Faculty Colloquium (1st term of 2017-18)
Speaker: Prof. Zhong Lei
Date: 1 Dec 2017 (Fri)
Time:  4:00pm
Venue:  G24, Arts and Humanities Hub, Fung King Hey Building, CUHK
Language: Putonghua
Abstract:

Non-reductive Physicalism, a very attractive position in contemporary philosophy of mind, asserts that whereas mental states ontologically depend upon physical states, the mental is irreducible or non-identical to the physical. However, it has been argued that non-reductive physicalism is in tension with the thesis of Causal Closure of Physics, which is the view that every physical effect has a complete physical cause. Although the Closure thesis is widely accepted, philosophers say surprisingly little about what notion of physical entities should be adopted. In this talk, I distinguish between three versions of Closure that appeal to a narrow, a moderate, and a broad notion of the physical, respectively. I then argue that none of the three versions can raise a serious challenge to non-reductive physicalism.

 

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Speaker: Prof. Ka-ming Wu
Date: 13 Oct 2017 (Fri)
Time:  4:00pm
Venue:  G24, Arts and Humanities Hub, Fung King Hey Building, CUHK
Language: English
Abstract:

A paper jam crisis was looming in the Hong Kong territory as local paper recycling firms launched a strike in September 2017 in response to the new rules by the mainland Chinese authority on waste as “polluting foreign imports”. While awakening to the alarming rate and amount of waste generated daily, we might as well ponder on how waste collectors clean up the city and what their experiences are. My recent book Living with Waste: Economies, Communities and Spaces of Waste Collectors in China (The Chinese University Press 2016), co-authored with Zhang Jieying, addresses this issue. In the talk, I will introduce our book and explore how waste collectors work, experience and live with depleted or broken matters in the margins of Beijing city. Questions I will also address include: how does waste work as a modality of power? How does waste shape the language, strategies and everyday precarious experience of waste collectors? Lastly, I will discuss how humanities research can address global environmental challenges and engage with emerging concepts such as “planetary boundary” and the Anthropocene.

 

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