Program for 2015 ISP Conference

Preliminary schedule – subject to change (Updated June 15, 2015)

 32nd International Social Philosophy Conference

Education & Social Justice

2015 Program – Abstracts.

Thursday, July 16

Registration: 8:15 am – 12:00 pm, Yates-Gill Lobby

Breakfast: 8:15 – 9:00 am College Cafeteria

Book Display: Yates-Gill 222

Session I: 9:00 – 10:20 am

I-A. Corporations & Culture *

Chair: Dee Dee Mower, Weber State University

The Corporatized University as a Hostile Educational Environment

James Edward Roper, Michigan State University

The Concept of “Bildung” and Contemporary Education

Velimir Stojkoski, Marquette University

I-B. Education & Emotion

Chair:   Chris Lowry, University of Waterloo

 

The Tao of Resistance: Humanity and the Education of the Emotions.

Colena Sesanker, University of Connecticut

Learning as Learning How to Feel

Matt Silliman, Massachusetts College of Liberal Arts

 

I-C. Public Force

Chair: David Reese, Georgetown University

 

Coercion, Enforcement, Public Justification

James W. Boettcher, St. Joseph’s University

Alcoholic Beverages Should be Banned

Donald W. Bruckner, Penn State University, New Kensington

I-D. Women & Philosophy

Chair: Ian Werkheiser, Michigan State University

Philosophy in Schools: Can Early Exposure Help Solve Philosophy’s Gender Problem?

Gina Schouten, Illinois State University

When is Being a Woman Enough?

Larry Busk, University of Oregon

Refreshment Break: 10:20 – 10:40 am Yates-Gill Lobby

Session II: 10:40 am – 12:00 pm

 

II-A. Panel: Teaching Justice Through Service Learning

Chair: Jennifer Szende, University of Montreal

Karen Adkins, Regis University

Abigail Gosselin, Regis University

Jason Taylor, Regis University

II-B. Indigenous Justice

Chair: Ericka   L. Tucker, Marquette University

 

Parental Decision-Making and the Aboriginal Right to Pursue Traditional Medicine

Chris Lowry, University of Waterloo

Can Anderson’s Imperative of Integration Accommodate Native American’s Right to Self-Determination?

Kayleigh A. Doherty, Arizona State University

II-C. Community & Disparity

Chair: Donald W. Bruckner, Penn State University, New Kensington

Communities and Collective Capabilities

Ian Werkheiser, Michigan State University

Deviance to Diminish Educational Disparity

Dee Dee Mower, Weber State University

II-D. Tradition & Resistance

Chair: Colena Sesanker, University of Connecticut

Peripheral-Being-in-the-World and Epistemological Resistance

Jesus Ramirez, University of South Florida

The Traditionalists and Challengers-to-Traditionalists Positions in Philosophy of Education

Ernesto Rosen Velasquez, University of Dayton

II-E. Paths to Social Justice

Chair: Larry Busk, University of Oregon

 

Love and Resistance

Barrett Emerick, St. Mary’s College of Maryland

Transformative Mainstreaming: Placing Intersectionality at the Heart of Development

Audra L. King, Central Connecticut State University

Lunch: 12:00 – 1 pm, on one’s own (cafeteria serves 11:30 – 1 pm, Yates-Gill Union)

Session III: 1 – 3 pm

III-A. Tom Digby’s Love and War; How Militarism Shapes Sexuality and Gender (a conversation with the author)

Chair: Richard Oxenberg, Endicott College

Sarah Clark Miller, Pennsylvania State University

David Reese, Georgetown University

Anna Gotlib, Brooklyn College CUNY

Tom Digby, Springfield College

III-B. Vulnerability & Disability

Chair: Gina Schouten, Illinois State University

 

Autonomy, Sexuality, and Intellectual Disability

Andria Bianchi, University of Waterloo

The Vulnerable Body in Feminist Self-Defense Classes

Anna Cook, University of Oregon

III-C. Race, Disparity, & Belonging

Chair: Donald W. Bruckner, Penn State University, New Kensington

 

Racism, Racial Discrimination and Racial Injustice:  How They Are, and Are Not, Related

D.C. Matthew, York University

Being Brown in Academia and Epistemic Insecurity

Saba Fatima, Southern Illinois University, Edwardsville

Reflecting on Rocky Choices: Justice, School Discipline, and Classroom Membership

Jacob Fay, Harvard Graduate School

III-D. Epistemologies of Ignorance

Chair: Kayleigh A. Doherty, Arizona State University

 

Exploring Possibilities: Epistemic Responsibility and Education

Ezgi Sertler, Michigan State University

Epistemic Issues in Biomedical Ethics: Ignorance, Knowledge, and Disability

Christine Wieseler, University of South Florida

III-E. Inequalities in Education

Chair: Matt Waldschlagel, University of North Carolina

Equality in Education: Why We Must Go all the Way

Tammy Harel Ben-Shahar, Columbia University Law School

Education and the Imaginary Public

Michael S. Merry, University of Amsterdam

Refreshment Break: 3 – 3:30 pm Yates-Gill Lobby

Graduate Student Award Presentation: Yates-Gill Lobby

First Plenary Session: 3:30 – 5 pm

Chair: Margaret Crouch

Who Do We Think We Are?

Lorraine B. Code, York University

Reception: 5:15 – 6:15 pm, Morning Day Café

           (Liberty Town Square)

Dinner: on one’s own (cafeteria serves 6:15 – 7:15)

****

Friday, July 17

Registration: 8:15 am – 12:00 pm *

Breakfast: 8:15 – 9:00 am *

Book Display: Yates-Gill 222

Session IV: 9:00 – 10:20 am

IV-A. Issues of Justice

Chair: Michael S. Merry, University of Amsterdam

Global Justice, Environmental Justice; Bridging the Gap

Jennifer Szende, University of Montreal

International Trade as a Subject of Justice

Sabrina Martin, Oxford University

IV-B. Gender Issues

Chair: Dennis Arjo, Johnson County Community College

 

The Normative Implications of Transnational Sexual Violence for Global Gender Justice

Sarah Clark Miller, Pennsylvania State University

Regulation of Bodies as Gendered Nationalistic Ideology: Physically Wounded Veterans as Political Props

David Matthew Reese, Georgetown University

 

IV-C. Education & Equality

Chair: Andria Bianchi, University of Waterloo

 

Inequalities and Educational Justice

Krassimir Stojanov, Catholic University of Eichstaett-Ingolstadt

Compelled Concessions: the movement among egalitarians and sufficientarians toward a shared conception of educational justice

Ian McDaniel, The University of Kansas

IV-D. Culture & Critical Reasoning

Chair: Marilea Bramer, Minnesota State University, Moorhead

Bloodthink, Doublethink, and Socratic Dialectic: Critical Thinking and the Duplicitous Mind

Richard Oxenberg, Endicott College

Honnethian Critical Education

Jenn Dum, Binghamton University

 

IV-E. Public Reason, Public Speech, Alliances

Chair: Ezgi Sertler, Michigan State University

 

Political Performativity and Public Speech in Arendt’s Eichmann in Jerusalem

Lillian  Cicerchia, Fordham University

Alliances and Virtue: Beyond Friendships and Collaborations

Barry DeCoster, Albany College of Pharmacy

 

Refreshment Break: 10:20 – 10:40 am, Yates-Gill Lobby

Session V: 10:40 am – 12:00 pm

 

V-A. Empathy & Care

Chair: Lillian Cicerchia, Fordham University

Can Empathy and Solidarity with Distant Others be Taught?

Carol C. Gould, Hunter College & the Graduate Center, City University of New York

Criminal Justice, Restitution, and the Ethic of Care

Joseph H. Kupfer. Iowa State University

 

V-B. Epistemic Injustice & Self Defense

Chair: Anna Cook, University of Oregon

 

Epistemic Injustice & Culpability

Eric Banyuns, The Graduate Center, CUNY

Justifying the State Right of Self-Defense

Jennifer Kling, University of North Carolina Chapel Hill

V-C. Civic Engagement, Civic Reason

Chair: Michael D. Doan, Eastern Michigan University

 

How public is just right? Public reason in the classroom

Joshua Keton, The Graduate Center, CUNY

Education and Civic Involvement

Gordon B. Mower, Brigham Young University

 

V-D. Morality and Social Media

Chair: Ruth Groenhout, Calvin College

Informal Discourse and Student Anonymity: Yik-Yak’s Role in the University Public Sphere

Kyle Thomsen, St. Francis University

Measuring the Moral Dimensions of Infrastructure

Shane Epting, University of North Texas

 

V-E. Assessment & Transformation

Chair: Maurice Hamington, University of Oregon/Lane Community College

 

Human Resource and Citizen: The Paradox of Educational Assessment

Rein Staal, William Jewell College

Enactivism, Affectivity, and Transformative Learning

Michelle Maiese, Emmanuel College

Lunch: 12:00 – 1:15 pm, on one’s own (cafeteria serves 11:30 – 1)

Executive Committee Meeting: 12 – 1 pm Yates Dining Room

Session VI: 1:15 – 3:15 pm

 

VI-A. Panel on the work of Nel Noddings

Chair: Nancy Snow, Marquette University

Noddings Among the Philosophers

Ruth Groenhout, Calvin College

Reciprocity as Developmental Virtue and Ideal of Justice in the Care Ethic of Nel Noddings

Maureen Sander-Staudt, Southwest Minnesota State University

The Student is More Important Than the Subject: Nel Noddings, Care, and Emergent Normativity

Maurice Hamington, University of Oregon/Lane Community College

VI-B. The Marginalized

Chair: Roxanne K. Smith, University of Illinois Springfield

Spiritual Violence and Gender Based Oppression

Theresa Tobin, Marquette University

Three hypotheses for explaining the so-called oppression of men: teaching Marilyn Frye’s “Oppression”

Peter W. Higgins, Eastern Michigan University

Invisible Punishment?

Zack Hoskins, University of Nottingham

VI-C. Education for Citizens

Chair: Miranda Pilipchuk, Villanova University

Cultivating Citizenship: Student-Initiated Civic Engagement Projects

Ramona Ilea, Pacific University, Monica Janzen, Anoka-Ramsey Community College

Civil Service and Education: Changing our View of Dependency

Laura Wildemann Kane, The Graduate Center, CUNY

VI-D. Objectivity & Impartiality

Chair: Julian Roel Gonzalez, University of Kansas

Ideal Theory, Oppression, and the Aims of Political Theorizing

Lisa H. Schwartzman, Michigan State University

Education and the Failure of “Objectivity” as an Epistemic Ideal

Devora Shapiro, Southern Oregon University

James, Hobhouse, and the Rational Good

Randall Morris, William Jewell College

 

VI-E. Education & Action

Chair: Karen Adkins, Regis University

 

Educating the Educators: What activists can teach academics

Trevor William Smith, Marquette University

Acting in the Dark, Together

Michael D. Doan, Eastern Michigan University

Imagining Adorno’s ‘Education after Auschwitz’

Catlyn Origitano, Marquette University

Refreshment Break: 3:15 – 3:30 pm, Yates-Gill Lobby

Second Plenary Session: 3:30 – 5 pm

Chair: Sally Scholz, Villanova University

Care Ethics and Social Policy

Nel Noddings, Stanford University (Emerita)

Reception: 5:15 – 6:15 pm, Morning Day Café

Banquet: 6:30 – 8:30 pm, Yates-Gill 222

Presidential Address:

Why Can’t We Behave?–with Apologies to Cole Porter

Margaret Crouch, Eastern Michgan University

*****

Saturday, July 18

Registration: 8:15 am – 12:00 pm, Yates-Gill Lobby

Breakfast: 8:15 – 9:00 am, College Cafeteria

Book Display: Yates-Gill 222

Session VII: 9:00 – 10:20 am

 

VII-A. Human Nature & Reflective Equilibrium

Chair: Shane Epting, University of North Texas

Human Nature, the Normativity Objection and the Practical Reason Response: No Cigar

Max G. Parish, Marquette University & University of Oklahoma

Scanlon’s Misguidance in Rawls’ Reflective Equilibrium

Julian Roel Gonzalez, University of Kansas

VII-B. Hope & Other Virtues

Chair: Karl Martin Adam, Oakland University

 

The Primacy of Hopefulness

Joan Woolfrey, West Chester University

Becoming Just: Law and Virtue in Aristotelian Ethics

David K. Chan, University of Wisconsin

VII-C. Moral Education & Politics

Chair: Peter W. Higgins, Eastern Michigan University

The Politics of Moral Education

Dennis Arjo, Johnson County Community College

How Epistemic Responsibility Carries over into Moral Responsibility

Jan Narveson, University of Waterloo (Emeritus)

 

 VII-D. Spinoza & the Philosophy of History

Chair: Jim Boettcher, St. Joseph’s University

Power, Dissent and Social Change in Spinoza’s Social and Political Theory

Erica L. Tucker, Marquette University

Taking Care of the Past: Materiality and Representation in the Philosophy of History

David J. Leichter, Marian University

VII-E. Forgiveness & Human Nature

Chair: Matt Silliman, Mass. College of Liberal Arts

           

How Not to Think About Forgiveness

Matt Waldschlagel, University of North Carolina

The Sticky Question of Human Nature: stumbling-block or resource for Aristotelian Feminist Eudaimonism?

Celeste Harvey, Marquette University

 

Refreshment Break: 10:20 – 10:40 am, Yates-Gill Lobby

Session VIII: 10:40 am – 12 noon

VIII-A. Liberty & Limits

Chair: Monica Janzen, Anoka-Ramsey Community College

A Left Libertarian Philosophy of Social Justice

Norman Arthur Fischer. Kent State University

Democracy and the Informal Sphere

Seth Mayer, Auburn University

VIII-B. Curiosity & Climate Change

Chair: Catlyn Origitano, Marquette University

Curiosity’s Potential in Education for Social Justice: Freire, Dewey, and Flexible Epistemology

Jordan Stewart-Rozema, Emory University

The Duty to Assist, Political Feasibility, and Global Climate Change

Sarah Brigid Kenehan, Marywood University

VIII-C. Animals

Chair: Ramona Ilea, Pacific University

 

He Eats Me, He Eats Me Not: Violence Against Women and Animals, and the Construction of the Political Subject

Miranda Pilipchuk, Villanova University

The Impossibility of Vegetarianism

Andrew F. Smith, Drexel University

VIII-D. Gamification & Equality

Chair: Randall Morris, William Jewell College

Leveling Up Education: A Constructive Critique of Gamification

Matt Ross, Independent Scholar

Talent, Circumstances, and Equality of Opportunity in Education

Kirsty Leanne Macfarlane, La Trobe University, Melbourne, Australia

 

Lunch: 12 – 1 pm on one’s own (cafeteria serves 11:30 – 1)

   Business Meeting: 12:15 – 1 pm (College Cafeteria)

Third Plenary Session – Book Award 1 – 2:30 pm

Bottlenecks; A New Theory of Equal Opportunity

By Joseph Fishkin

Chair: Jeff Gauthier, University of Portland

Jeff Brown, University of Denver

Barry DeCoster, Albany College of Pharmacy

Author’s Response

Session IX: 2:45 – 4:45 pm

IX-A. Judith Andre’s Worldly Virtue (a conversation  with the author)

Chair: Lisa H. Schwartzman, Michigan State University

Barrett Emerick, St. Mary’s College of Maryland

Celeste Harvey, Marquette University

Nancy Snow, Marquette University

Judith Andre, Michigan State University

IX-B. Reflective Teaching

Chair: Kyle Thomsen, St. Francis University

 

Towards a Critical-Analytic Philosophy of Education

Paul McLaughlin, University of Limerick

A Voice of One’s Own: Reflective Teaching, Bioethics, and the Underprivileged Student

Anna Gotlib, Brooklyn College CUNY

How to Conceive of Infant Autonomy: The Structure and Uses of Infant Autonomy in a Moral Framework

Marilea Bramer, Minnesota State University, Moorhead

IX-D. Problematizing Aristotle

Chair: David K. Chan, University of Wisconsin

Why Virtue Ethicists Parent Poorly: The threat of developmental psychology for childrearing in virtue ethics

Jill B. Delston, University of Missouri St. Louis

Inventing Virtue Metaphysics

Roxanne K. Smith, University of Illinois Springfield

 

IX-E. Rights, Others, & Credibility

Chair: Jenn Dum, Binghamton University

         

Types, Tokens, and Brands; Credibility Excess as Epistemic Vice

Emmalon Davis, Indiana University

The Slippery Slope to Justice: An Argument for the Recognition of Polygamy

Karl Martin Adam, Oakland University

Prioritizing Religion: The Case of Vaccine Exemption Policies

Mark Navin, Oakland University

Dinner: on one’s own (cafeteria serves 5 – 6 pm)

 

Special Thanks

Local Arrangements:

Elizabeth Sperry

Darlene Atkinson

Kiki Strecker

William Jewell College

Program Committee:

Matt Silliman (chair)

Joan Woolfrey

Mark Navin

Book Award Committee:

Jeff Gauthier (chair)

Jeff Brown

Barry DeCoster

Graduate Award Selection Committee:

Karen Adkins (chair)

Jacob Affolter

Melissa Mosko

NASSP Executive Committee:

Margaret Crouch, President

Alistair Macleod, Past President

Sally J. Scholz, Vice President

Nancy Snow, Archivist

James Boettcher, Treasurer

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