Summer 2013: Mind and Perception Reading Group

Date: Wednesday, June 12, 2013
Time: 10:30 am to 12:00 pm
Location: Philosophy Department Lounge
Reading: Susanna Schellenberg, “Experience and Evidence” (2006) Philpapers
About: We will be convening again this summer for at least a few meetings of the Mind and Perception Reading Group, usually on Wednesdays at 10:30 am. Probable topics for read papers include phenomenal content, naive realism (relationalism) and hallucination, neo-empiricism, and demonstrative thought. But, the final list of papers and meeting dates have not been set.

Workshop with Cordelia Fine

Date: February 19, 2013
Time: 12:00 pm to 2:00 pm
Location: Duncan College Private Dining Room
About: The session will be open to interested faculty, students, and visitors, and it will operate as a discussion focused on some of Fine’s recent work. Fine will say a few brief introductory remarks, 5 to 10 mins, then the floor will open for discussion.
Sponsors: This talk is generously cosponsored by the Departments of Psychology, Philosophy, and the Center for the Study of Women, Gender, and Sexuality.

Cordelia Fine, ‘Neurosexism’: from scanner to sound bite to psyche to society

Speaker: Cordelia Fine
Senior Research Fellow in Psychological Sciences and Associate Professor
University of Melbourne
Date: Monday, February 18, 2013
Time: 4:00 pm to 6:00 pm
Location: 309 Sewall Hall
Abstract: This talk will chart the problematic journey of ‘facts’ about sex differences in the brain: from their production in the laboratory, to popular (mis)representation, to lay-beliefs about gender and their corresponding psychological effects. Feminist critics have recently argued that current use of the new technology of functional neuroimaging in sex differences research follows a long tradition of ‘neurosexism’: neuroscientific research or claims that reinforce traditional gender stereotypes and roles in ways that are not scientifically justified. Having argued for the validity of such concerns within the functional neuroimaging literature, I review evidence that such claims (especially when exaggerated by popular commentators), have scope to sustain the very sex differences they seek to explain via their effects on social attitudes and behaviors.
Web: HRC
Sponsors: This talk is generously cosponsored by the Departments of Psychology, Philosophy, and the Center for the Study of Women, Gender, and Sexuality.