12/7/2014: Joint Session Podcast - Symposium III on Culpability, Duress and Excuses, featuring Gideon Rosen and Marcia Baron

Published: Oct. 13, 2014, 2:32 p.m.

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The 88th Joint Session of the Aristotelian Society and the Mind Association was held at the University of Cambridge from 11 to 13 July 2014. The Joint Session is a three-day conference in philosophy that is held annually during the summer by the Aristotelian Society and the Mind Association. It has taken place at nearly every major university across the United Kingdom and in Ireland. Since 1910, the Joint Session has grown to become the largest gathering of philosophers in the country, attracting prestigious UK and international speakers working in a broad range of philosophical areas. Inaugurated by the incoming President of the Mind Association, the Joint Session includes symposia, open and postgraduate sessions, and a range of satellite conferences.

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This podcast is a recording of the third symposium at the Joint Session - "Culpability, Duress and Excuses" - which featured Gideon Rosen (Princeton) and Marcia Baron (St. Andrews). Gideon Rosen is Chair of the Council of the Humanities at Princeton University. He joined the faculty of Philosophy in 1993, having taught previously at the University of Michigan. His areas of research include metaphysics, epistemology and moral philosophy. He is the author (with John Burgess) of A Subject With No Object (Oxford, 1997). Marcia Baron is Professor of Moral Philosophy at the University of St. Andrews and Rudy Professor of Philosophy at Indiana University. Her main interests are in moral philosophy and philosophy of criminal law. Publications include Kantian Ethics Almost without Apology (Cornell 1995), Three Methods of Ethics: A Debate, co-authored with Philip Pettit and Michael Slote (Blackwell, 1997), \\u201cManipulativeness\\u201d (2003), \\u201cExcuses, Excuses\\u201d (2007), \\u201cVirtue Ethics, Kantian Ethics, and the \\u2018One Thought Too Many\\u2019 Objection\\u201d (2008), \\u201cKantian Moral Maturity and the Cultivation of Character\\u201d (2009), \\u201cGender Issues in the Criminal Law\\u201d (2011), \\u201cSelf-Defense: The Imminence Requirement\\u201d (2011), and \\u201cRape, Seduction, Shame, and Culpability in Tess of the d\\u2019Urbervilles\\u201d (2013). Forthcoming articles include \\u201cThe Ticking Bomb Hypothetical\\u201d and \\u201cThe Supererogatory and Kant\\u2019s Wide Duties.\\u201d

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