Dates: December 13-15, 2019
Venue: University of Tokyo, Komaba Campus & Komaba II Campus
Organizers: John O'Dea, Ryoji Sato, & Kengo Miyazono
Funding: JSPS KAKENHI (18H00605: 19K12942)
Dinner: Dinner will be organised at a nearby restaurant for the nights of the 13th, 14th and 15th. If you are interested in joining, please send an email to John O'Dea ([email protected]) with the subject line "Dinner for Tokyo Agency Conference" by Friday, Dec 6th at the latest. Alternatively, you can submit your answer here. The cost will be in the vicinity of ¥3000 – ¥5000.
Part I: Unconscious Perception
Komaba II Campus, RCAST Building 3, 2nd floor (middle) seminar room (map)
December 13
10:20-10:30: [Coffee]
10:30-11:50: Ryoji Sato (Nagoya University of Foreign Studies)
“How could there be unconscious perception?”
12:00-13:00: Tony Cheng (National Cheng-Chi University)
“Bálint's syndrome and ‘unconscious perception’”
13:00-15:30: [Lunch]
15:30-16:30: Masatoshi Yoshida (National Institute for Physiological Sciences)
“Awareness and decision in blindsight”
16:40-18:30: Ian Phillips (Johns Hopkins University)
“Action and experience”
Part II: Agency & Rationality
Komaba Campus, Building 18, 4th Floor, Collaboration Room 4 (map)
December 14
9:30-9:40: [Coffee]
9:40-11:10: Nikolaj JLL Pedersen (Yonsei University)
“Be careful what you like: Social media, data analysis, and illegitimate influence”
11:20-12:50: Akiko Frischhut (Akita International University)
“Passage experience and the intelligibility problem”
12:50-14:40: [Lunch]
14:40-16:10: Richard Dietz (University of Tokyo)
“Two tales of dynamic choice”
16:20-18:00: Laurie Paul (Yale University)
“Deliberation and the paradox of empathy for possible selves”
December 15
9:30-9:40: [Coffee]
9:40-11:10: Derek Baker (Lingnan University)
“Deliberation without authority”
11:20-12:50: Samuel Mortimer (University of Pennsylvania)
“Decision-making in different landscapes”
12:50-14:40: [Lunch]
14:40-16:10: Uku Tooming (Hiroshima University)
“Fitting desire”
16:20-18:00: Lisa Bortolotti (University of Birmingham)
“Epistemic innocence”
Venue: University of Tokyo, Komaba Campus & Komaba II Campus
Organizers: John O'Dea, Ryoji Sato, & Kengo Miyazono
Funding: JSPS KAKENHI (18H00605: 19K12942)
Dinner: Dinner will be organised at a nearby restaurant for the nights of the 13th, 14th and 15th. If you are interested in joining, please send an email to John O'Dea ([email protected]) with the subject line "Dinner for Tokyo Agency Conference" by Friday, Dec 6th at the latest. Alternatively, you can submit your answer here. The cost will be in the vicinity of ¥3000 – ¥5000.
Part I: Unconscious Perception
Komaba II Campus, RCAST Building 3, 2nd floor (middle) seminar room (map)
December 13
10:20-10:30: [Coffee]
10:30-11:50: Ryoji Sato (Nagoya University of Foreign Studies)
“How could there be unconscious perception?”
12:00-13:00: Tony Cheng (National Cheng-Chi University)
“Bálint's syndrome and ‘unconscious perception’”
13:00-15:30: [Lunch]
15:30-16:30: Masatoshi Yoshida (National Institute for Physiological Sciences)
“Awareness and decision in blindsight”
16:40-18:30: Ian Phillips (Johns Hopkins University)
“Action and experience”
Part II: Agency & Rationality
Komaba Campus, Building 18, 4th Floor, Collaboration Room 4 (map)
December 14
9:30-9:40: [Coffee]
9:40-11:10: Nikolaj JLL Pedersen (Yonsei University)
“Be careful what you like: Social media, data analysis, and illegitimate influence”
11:20-12:50: Akiko Frischhut (Akita International University)
“Passage experience and the intelligibility problem”
12:50-14:40: [Lunch]
14:40-16:10: Richard Dietz (University of Tokyo)
“Two tales of dynamic choice”
16:20-18:00: Laurie Paul (Yale University)
“Deliberation and the paradox of empathy for possible selves”
December 15
9:30-9:40: [Coffee]
9:40-11:10: Derek Baker (Lingnan University)
“Deliberation without authority”
11:20-12:50: Samuel Mortimer (University of Pennsylvania)
“Decision-making in different landscapes”
12:50-14:40: [Lunch]
14:40-16:10: Uku Tooming (Hiroshima University)
“Fitting desire”
16:20-18:00: Lisa Bortolotti (University of Birmingham)
“Epistemic innocence”