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- IS&T RCS Tutorial - Introduction to Python, Part Two (Hands-on)10:00 am
- Information, Overload - Boston University School of Visual Arts 2025 Alumni Exhibition11:00 am
- MSE PhD Prospectus Defense: Kaixin Suo11:00 am
- Ni de Aquí, Ni de Allá (Not From Here, Not From There) Exhibition11:00 am
- IS&T RCS Tutorial - Introduction to BU's Shared Computing Cluster (Hands-on)1:00 pm
- U.S. Bar Exam Eligibility Info Session - LLM Professional Development 1:00 pm
- Graduate Admissions Office Hours (Virtual)2:00 pm
- CURA 2025 Fall Welcome Reception 3:00 pm
- Paris Info Session & Reception5:00 pm
- Study and Snacks5:00 pm
- ENG Internships for International Engineers5:30 pm
- Dance Theatre Group First Meeting7:00 pm
- The Ceremony7:30 pm
- MechE Seminar Series: Neil Dasgupta11:00 am
- [Merck] Industry Careers in Modeling/Informatics - Protein/Structural Chemistry12:00 pm
- IS&T RCS Tutorial - Introduction to the SCC for Neuroimagers (Hands-on)1:00 pm
- ENG Resume Lab2:15 pm
- ENG Your Job Search Timeline3:00 pm
- Coffee & Conversation Kickoff!3:30 pm
- Coffee & Conversation Kickoff!3:30 pm
- Friday Philosophy Colloquium: Matthew Congdon4:00 pm
- Sunset Kayaking6:15 pm
Friday Philosophy Colloquium: Matthew Congdon
The Philosophy Department's Friday Colloquium, with guest speaker, Matthew Congdon (Vanderbilt; ethics, social, aesthetics). “Two Myths about Emotion” Abstract: An old myth once held that emotion and reason are fundamentally opposed. In this paper, I argue that a common philosophical strategy for overcoming this myth—defending an analogy between emotional rationality and propositional rationality—constitutes many philosophers’ “new myth” about emotion. I defend the alternative that emotions help frame agents’ outlooks in ways that precede and underlie the possibility of forming propositional attitudes in the first place. I conclude by considering the implications this has for an account of the rational assessment of emotions.
| When | 4:00 pm - 6:00 pm on 12 September 2025 |
|---|---|
| Building | STH 325 |