MODAL METAPHYSICS: ISSUES ON THE (IM)POSSIBLE III Speakers and/or commentators

29/07/2015 18:59

Speakers and/or commentators 

  • Brian Ball (Oxford University, UK): "Modality and Metaontology" 
  • Jonathan Livingstone-Banks "Essence and Possibility" 
  • Johannes Bulhof (McNeese State University, USA): "The “Problem” of Alien Properties" 
  • Darragh Byrne (University of Birmingham, UK), 
  • Naomi Thompson (University of Hamburg, Germany): "Is the World Really Hyperintensional?" 
  • Sam Cowling (Denison University, USA): "Conceivability Arguments for Haecceitism" 
  • Michael De (University of Konstanz, Germany): "Five-dimensionalism" 
  • Louis deRosset (University of Vermont, USA): "Modal Logic for Contingentist Metaphysics" 
  • Nikk Effingham (University of Birmingham, UK): "Heterodox Ludovicianism" 
  • Karen Green (University of Melbourne, Australia): "Natural Language and Ontological Illusions" 
  • Amy Karofsky (Hofstra University, USA): "The Impossibility of Otherwisedness" 
  • Theodore D. Locke (University of Miami, USA): "Grounding and Impossible Worlds" 
  • Luke Malik: "Textbook Kripkeanism and Its Problems" 
  • Peter Marton (Clark University, USA): "Knowing Possibilities and the Possibility of Knowing (A Further Challenge for the Anti-Realist)" 
  • Jonathan Nassim (University of London) : "Problems with Primitives: David Lewis's Justification of Modal Realism as a Test Case" 
  • Cristina Nencha (Northwest Philosophy Consortium, Italy): "Essentialism and David Lewis" 
  • Rossana Raviola (University of Pavia, Italy): "Necessity Contingency, Essentiality in the Case of Physical Objects" 
  • Igor Sedlár (Comenius University in Bratislava, Slovakia): "Impossible Worlds in Epistemic Logic" 
  • Ádám Tamás Tuboly (University of Pécs, Hungary): "Why did Quine’s Animadversions against Modal Logic and the Historical Significance of the Reviews of JSL" 
  • Andriy Vasylchenko (National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine, Ukraine): "Identity and Existence in Intentionally Possible Worlds" 
  • Behnam Zolghadr (Tarbiat Modares University, Iran): "Modal Meinongianism: Purely Fictional Objects" 
  • Zsófia Zvolenszky (Eötvös University, Hungary): "Inadvertently Created Fictional Characters Are Innocuous" 
  • Andy Yu (Oxford University, UK): "The Indefinite Extensibility of Proposition"

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