Programme
All times are in CEST (Rome time)
We aim to start on time, so please join the conference room a few minutes before the scheduled start.
We aim to start on time, so please join the conference room a few minutes before the scheduled start.
ALL TIMES ARE IN CEST
Day 1 - 9 June 2021 - Wednesday
Animal Value, Theory and Emotions
15:00 - 15:15 CEST | WELCOME
15:15 - 16:15 CEST | Keynote: Elisa Aaltola
(Department of Philosophy, Contemporary History and Political Science, University of Turku)
The Moral Psychology and Paradoxes of “Animal Love”
(Department of Philosophy, Contemporary History and Political Science, University of Turku)
The Moral Psychology and Paradoxes of “Animal Love”
16:30 - 17:30 CEST | PARALLEL SESSIONS 1
1A What is an animal?
Friederike Zenker (Center for the Theory and History of Images, University of Basel) Singular Animals. Towards Epistemic Justice in Human-Animal Relations Carmen Krämer (Department of Philosophy/Human Technology Center, RWTH Aachen University) “Animal” as a problem of “animal” ethics
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1B Moral beliefs in action
Konstantin Deininger (School of Philosophy, Munich University) Is it Morally Certain that it is Wrong to Kill and Eat Other Animals for Food? Presenting author: Konstantin Deininger; co-authors: Herwig Grimm & Andreas Aigner (This paper contains argumentative pieces of the manuscript “Resisting Moral Relativism by Difficulties of Reality: A Wittgensteinian-Diamondian Approach”) Maria Eugênia Zanchet (Faculty of Cultural Studies, Universität Bayreuth) Practical identity and moral transgressions: a Kantian approach |
17:45 - 18:45 CEST | PARALLEL SESSIONS 2
2A Alternative approaches to moral status
Benedikt Namdar (Department of Philosophy, Karl-Franzens-Universität Graz) Vulnerability as a marker of moral status and moral standing Simone Pollo (Department of Philosophy, Università La Sapienza, Rome)
A Humean Vegetarianism |
2B Ecology and wild animals
Silvina Pezzetta (CONICET - National Council of Scientific and Technical Research - UBA Law School, Argentina) The feral pigeon's case: putting in crisis classical animal rights theories Giovanni Fava (University of Bologna),
Another look at the naturalistic fallacy: on some ecological aspects of Philippe Descola’s anthropology |