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This lecture in the series Remembering and Forgetting is presented by Kathleen Higgins, exploring how memories and new insights help us honor the dead and integrate their presence into our lives.
Katherine Puddifoot explores how social stereotypes shape our recollections and how this can lead to injustice in personal memories.
This lecture in the series Remembering and Forgetting is presented by James Wilson, exploring how to reconcile different reasons for public remembrance.
This lecture in the series Remembering and Forgetting is presented by Tom Stern, exploring the phenomenon of involuntary memory in Proust’s work.
Marya Schechtman explores the value of treasured memories in constituting personal identity and intimate social relationships.
Professor Pamela Hieronymi will be delivering this year's Royal Society of Edinburgh/Royal Institute of Philosophy annual public lecture. Her talk navigates debates around Free Will, focusing on two key aspects: "problems in life" and "problems in theory."
Is the aspiration to 'ethical AI’ realistic? Could artificial systems themselves be ethical agents? Are the financial incentives to ignore ethics just too powerful?
This lecture in the series Remembering and Forgetting is presented by James Dawes, tracing the history of trauma as a concept and the moral risks and demands it places on us.
This lecture in the series Remembering and Forgetting is presented by Rima Basu, examining the duty to forget and its implications for privacy and moral judgment.
The annual Royal Institute of Philosophy & UCD School of Philosophy public lecture will be delivered this year by Professor Rahel Jaeggi, who will explore what drives social change and how much of an impact social actors can have on this.