6th PPN Conference, October 21 - 23, 2021: Conference Schedule

Below is the conference schedule with all times given in Eastern US timezone. Conference registration is here. For registered participants with password access, conference access can be found here.

Thursday, 21 October 2021

Conference Welcome (1:00 – 1:15 PM)

Plenary I (1:15 PM – 3:00 PM)

Climate Change and Our Common Future
Andrew Light | Assistant Secretary for International Affairs, U.S. Department of Energy
David Morrow | American University and George Mason University

Concurrent Afternoon Sessions (3:30 PM – 5:00 PM)

Public Philosophy: Theory and Practice (Lightning Talks)
Chair: Danielle Lake

Anna Peterson & Sam Snyder, “Public Philosophy, Ethics, and Activism”
Marie Sandy & Benjamin Trager, “Revisiting John Dewey's Social Philosophy during the ‘Original’ Liberal Turn: Implications for Service Learning with Democratic Values in a Neoliberal Context”
Catherine Womack, “The Making of a Proud Public Philosopher, or How I Learned to Love Writing on Deadline”
Landon Frim, “Mill, Mao, or Socrates: Three Strategies for Dealing with the Alt-Right in the Public University Classroom”
Britt Holbrook, “Engaging the Public as a Field Experiment in Engineering Ethics Education”

Public Engagement with Science and Policy (Lightning Talks)
Chair: Ben Almassi

David Henderson, “Who Am I to the Crow?”
Elizabeth Hoppe, “Hindsight is 20/20: Anticipatory Technology Ethics and the Boeing 737 MAX”
Siobhain Lash, “Environmental Racism and Governance: A Case for an Ostromian Approach towards an Alternative Institution in Louisiana”
Kian Mintz-Woo, “Reflections on Speaking to Non-Profits and Decision-Makers”

The Adversities of International Displacement: Refugees (Panel)
Chair: Michelle Pham

Mlado Ivanovic, “The Fictions of Refuge”
Ezgi Sertler, “A Structural-Epistemological Approach to Forced Displacement”
Anna Malavisi, “Integrity as an Institutional Virtue as a Form of Political Responsibility”

Roundtable on the Blackwell Companion to Public Philosophy (Panel)
Chair: Sharyn Clough

Speakers: Nancy McHugh, Lee McIntyre, and Ian Olasov

Engaging the Public in Philosophy on Social Media (Panel)
Chair: Cristina Cammarano

Timothy Barczak, “Social Media as the New Technological Public Sphere”
Kristan Barczak, “An Exploration of ‘Truth’ on Social Media in a Post-Truth Era”
Beththena Johnson, “Audience and Interaction: Thoughts on Engagement via Social Media”
Katie O’Keefe, “Using Design to Calibrate Philosophical Discussion on Social Media”
Jamie Herman, “Concerns and Limitations in Conducting Public Philosophy via Social Media”

Evening Workshops (6:30 PM – 8:30 PM)

Workshops require pre-registration.

A1: Peace Literacy 101: Human Aggression and Its Anatomy
Shari Clough & Paul K. Chappell

A2: We Know What You Did Last Summer…: Incorporating the P4C Pedagogy into a Summer Camp Setting
Claire Katz, Daniel Conway, Haley Burke & Michael Portal

A3: Transforming Undergraduate Philosophy Curricula
Clair Morrissey & Caro Brighouse 

A4: Using Public Philosophy to Increase Diversity and Inclusion
Kristen Intemann, Jingyi Wu & Krushil Watene

Friday, 22 October 2021

Morning Workshops (10:00 AM – 12:00 PM)

Workshops require pre-registration.

B1: Philosophical Fieldwork: Strategies for Participatory Engagement
Evelyn Brister & Robert Frodeman

B2: Public-Facing Assessments in Graduate Seminars
Colin Marshall, Erica Bigelow, Nic Jones & Darcy McCusker

B3: Descriptive Inquiry: A Process for Doing Public Philosophy
Cara Furman & Cecelia Traugh

B4: Empowerment through Dialogue: Creating Communities of Philosophical Inquiry in Elementary Schools
Karen Emmerman & Debi Talukdar

Plenary II (1:15 PM – 3:00 PM)

Science and Technology for the Public Interest
David Rodin | Principia Advisory and University of Oxford
Tony Pfaff | U.S. Army War College, Strategic Studies Institute 
Rachel Gillum | Salesforce, Office of Ethical and Humane Use and Stanford University 
Moderated by Jesse Kirkpatrick, George Mason University

Concurrent Afternoon Sessions (4:30 PM – 6:00 PM)

Applied Ethics and Policy (Lightning Talks)
Chair: Clair Morrissey

Elizabeth Fenton, “Reciprocity and Resources”
Alyssa Adamson, “Budgets as Moral Documents”
Michael Lissack & Brenden Meagher, “Lessons from Covid-19: Decisions Based on Truthiness Need More Solid Foundations”
Michelle Pham & Ashley Feinsinger, “What's the Value of Participant Engagement in Basic Human Neuroscience Research?”
N.A.J Taylor, “The International Ethics of Australian Nuclear Heritage”

Classroom Activities and Pedagogy (Lightning Talks)
Chair: Ramona Ilea

Kate Brelje, “Tradespeople, Hypnotherapists, and Refugees: Utilizing Interviews in the Philosophy Classroom and Beyond”
Cristina Cammarano, “Writing and Reading Philosophy across Walls”
Timothy Stock, Cristina Cammarano & Michele Schlehofer, “Public Philosophy at the Heart: A Chair’s Perspective”
Jana McAuliffe, “Philosophy after Graduation: Conversations between Students and Alums”
Michele Schlehofer, “‘Listening First’: Community-Based Research Meets Public Philosophy”

Reflecting on the Methods of Field Philosophy (Panel)
Chair: Jeremy Bendik-Keymer

Jessica Luther Rummel & Torrey Lynne Henderson, “Field Philosophers and Direct Action – Tools for Liberation Movements”
Adam Briggle, “Field Philosophy in the Bowels of Bureaucracy”
Jared L. Talley, “Field Philosophy in an Actual Field: My Body and My Engaged Philosophy”

Prisons and Philosophy: Being an Insider While Being an Outsider (Panel)
Chair: Michael Burroughs

Speakers: Shannon Fyfe, Elizabeth Lanphier & Amy McKiernan

The Inhumanity of Fake News (Panel)
Chair: Ian Olasov

Jennifer Foster, “Fake News, Real Fears: How Misinformation Makes It Hard to Be (Doxastically) Courageous”
Megan Fritts, “Digital Misinformation and the Exploitation of Humane Virtues”
Seth Goldwasser, “How Fake News Keeps Us Dumb: The Role of Function in Modeling Pathologies”
A. G. Holdier,  “On Useless Wights: An Aristotelian Critique of Fake News”

Saturday, 23 October 2021

Morning Workshops (9:00 AM – 11:00 AM)

Workshops require pre-registration.

C1: Sustainability Activism Within and Outside Philosophy
Eugene Chislenko & Rebecca Millsop

C2: Deliberative Practice for the Public Sector
Alex Richardson, Delaney Thull & Michael Vazquez
(This is a 90-minute workshop.)

C3: Algorithmic Auditing: Ethics and AI
Jovana Davidovic & Shea Brown

C4: Spaces of Public Philosophy
Anna Peterson, Ali Mian & Jaime Ahlberg

PPN Business Meeting (11:30 AM – 12:30 PM)

All PPN conference participants are welcome and encouraged to attend.

Concurrent Afternoon Sessions (1:30 PM – 3:00 PM)

Teaching Inside and Outside the Classroom (Lightning Talks)
Chair: Britt Holbrook

Matthew Hastings, “Ethics of Education for Digital Technology” 
Bob Coulter, “Philosophical Grounding for Outdoor Learning”
Benjamin Hole and Ramona Ilea, “Radical Hope for Teaching Civic Engagement in Ethics Courses”
Danielle Lake & Dani Green, “Disrupting Higher Education: A Call to Action for Public Philosophers”
Nora Boyd, “Philosophy Gets Dirty: Teaching Environmental Ethics as Community-Engaged Activism”

Public Philosophy Events and Projects (Lightning Talks)
Chair: Nancy McHugh

Jesse Hamilton, “A Philosophy Book Club with the General Public”
Anna Ichino, “The Philosophy Museum”
Gene Lin, “Creating the Largest US Public Philosophy Group: 4 Key Decisions”
Rachel Robison-Greene & Richard Greene, “Ethics Slams in Person and Online”
Anastasia Anderson, “The Thinking Playground”

Theorizing Public Engagement (Lightning Talks)
Chair: Adam Briggle

Danna Aduna, “What Can Activists Do about Epistemic Injustice and Gaslighting?”
Jeremy Bendik-Keymer, “To Make a Community More Harmonious through Disagreement: Part I. Settler Colonialism”
Lauren Bialystok, “Using Philosophy to De-Polarize Public Discourse on Sex Education”

Invasion Biology and Conservation Decision-Making (Panel)
Chair: Evelyn Brister

Karen Kovaka & Jacob Barney, “Invasion Biology and Ecological Networks” 
David Frank, “Biogeographic Origin and Conservation Decision-Making” 
Jay Odenbaugh, “Endangered Ecosystems and Non-Native Species”
Carlos Santana, “Against Ecological Nativism in the Urban Community”

Drama Queens: Gender & Performance in Public Testimony (Panel)
Chair: Catherine Womack

Speakers: Jeanette “Joy” Harris, Vanessa Voss & Margaret Betz

Ethics and Policing: Philosophers Engaging with Police Reform (Panel)
Chair: Helen de Cruz

Michael Burroughs, “Forming a Community-Sourced Police Reform Initiative in Bakersfield, CA”
Ben Jones, “Turning Principle into Policy: Philosophy’s Role in Police Reform” 
Eduardo Mendieta, “Reimagining Police Ethics”
Mercer Gary, “Transforming Police and Public Safety at the University”

Plenary III (4:00 PM – 5:30 PM)

Bioethics and Forms of Public Philosophy
Jonathan Moreno | University of Pennsylvania, Perelman School of Medicine
Nita Farahany | Duke University, School of Law
Anita L. Allen | University of Pennsylvania, School of Law and Department of Philosophy
Moderated by Christopher DiTeresi, George Mason University