Curtis Hyra will explore the benefits of a high-trust work environment in a free public lecture Friday, September 28.
Curtis Hyra will explore the benefits of a high-trust work environment in a free public lecture Friday, September 28.
A free public lecture September 13 will explore philosophical issues surrounding food.
Communications professor Thomas Goodnight of the University of Southern California will present on the UWindsor campus Friday and Monday.
Philosophy professor Jeff Noonan and photographer Douglas MacLellan will launch their collaborative work “A Moral History of Objects” on Tuesday.
When describing the nature of argument, war is one of the most popular metaphors — and one of the most misused, says Michael Yong-Set.
“For all the ways this metaphor helpfully guides us in understanding argument, there seem to be several very troubling ways that it can misdirect our thinking and miscalibrate our expectations when we argue,” he says.
A reception Wednesday, April 18, will launch philosophy professor Jeff Noonan’s book, Embodiment and the Meaning of Life.
Critical Reflections, the undergraduate and graduate philosophy conference, runs all day March 9 and 10.
Waleed Mebane, a doctoral candidate in argumentation studies, will explore the topic of “Argument Mining” in a free public lecture February 16.
A free public lecture Friday, February 2, will examine the importance of time in understanding the identity and binding character of a law.
UWindsor alumnus Grant Yocom, a special lecturer in philosophy at Michigan’s Oakland University, will discuss his research on urban social theory in the free public presentation “Here we live, here we shall live: Nietzsche, projective history and activist practice in Detroit,” at 4 p.m. Wednesday, December 6, in the University Club Vanier Hall.
Dr. Yocom has worked with community organizations and artist collectives on both sides of the border and currently serves on the executive board of the Windsor Philosophical Arts Association.