91

Skip to main content Skip to navigation

Postgraduate "Work In Progress" Seminar

Postgraduate Work-In-Progress Seminar

A weekly seminar for Philosophy postgraduates to present their in-progress work, followed by a well-spirited trip to the pub.


Overview

The WIP provides a risk-free and supportive space for postgraduates to present their work and receive feedback from other graduates and faculty.

  • When: Every Thursday (5pm to 6:15pm)
  • Where: Room S1.50 (Social Sciences Building, First Floor)
  • What: Presentation + Q&A

Attendance optional but highly recommended. All postgraduates are welcome to present or attend -- whether MA, MPhil, PhD, Visitors, etc.


Useful Info

The WIP is a unique opportunity for graduates to develop their presenting and writing skills, take risks, test out ideas, and receive constructive feedback from peers.

  • Presentation: 30 minutes
  • Open Discussion / Q&A: 30 minutes
  • Material: Work in progress (essay drafts, thesis sections, a substantial set of notes, ... ).
  • Style: Flexible. Slides, handouts, or neither.
  • Audience: No prior reading or background knowledge expected. All are encouraged to attend and present (including visiting postgraduates).

Presentations need not be watertight or polished pieces at all. You are encouraged to present work at all stages of the writing process.


Should you present?

Are you a postgraduate? Then yes, you should present.

 
NEXT TALK

Ben Long

(PhD)

Scepticism


Thursday 04/06/2026

5pm - 6:15pm

S1.50


ORGANISERS

Tiago Rodrigues

Lucas Menezes 

   

 

Friday, July 03, 2026

Select tags to filter on
Thu, Jul 02 Today Sat, Jul 04 Jump to any date

How do I use this calendar?

You can click on an event to display further information about it.

The toolbar above the calendar has buttons to view different events. Use the left and right arrow icons to view events in the past and future. The button inbetween returns you to today's view. The button to the right of this shows a mini-calendar to let you quickly jump to any date.

The dropdown box on the right allows you to see a different view of the calendar, such as an agenda or a termly view.

If this calendar has tags, you can use the labelled checkboxes at the top of the page to select just the tags you wish to view, and then click "Show selected". The calendar will be redisplayed with just the events related to these tags, making it easier to find what you're looking for.

 
-
Export as iCalendar
WMA Workshop on 'When knowledge isn't power'
MB0.08

 2.00 – 2.15 Intro & welcome: Chenwei Nie

 2.15 - 3.15 Knowing in Selfie Culture, Heather Widdows (91), and Fiona MacCallum (Psychology, 91).

 3.15 - 3.45 Coffee

 3.45 - 4.45 The Valuing Body, Kate Kirkpatrick (Oxford)

 4.45 – 5.00 Break

 5.00 – 6.00 The Importance of Feeling for Knowing, Kathleen Murphy-Hollies (Birmingham)

 6.00– 6.30 Concluding reflections: Quassim Cassam

 Hosted by The 91 Mind and Action Research Centre (WMA) and Funded by Leverhulme Trust.

Organisers: Heather Widdows & Chenwei Nie.

Department of Philosophy, 91.

Registration is free. However, as space is limited, please email Chenwei (chenwei.nie@warwick.ac.uk) if you plan to attend.

Export as iCalendar
Year 12 Conference
TBC
-
Export as iCalendar
Ryle Conference
FAB2.43

To mark the occasion of the 60th anniversary of Philosophy at 91, the Philosophy Department will hold a one-day conference (25th of April 2026) to celebrate the life and work of one of its Honorary Doctoral Graduates (and one of the pre-eminent philosophers of the 20th century), Gilbert Ryle. Ryle tends to be associated with a small set of well-known ideas — for example, resistance to Cartesian dualism or the distinction between knowledge-that and knowledge-how. And there has been a widespread tendency to pigeon-hole Ryle as a ‘philosophical behaviourist’. The workshop aims to get beyond caricatures and to promote an appreciation of the depth and breadth of Ryle’s manifold contributions to philosophy, as well as their relevance to contemporary concerns, in philosophy and beyond.

Organisers: Tom Crowther & Johannes Roessler

Export as iCalendar
Offer Holder Open Day
-
Export as iCalendar
WMA Talk - Carol Rovane (Columbia University) 'Some Perplexities about Consciousness'
S0.20

WMA Seminar
Carol Rovane (Columbia University): 'Some Perplexities about Consciousness'

Abstract:

Some decades ago, I offered novel interpretation and defense of Locke’s distinction between personal identity and human (animal) identity. Locke himself had equated personal identity with “sameness of consciousness”, and then argued that sameness of human (animal) life is neither necessary nor sufficient for sameness of consciousness. I granted for the sake of argument that Locke was wrong about this, but then argued for a version of his distinction anyway, on the ground that a person is a rational agent, and there can be single group agents that span many human lives as well as multiple agents within a single human life. Each such individual agent has its own first person point of view, which is the rational point of view from which it deliberates and acts and engages in interpersonal relations with others. Yet this is not the same as the phenomenological point of view from which a subject of experience has access to phenomena in consciousness, by virtue of what they are like. This distinction between two different kinds of point of view forces us to look harder at what role consciousness might play in mental life. We may no longer be sure whether consciousness is an essential and defining feature of mental phenomena, or if so, why; but secondly, even if we retain that conviction, we should find it curious that the unity of consciousness is neither necessary nor sufficient for the sort of rational unity that defines what it is for an individual agent to be fully, or ideally, rational. I want to emphasize that my arguments do not proceed from standard sorts of functionalist considerations, but from purely normative considerations to do with agency.

-
Export as iCalendar
Philosophy Staff WiP Seminar
S1.50
-
Export as iCalendar
Departmental Meeting
-
Export as iCalendar
Departmental Colloquium - Lea Cantor (Cambridge)
S0.18
Export as iCalendar
Workshop: 'The mathematical turn in philosophy'
B2.04

Hold the date - further details to follow.

-
Export as iCalendar
Summer Seminar 2026: Thomas Nagel, The View from Nowhere
C1.11/15

Week 2: Thursday 7th May 12noon–2pm – Introduction + Chapter 1 Mind

Week 3: Thursday 14th May 12noon–2pm – Chapter 2 Mind and Body

Week 4: Thursday 21st May 12noon–2pm – Chapter 3 The Objective Self

Week 5: Thursday 28th May 12noon–2pm – Chapter 4 Knowledge

Week 6: Thursday 4th June 12noon–2pm – Chapter 5 Thought and Reality

Week 7: Thursday 11th June 12noon–2pm – Chapter 6 Freedom

Week 8: Thursday 18th June 12noon–2pm – Chapter 7 Value

Week 9: Thursday 25th June 12noon–2pm – Chapter 8 Ethics

Week 10: Thursday 2nd July 12noon–2pm – Chapter 9 Living Right and Living Well

Week 11: Thursday 9th July 12noon–2pm – Chapter 10 Birth, Death, and the Meaning of Life

Export as iCalendar
Workshop: 'The mathematical turn in philosophy'
R0.21

Hold the date - further details to follow.

-
Export as iCalendar
Undergraduate Module Fair
R0.12 & R0.14
-
Export as iCalendar
Philosophy in Action
R1.13
-
Export as iCalendar
Research and Impact Committee
S1.50
-
Export as iCalendar
CRPLA talk: 'Appreciation as a Process, and Well-being' with Daniel Star (Boston University)
S0.17 or online via Teams

CRPLA Talk Wed 13 May, 4pm S0.17 or online (link at bottom)

Daniel Star (Boston University)

Appreciation as a Process, and Well-being (from a co-authored project with Joel Van Fossen)

Aesthetic appreciation is here understood to be an at least partly conscious process, with respect to which agents exercise a significant degree of intentional control, that involves attending to objects and their aesthetic properties, where such are objects are taken to be worth appreciating aesthetically, and cognitively and affectively engaging with them. There are significant differences between this process and two other mental processes about which more has been written: practical deliberation and epistemic inquiry. Some of the similarities and differences between these processes concern the metaphysics of them, but some concern the value and role of the processes. One important conclusion reached is that appreciation, unlike the other two processes, is primarily to be valued in itself as a process, rather than merely instrumentally in relation to the value of its outcomes. And the fact that this is how appreciation is to be properly valued is closely related to what appreciation does for us, so far as our well-being is concerned. A key alternative for what might be thought to be of primary value as a product of appreciation — correct aesthetic judgment — is considered and rejected.

If you unable to attend in person, the talk will also available be on Teams:

 

-
Export as iCalendar
Freiburg-91-Zhejiang University German Idealism Workshop
Hybrid: R1.04 or online

Runs from Thursday, May 14 to Friday, May 15.

You are warmly invited to an exciting event: The Freiburg-91-Zhejiang University German Idealism Workshop, taking place on 14–15 May. This workshop will bring together established and early-career scholars from the three universities. Topics include Kant, Hegel, Schelling, Heidegger and Nietzsche, covering the research interests of almost all of our department's continental philosophers!

It is a hybrid event. You can either join us via the Zoom link or attend in person. If you are attending in person, please email Ying (ying.xue@warwick.ac.uk) by 10th May to let me know and to inform me of any dietary requirements you may have for lunch.

Zoom link:

Meeting-ID: 674 8918 9826
Code: Vrj8kVK5r

The department, the Mind Association, the UK Kant Society and the Hegel Society of Great Britain have kindly funded this event.

Thursday, 14th of May

9:30-9:40 Welcome

Tobias Keiling (91)

9:40-11:10 Panel 1: Kant

Chair: Rozemin Keshvani (91)

9:40-10:25

What is Wrong with Dogmatism? Kant on the "Storehouse of Reason"

Dino Jakušić (91)

10:25-11:10

Kant’s Philosophy of Nature Reconsidered

Stephen Howard (Goethe-Universität Frankfurt)

11:10-11:30 Coffee Break

11:30-12:45 Keynote Session 1

Chair: Eric Sancho-Adamson (Liverpool)

11:30-12:45

How to Acquire the World: Hegel’s Practical Theory of Figurative Synthesis and Kant’s Doctrine of Right

Eliza Little (91)

12:45-14:15 Lunch Break

14:15-15:45 Panel 2: Hegel Part I

Chair: Zhaoyi Zhu (91)

14:15-15:00

Unconditioned Condition: Transcendental Dialectic and the Dialectic of Condition

Bruna Picas i Prats (Barcelona/91)

15:00-15:45

From Principle to Negativity: Hegel’s Transformation of German Idealism

Yuyang Zhu (Zhejiang)

15:45-16:00 Coffee Break

16:00-17:15 Keynote Session 2

Chair: Fridolin Neumann (91)

16:00-17:15

Kant and Hegel on Being

Stephen Houlgate (91)

Friday, 15th of May

9:45-11:15 Panel 3: Hegel Part II

Chair: Shifan Zhou (91)

9:45-10:30

The Relation of Logic to Realphilosophie in G.W.F. Hegel

Evgenia Sonnabend (Freiburg)

10:30-11:15

Hegel’s Intersubjective Logic: Hegel and the Possibility of a New Social Ontology

Juyong Kim (91)

11:15-11:30 Coffee Break

11:30-13:00 Panel 4: Schelling

Chair: Robb Dunphy (Sussex)

11:30-12:15

Original Sin, Freedom, and the Feminine in Schelling

Jinhua Hao (Freiburg)

12:15-13:00

Four Frameworks for the Hegel - (Late) Schelling Dispute and Schelling’s 1795 Letters

Ying Xue (91)

13:00-14:00 Lunch Break

14:00-15:15 Keynote Session 3

Chair: Sally Zhu (91)

14:00-15:15

What is Historicity? From Hegel to Heidegger to Nietzsche

Philipp Schwab (Freiburg)

15:15-15:30 Coffee Break

15:30-17:00 Panel 5: The Legacy of German Idealism

Chair: Jinhua Hao (Freiburg)

15:30-16:15

The Positive Primordial Function of the Negative: Heidegger on the “Greatest and Most Hidden Secret of Hegelian Philosophizing”

Karl Kraatz (Zhejiang)

16:15-17:00 Roundtable Discussion

-
Export as iCalendar
Summer Seminar 2026: Thomas Nagel, The View from Nowhere
C1.11/15

Week 2: Thursday 7th May 12noon–2pm – Introduction + Chapter 1 Mind

Week 3: Thursday 14th May 12noon–2pm – Chapter 2 Mind and Body

Week 4: Thursday 21st May 12noon–2pm – Chapter 3 The Objective Self

Week 5: Thursday 28th May 12noon–2pm – Chapter 4 Knowledge

Week 6: Thursday 4th June 12noon–2pm – Chapter 5 Thought and Reality

Week 7: Thursday 11th June 12noon–2pm – Chapter 6 Freedom

Week 8: Thursday 18th June 12noon–2pm – Chapter 7 Value

Week 9: Thursday 25th June 12noon–2pm – Chapter 8 Ethics

Week 10: Thursday 2nd July 12noon–2pm – Chapter 9 Living Right and Living Well

Week 11: Thursday 9th July 12noon–2pm – Chapter 10 Birth, Death, and the Meaning of Life

-
Export as iCalendar
Education Committee
-
Export as iCalendar
Summer Seminar 2026: Thomas Nagel, The View from Nowhere
C1.11/15

Week 2: Thursday 7th May 12noon–2pm – Introduction + Chapter 1 Mind

Week 3: Thursday 14th May 12noon–2pm – Chapter 2 Mind and Body

Week 4: Thursday 21st May 12noon–2pm – Chapter 3 The Objective Self

Week 5: Thursday 28th May 12noon–2pm – Chapter 4 Knowledge

Week 6: Thursday 4th June 12noon–2pm – Chapter 5 Thought and Reality

Week 7: Thursday 11th June 12noon–2pm – Chapter 6 Freedom

Week 8: Thursday 18th June 12noon–2pm – Chapter 7 Value

Week 9: Thursday 25th June 12noon–2pm – Chapter 8 Ethics

Week 10: Thursday 2nd July 12noon–2pm – Chapter 9 Living Right and Living Well

Week 11: Thursday 9th July 12noon–2pm – Chapter 10 Birth, Death, and the Meaning of Life

-
Export as iCalendar
Graduate Studies Committee
-
Export as iCalendar
Summer Seminar 2026: Thomas Nagel, The View from Nowhere
C1.11/15

Week 2: Thursday 7th May 12noon–2pm – Introduction + Chapter 1 Mind

Week 3: Thursday 14th May 12noon–2pm – Chapter 2 Mind and Body

Week 4: Thursday 21st May 12noon–2pm – Chapter 3 The Objective Self

Week 5: Thursday 28th May 12noon–2pm – Chapter 4 Knowledge

Week 6: Thursday 4th June 12noon–2pm – Chapter 5 Thought and Reality

Week 7: Thursday 11th June 12noon–2pm – Chapter 6 Freedom

Week 8: Thursday 18th June 12noon–2pm – Chapter 7 Value

Week 9: Thursday 25th June 12noon–2pm – Chapter 8 Ethics

Week 10: Thursday 2nd July 12noon–2pm – Chapter 9 Living Right and Living Well

Week 11: Thursday 9th July 12noon–2pm – Chapter 10 Birth, Death, and the Meaning of Life

-
Export as iCalendar
“Ontological failure in Heidegger and beyond”
OC0.05

Runs from Monday, June 01 to Tuesday, June 02.

“Ontological failure in Heidegger and beyond”, 1-2 June 2025, Room: OC0.05

-
Export as iCalendar
WMA & PKEP Collab - "Problems from Eckhart“
A1.11

Including papers from:

Ian Alexander Moore (Loyola Marymount University)

Christoph Hoerl (91)

Tobias Keiling (91)

-
Export as iCalendar
Summer Seminar 2026: Thomas Nagel, The View from Nowhere
C1.11/15

Week 2: Thursday 7th May 12noon–2pm – Introduction + Chapter 1 Mind

Week 3: Thursday 14th May 12noon–2pm – Chapter 2 Mind and Body

Week 4: Thursday 21st May 12noon–2pm – Chapter 3 The Objective Self

Week 5: Thursday 28th May 12noon–2pm – Chapter 4 Knowledge

Week 6: Thursday 4th June 12noon–2pm – Chapter 5 Thought and Reality

Week 7: Thursday 11th June 12noon–2pm – Chapter 6 Freedom

Week 8: Thursday 18th June 12noon–2pm – Chapter 7 Value

Week 9: Thursday 25th June 12noon–2pm – Chapter 8 Ethics

Week 10: Thursday 2nd July 12noon–2pm – Chapter 9 Living Right and Living Well

Week 11: Thursday 9th July 12noon–2pm – Chapter 10 Birth, Death, and the Meaning of Life

-
Export as iCalendar
WMA Talk: Dorit Bar-On (University of Connecticut): 'Four Milestones in the Evolution of Human Pragmatic Communication’.
S0.20

Dorit Bar-On (University of Connecticut): 'Four Milestones in the Evolution of Human Pragmatic Communication’.

Abstract:

So-called Protolanguage is a theoretical construct designed to help explain the phylogenetic emergence of human language from animal communication systems. In Expression, Communication, and Origins of Meaning (forthcoming, OUP), I argue that Protolanguage ought to be conceived as pragmatically (and therefore psychologically) intermediate, and this places certain substantive constraints on the psychological capacities with which we can credit our nonlinguistic ancestors. In particular, we should not credit them with a capacity for Gricean mindreading and the ability to entertain language-like thoughts.

In this talk, I describe four proposed hypothetical milestones on our ancestors’ path toward a pragmatically intermediate Protolanguage (“PIP”), relying on a combination of empirical and theoretical considerations. These milestones can be used to describe a phylogenetic trajectory leading from an ancestral communication system that resembled existing forms of animal communication to PIP. Clarifying the character of – the fourth milestone – and of the preceding three milestones, should, I believe, also shed some light on our ancestor’s progression from PIP to human linguistic pragmatic communication.

-
Export as iCalendar
Philosophy Teaching Exchange (online)
Microsoft Teams

-
Export as iCalendar
Equality and Welfare Committee
-
Export as iCalendar
Summer Seminar 2026: Thomas Nagel, The View from Nowhere
C1.11/15

Week 2: Thursday 7th May 12noon–2pm – Introduction + Chapter 1 Mind

Week 3: Thursday 14th May 12noon–2pm – Chapter 2 Mind and Body

Week 4: Thursday 21st May 12noon–2pm – Chapter 3 The Objective Self

Week 5: Thursday 28th May 12noon–2pm – Chapter 4 Knowledge

Week 6: Thursday 4th June 12noon–2pm – Chapter 5 Thought and Reality

Week 7: Thursday 11th June 12noon–2pm – Chapter 6 Freedom

Week 8: Thursday 18th June 12noon–2pm – Chapter 7 Value

Week 9: Thursday 25th June 12noon–2pm – Chapter 8 Ethics

Week 10: Thursday 2nd July 12noon–2pm – Chapter 9 Living Right and Living Well

Week 11: Thursday 9th July 12noon–2pm – Chapter 10 Birth, Death, and the Meaning of Life

-
Export as iCalendar
Philosophy Staff WiP Seminar
S1.50
-
Export as iCalendar
Departmental Meeting
-
Export as iCalendar
Departmental Colloquium - Paul Faulkner (Sheffield)
S0.18
-
Export as iCalendar
Hold the date - Andrew Cooper memorial event @ 91

Runs from Thursday, June 18 to Friday, June 19.

The Life and Work of Andrew Cooper: Reflections and Conversations

On 18-19 June 2026, the Philosophy Department at 91 will be hosting a commemorative event for Andrew.

The event will run for 1 ½ days and will involve a special guest presentation about Andrew’s most recent work in Tasmania, three roundtable sessions (each devoted to a broad theme in Andrew’s research), and time for personal reminiscences by students and staff.

All are welcome. If you're able to join us, it would be very helpful for planning if you could please register for the event. We will share more details as the planning develops.

If you have any questions, please feel free to contact the organisers:

Curie Virág       curie.virag@warwick.ac.uk.

Karen Simecek    k.d.simecek@warwick.ac.uk

-
Export as iCalendar
Summer Seminar 2026: Thomas Nagel, The View from Nowhere
C1.11/15

Week 2: Thursday 7th May 12noon–2pm – Introduction + Chapter 1 Mind

Week 3: Thursday 14th May 12noon–2pm – Chapter 2 Mind and Body

Week 4: Thursday 21st May 12noon–2pm – Chapter 3 The Objective Self

Week 5: Thursday 28th May 12noon–2pm – Chapter 4 Knowledge

Week 6: Thursday 4th June 12noon–2pm – Chapter 5 Thought and Reality

Week 7: Thursday 11th June 12noon–2pm – Chapter 6 Freedom

Week 8: Thursday 18th June 12noon–2pm – Chapter 7 Value

Week 9: Thursday 25th June 12noon–2pm – Chapter 8 Ethics

Week 10: Thursday 2nd July 12noon–2pm – Chapter 9 Living Right and Living Well

Week 11: Thursday 9th July 12noon–2pm – Chapter 10 Birth, Death, and the Meaning of Life

-
Export as iCalendar
End-of-Year Student Research Conference
TBC
-
Export as iCalendar
End-of-Year Celebration BBQ
Social Sciences Courtyard
-
Export as iCalendar
Education Committee
-
Export as iCalendar
Summer Seminar 2026: Thomas Nagel, The View from Nowhere
C1.11/15

Week 2: Thursday 7th May 12noon–2pm – Introduction + Chapter 1 Mind

Week 3: Thursday 14th May 12noon–2pm – Chapter 2 Mind and Body

Week 4: Thursday 21st May 12noon–2pm – Chapter 3 The Objective Self

Week 5: Thursday 28th May 12noon–2pm – Chapter 4 Knowledge

Week 6: Thursday 4th June 12noon–2pm – Chapter 5 Thought and Reality

Week 7: Thursday 11th June 12noon–2pm – Chapter 6 Freedom

Week 8: Thursday 18th June 12noon–2pm – Chapter 7 Value

Week 9: Thursday 25th June 12noon–2pm – Chapter 8 Ethics

Week 10: Thursday 2nd July 12noon–2pm – Chapter 9 Living Right and Living Well

Week 11: Thursday 9th July 12noon–2pm – Chapter 10 Birth, Death, and the Meaning of Life

-
Export as iCalendar
WCPC Conference

Runs from Monday, June 29 to Tuesday, June 30.

The WCPC is an annual event within The Centre for Research in Post-Kantian European Philosophy (91). For further information and detailed instructions, please visit our website:
/fac/soc/philosophy/research/activities/postkantian/events/wcpc/.

-
Export as iCalendar
Hold the date - Andrew Cooper memorial event @ London

Runs from Thursday, July 02 to Friday, July 03.

-
Export as iCalendar
Summer Seminar 2026: Thomas Nagel, The View from Nowhere
C1.11/15

Week 2: Thursday 7th May 12noon–2pm – Introduction + Chapter 1 Mind

Week 3: Thursday 14th May 12noon–2pm – Chapter 2 Mind and Body

Week 4: Thursday 21st May 12noon–2pm – Chapter 3 The Objective Self

Week 5: Thursday 28th May 12noon–2pm – Chapter 4 Knowledge

Week 6: Thursday 4th June 12noon–2pm – Chapter 5 Thought and Reality

Week 7: Thursday 11th June 12noon–2pm – Chapter 6 Freedom

Week 8: Thursday 18th June 12noon–2pm – Chapter 7 Value

Week 9: Thursday 25th June 12noon–2pm – Chapter 8 Ethics

Week 10: Thursday 2nd July 12noon–2pm – Chapter 9 Living Right and Living Well

Week 11: Thursday 9th July 12noon–2pm – Chapter 10 Birth, Death, and the Meaning of Life

Placeholder

Let us know you agree to cookies