The next talk in the Cognitive Development Center seminar series at
the CEU will be given by
Marian Chen (Psychology, Northwestern University, Chicago)
Title:
What infants track when they track multiple objects
Date and time:
Monday, 8 June 2009, 5.00 pm
CEU Cognitive Development Center
Hattyuhaz, Level 3, Hattyu u. 14, 1015 Budapest
Map:
http://maps.google.com/maps?q=1015+Budapest,+Budapest,+Hattyu+utca+14,+Hung…
Everyone is welcome to attend.
Our seminars start on time and we may not be able to let latecomers in.
---
Gergely Csibra
The Department of Philosophy at CEU invites you to a conference on the
philosophy of Gary Watson entitled
“Actions, Reasons, and Desires: Gary Watson on Freedom and Agency”
All talks will be held in the Philosophy Seminar Room: CEU, Zrínyi
utca 14, Room 412
Program:
June 22
10:00 Gary Watson (University of Southern California, Los Angeles),
“The Trouble with Psychopaths”
11:30 Ferenc Huoranszki (Central European University), “Weakness and
Compulsion: the Essential Difference”
Lunch break
15:00 Annemarie Kalis (Utrecht University), “Evaluation and
Motivation: The Case of Choosing the Bad”
19:30 Conference Dinner
June 23
10:00 Olli Koistinen (University of Turku), “Watson on Freedom and
Real Agency”
11:30 Zoltán Wágner (Central European University), “The Will, Counter-
Normative Agency, and Freedom”
Lunch break
15:00 András Szigeti (Central European University), “Moral
Responsibility and Practical Skepticism”
16:30 Gary Watson: Concluding remarks
Please contact Zoltán Wágner (fphwaz01(a)phd.ceu.hu) for further
information.
The CEU Department of Philosophy cordially invites you to talk
by
Barbara Montero (CUNY/Staten Island)
on
An Expert Reflects: Conscious Deliberation in the Art of Chess
Friday, 19 June 2009, 3.30 PM, Zrinyi 14 room 412
Abstract:
To gain insight into human nature philosophers often discuss the inferior performance that results from such deficits as blindsight, agnosia, or amnesia. Less often do they look at superior abilities. A notable exception to this is Herbert Dreyfus who has developed a theory of expertise according to which expert action proceeds basically automatically and unreflectively. And this, as he sees it, suggests that our uniquely human freedom to step back and reflect upon our actions is actually rather insignificant to our lives. I question Dreyfus's starting point. Contrary to Dreyfus who argues that "the enemy of expertise is thought," I shall argue that, at least in chess, an expert reflects.
Kedves Kollégák,
A BME Kognitív Tudományi Tanszék szeretettel vár mindenkit tanszéki
szemináriumsorozatának *következő előadásá*ra:
Június 8., hétfő, 12:00-13:00, BME, XI., Stoczek u. 2., St. ép., 320.-as
terem.
*Tisljár Roland*
Egyetemi tanársegéd, Szegedi Tudományegyetem, Pszichológiai Intézet
/A humor szerepe a társas kapcsolatokban/
*Absztrakt és bővebb info:*
http://cogsci.bme.hu/Esem.php?esemIndex=82
--
Ferenc Kemény
PhD Student
Budapest University of Technology and Economics,
Department of Cognitive Science,
Stoczek u. 2,
Budapest,
1111, Hungary
Tel & Fax: +36 1 463 3525
Dear All,
The next talk in the Friday seminar series:
Dezső Németh (University of Szeged)
Implicit sequence learning and it's consolidation - development and
pathology
05 JUNE, 14:00, Institute for Psycholohy, HAS, 83-85 Szondi street.
Everyone is welcome to attend.
Kindest regards,
Gabor Stefanics
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