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PhD Viva Success: David Hurrell

Congratulations go to David Hurrell, who has successfully defended his PhD thesis on Nietzsche’s conception of decadence.

David was supervised by Manuel Dries, Sophie-Grace Chappell and Cristina Chimisso. The examiners were Andrew Huddleston (Birkbeck) and Derek Matravers.L-R: Manuel Dries; David Hurrell; Andrew Huddleston; Derek Matravers.

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Philosophy Values and Reasons Research Seminar 2019/2020: Programme

We are happy to announce the programme for the Department of Philosophy’s Values and Reason Research Seminar Series, for the academic year 2019/20.

Thursday 3rd October 2019: Carolyn Price (The Open University)

Wednesday 6th November 2019: Natalia Waights Hickman (University of Oxford)

Wednesday 4th December 2019: Constantine Sandis (University of Hertfordshire)

Wednesday 8th January 2020: Giuseppina D’Oro (Keele University)

Wednesday 5th February 2020: Solveig Aasen (University of Oslo)

Wednesday 4th March 2020: Anil Gomes (University of Oxford)

Wednesday 1st April 2020: Josh Habgood-Coote (University of Bristol)

Wednesday 6th May 2020: Ema Sullivan-Bissett (University of Birmingham)

Wednesday 3rd June 2020: Michael Frazer (University of East Anglia)

All of the seminars take place in the Walton Hall Campus in Milton Keynes, 2pm-4pm. If you would like to attend, please contact Mark Pinder.

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Dr Antonia Peacocke (NYU) at the Philosophy Research Seminar

In June’s Philosophy Research Seminar, Dr Antonia Peacocke from New York University spoke to us about how literature expands the imagination.

According to Dr Peacocke, poetic devices in literature can direct your attention to previously unnoticed phenomenal properties of your own experiences. allowing you to conceptualize those previously unnoticed properties. One upshot is that literature can help you form new phenomenal concepts to expand the range of your active phenomenal imagination.

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PhD Success: Susanne Mathies

Congratulations to Susanne Mathies, who recently completed her PhD “The Simulated Self – Fiction Reading and Narrative Identity”.

L-R: Manuel Dries (internal examiner); Carolyn Price (supervisor); Susanne Mathies; Kathleen Stock (University of Sussex, external examiner).

In the thesis, Susanne develops an account that explores the relation between fiction reading and the reader’s narrative identity. The account is based on two starting assumptions: first, that human beings are entangled in stories throughout their lives, and second, that emotions are complex and have a narrative structure. During the reading process, the fiction reader creates her own narratives which contain not only the story provided by the work of fiction, but also event sequences from her own experiential memories. This involves the creation of self-conscious emotions, which can continue after the reading is finished, and can motivate the reader to engage in self-reflection and to refigure her self-narrative. Susanne’s account thus examines a new topic: the interactive influence of fiction reading and the fiction reader’s narrative identity.

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Recent PhD Graduate Susanne Mathies Publishes in Philosophia

Dr Susanne Mathies, who recently passed her PhD viva at the Open University, has published “The Simulated Self – Fiction Reading and Narrative Identity” in Philosophia. The article develops a new model of fiction reading, built on two assumptions: that human beings are entangled in stories, and that emotions are complex and have a narrative structure.

The article is open access, and can be read here.

Susanne was supervised by Dr Carolyn Price and Professor Derek Matravers.

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Mark Pinder and Jon Pike at the Philosophy Research Seminar

In March’s research seminar, Mark Pinder raised some objections to recent work by Jon Pike and Sean Cordell on issues about cheating in sport, to which Jon offered some rebuttals. They were asking how one should go about defending a theory of cheating in sport. Do you have to analyse the concept of cheating, or should you engineer it?

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