Moral and intellectual lecture series
The Howison Lectures in Philosophy are a lecture series established in 1919 by friends and former students of George Howison , who served as the Mills Professor of Intellectual and Moral Philosophy and Civil Polity at the University of California, Berkeley .
Professor Howison held the reasoned conviction that this world to its very depth is kindred to the human spirit; that it is a community of free persons, finite and infinite, sustained by the vision of the Perfect; and all his great powers were directed to awaken in others a loyalty to these ideas. And those, it would seem, would most speak from a foundation in his memory who were able to share with him this high purpose and conviction.
— Founding donors of the Howison Lectures in Philosophy
Past lectures
1922 — William Ernest Hocking — "Naturalism and the Belief in Purpose"; "Intuitionism and Idealism"; "Realism and Mysticism"
1923 — Arthur Oncken Lovejoy — "The Discontinuities of Evolution"
1925 — William Pepperell Montague — "Time and the Fourth Dimension"
1925 — Ralph Barton Perry — "A Modernist View of National Ideals"
1926 — Clarence Irving Lewis — "The Pragmatic Element in Knowledge"
1927 — Evander Bradley McGilvary — "Space and Time"
1929 — Robert Mark Wenley
1930 — James Hayden Tufts — "Recent Ethical Theories"
1931 — John Dewey — "Thought and Context"
1932 — Walter Goodnow Everett — "The Uniqueness of Man"
1933 — F. C. S. Schiller — "Theory and Practice"
1934 — G. Watts Cunningham — "Perspective and Contact in the Meaning Situation"
1935 — Frederick James Eugene Woodbridge — "An Approach to a Theory of Nature"
1936 — Henry W. Stuart — "Knowledge and Self-Consciousness"
1937 — Heinrich Gomperz — "Limits of Cognition and Exigencies of Action"
1941 — George Holland Sabine — "Social Studies and Objectivity"
1941 — George Edward Moore — "Certainty"
1943 — Charles Montague Bakewell — "Philosophy Goes to War"
1944 — Curt John Ducasse — "The Method of Knowledge in Philosophy"
1945 — Harvey Gates Townsend — "The History of Townsend"
1946 — Wilmon Henry Sheldon
1947 — Alexander Meiklejohn — "Inclinations and Obligations"
1949 — George Boas — "The Acceptance of Time"
1954 — Brand Blanshard — "The Impasse of Ethics - and a Way Out"
1954 — Gilbert Ryle — "Some Problems in the Theory of Meaning"
1954 — Walter Terence Stace — "Mysticism and Human Reason"
1956 — Józef Maria Bocheński — "Logic and Philosophy"
1957 — Kurt von Fritz — "Aristotle's Contribution to the Theory and Practice of Historiography"
1957 — John Wisdom — "Paradox and Discovery"
1959 — Willard Van Orman Quine — "The Assuming of Objects"
1960 — Ernest Nagel — "The Cognitive Status of Theories"
1961 — Gabriel Honori Marcel — "Man, Techniques, and Meta-Techniques"
1963 — Henry H. Price — "Causes of Belief and Reasons for Belief"
1963 — Peter Geach — "Assertion"
1963 — Elizabeth Anscombe — "The Intentionality of Sensation: A Grammatical Feature"
1964 — Carl G. Hempel — "Problems of Induction"
1968 — Stuart Hampshire — "Sincerity and Uncertainty"
1971 — Gunther Patzing — "Truth, Determinism and Uncertainty"
1977 — Saul Kripke — "Wittgenstein on Rules and Private Language: An Exposition"
1977 — Peter F. Strawson — "Perception and Its Objects"; "Reference and Its Roots"
1978 — Robert Nozick — "The Identity of the Self. Why is there Something Rather than Nothing?"
1979 — Patrick Suppes — "The Limits of Rationality"
1979 — John Rawls — "Constructivist Moral Conceptions"
1979 — David Kellogg Lewis — "Causal Explanation"
1980 — Michel Foucault — "Truth and Subjectivity"
1981 — Hilary Putnam — "The Transcendence of Reason": 1) "Why There Isn't a Ready-Made World"; 2) "Why Reason Can't Be Naturalized"
1983 — Richard Rorty — "Relativism"
1984 — Gregory Vlastos — "Socrates' Disavowal of Knowledge"; "The Socratic Fallacy"
1985 — Nelson Goodman — "A Reconception of Philosophy"
1986 — Michael A. E. Dummett — "The Justification of Logical Laws"
1987 — Thomas Nagel — "Moral Conflict and Political Legitimacy"
1988 — Bernard Williams — "Philosophy and the Fragments of Enlightenment"
1988 — Jürgen Habermas
1994 — Noam Chomsky — "Naturalism and Dualism in the Study of Language and Mind"
1996 — Myles Burnyeat — "Freedom, Anger, Tranquility - An Archaeology of Feeling"; "Ancient Freedoms"; "Anger and Revenge"; "Happiness and Tranquility"
1999 — Nancy Cartwright — "The Dappled World"
2000 — Michael Frede — "On Aristotle's Notion of the Soul"
2002 — Ronald M. Dworkin — "Truth, Interpretation, and the Point of Moral Philosophy"
2002 — Stanley Cavell — "Philosophy the Day After Tomorrow: Moments in Nietzsche, Jane Austen, et cetera."; "The Wittgensteinian Event
2004 — David Kaplan — "The Meaning of 'Ouch' and 'Oops'"
2005 — Judith Jarvis Thomson — "Normativity"
2006 — John McDowell — "Intention in Action"
2007 — Fred Dretske — "What We See"
2007 — T. M. Scanlon — "The Ethics of Blame"
2009 — John Perry — "Thinking and Talking About the Self"
2010 — Ian Hacking — "Proof, Truth, Hands, and Mind"
2013 — Robert Brandom — "Reason, Genealogy, and the Hermeneutics of Magnanimity"
2014 — Sarah Broadie — "The Theoretical Impulse in Plato and Aristotle"
2015 — Kwame Anthony Appiah — "The Philosophy of "As If""
2016 — Christine M. Korsgaard — "Animal Selves and the Good"
2017 — Gisela Striker — "Cicero ’s De Officiis – Stoic Ethics for Non-Stoics"
2018 — Joseph Raz — "Identity and Social Bonds"
2019 — Philip Kitcher — "Progress in the Sciences and in the Arts"
See also
External links
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