.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Three_sided_football

This isn’t competitive football, just a chance to have some fun in the park. Before I go and buy cones etc with departmental money, I want to check that we will have three teams, so I have made a sign up list online at

http://www.signupgenius.com/go/60b0d4ba4ad2ba7f58-monday

So long as more than 20 people sign up by 12:00 on Friday, we shall go ahead with it. If not, I’ll let anyone who does sign up know on Friday afternoon. I appreciate this is in reading week, and I don’t want people cancelling plans for an event that can’t go ahead.

Due to organisational issues, the careers session scheduled for the 20th has to be postponed. Hopefully we can run it next semester. It has been replaced by a workshop about speaking at and submitting essays to undergraduate conferences.

The AV club on the 13th is about celebrity meltdowns and the existential issues they reveal. It will be lead by Zoe, one of our MLitt students.

(on behalf of Stephen Overy, stephen.overy1@ncl.ac.uk)