2009 Commencement Ceremony

The College of Humanities at California State University, Northridge will hold its 2009 Commencement Ceremony on May 20, 2009.

Date:Wednesday, May 20, 2009
Time:Begins at 6:30pm
Location:Oviatt Library Lawn (Map)

The Commencement Ceremonies at California State University, Northridge commemorate the accomplishments of our students and offer congratulations on their efforts. This climactic experience is for graduates, families, and friends, to celebrate and enjoy a momentous closing of a college career and the welcoming of a new beginning.

Visit the CSUN Commencement website for more information about this event.

Hurts So Good: What's Bad About Masochistic Pain?

“What’s bad about masochistic pain?”  That’s the question our very own Adam Swenson will address during this lecture.

Date:Friday, April 24, 2009
Time:1pm – 3pm
Place:Jerome Richfield Hall, Room 204

Adam has interests throughout ethics (meta, normative, and applied), social-political philosophy, philosophy of law, metaphysics, and philosophy of mind. His current research focuses on understanding how long-standing issues in ethics and value theory play out in the phenomena of pain. His published work includes the monograph Pain and Value, and the articles “Pains’ Evils” in Utilitas (2009) and “Privation Theories of Pain” in International Journal for Philosophy of Religion (forthcoming). He the editor of the blog Pain for Philosophers.

Related Links:

This event is hosted by the Center for Sex and Gender Research in collaboration with the Department of Philosophy.

Free and open to the public.  Parking on the Cal State Northridge campus costs $5.

For more information, please email Prof. Jacob Hale.

The Philosophy of Art

Join the Student Philosophy Society as we discuss topics in the philosophy of art.  We’ll talk about the nature of aesthetics and what constitutes art.  Bring a friend!

Topic:The Philosophy of Art
Date:Thursday, March 12, 2009
Time:5pm – 7pm
Place:Sierra Tower 503
(the philosophy library/study room on the fifth floor)

The Significance of Distribution

Aaron James (University of California, Irvine) will be joining the Student Philosophy Society to present a lecture on The Significance of Distribution.

Date:Wednesday, February 25, 2009
Time:4pm – 6pm
Place:Sierra Hall 451 (The Whitsett Room)

Abstract:

T. M. Scanlon’s contractualist conception of morality has important but largely unappreciated implications for the theory of justice, especially the theory of distributive justice.  For instance, many egalitarians believe that a distribution (of goods, resources, opportunities, or welfare) can be just by its very nature, in and of itself.  But if justice is part of “what we owe to each other,” this cannot be right: a distribution across persons cannot be just or unjust, taken simply as such.  For something is owed only if it is owed to one or another individual, and distributions across persons, as such, are not the kind of thing that can be owed to a single person.  Each person is owed at most his or her particular share, given his or her “personal” reasons.  If the ultimate significance of distribution cannot lie in whether or not an impersonal distributional pattern comes about, Scanlon’s theory also tells us what is ultimately at stake: whether we, the distributing agent, stand in a certain relation, a relation of “recognition,” to each of the distinct people involved.

Communication services (sign languages interpreters, note takers, realtime captionists or assistive listening devices) are avaliavle for this event.  Contact Donald Lilly for information.  Requests for services must be submitted at least seven (7) working days in advance.

This lecture is free and open to the public.  Parking on campus costs $5.

For more information, please email Prof. Rob Gressis.