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DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Paris:20260519T163000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Paris:20260519T180000
DTSTAMP:20260508T162735
CREATED:20260224T102358Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260224T103315Z
UID:32765-1779208200-1779213600@historyofwomenphilosophers.org
SUMMARY:New Voices | Lectures by Maxim Demin & Patricia Guevara Wozniak
DESCRIPTION:The New Voices on Women in the History of Philosophy network\, which is open to early-career researchers in the broadest sense\, is hosted by the Center for the History of Women Philosophers and Scientists in Paderborn. The objective of New Voices is to establish a forum and network for international early-career researchers in the field of female philosophers\, scientists\, and writers in the history of philosophy\, and to promote their work. \nIn the Spring of 2026\, the New Voices Talk Series will once again embrace a spirit of collaboration. This joint project represents a partnership between three universities: the University of Paderborn\, the Saint Joseph University of Beirut\, and the University of Lorraine. The organizers are: Dr. Jil Muller; Dr. Marguerite El Asmar Bou Aoun; Dr. Daniel Fischer and Dr. Katia Raya. \nEveryone is welcome to attend. Please register here and you will get the Zoom-Link after registration. \n_______ \nMaxim Demin – Philosophy\, God-Seeking\, and Developmental Psychology: Stolitsa and Volkovich in Late Imperial Russia \nThis presentation examines the philosophical project of two largely forgotten Russophone women thinkers\, Zinaida Stolitsa (1873–1956) and Vera Volkovich (1873–1962). As co-authors and lifelong partners\, they developed a distinctive body of work at the intersection of religious philosophy\, developmental psychology\, and pedagogical reform during the final decades of the Russian Empire. Their voices\, once publicly visible\, were later marginalized and silenced under Soviet rule.Stolitsa and Volkovich strategically used a wide range of media and communicative forms to articulate a female philosophical voice within the early twentieth-century God-Seeking movement. Their collaborative writings\, most notably the manifesto The Future in Our Hands (1909)\, combined speculative religious philosophy with emerging scientific approaches to child psychology. They published philosophical essays\, reviews\, and programmatic statements of their independent society\, and they also participated in international scholarly events in Geneva (1909) and The Hague (1912). These diverse communicative strategies enabled them to claim intellectual authority within discourses traditionally dominated by men. Their reworking of central theological and philosophical concepts\, particularly Stolitsa’s reinterpretation of Man-Godhood\, formulated partly in a one-sided polemic with figures such as Nikolai Berdiaev\, provided a conceptual foundation for their broader agenda of moral\, spiritual\, and national renewal. Their work also contributed to the early twentieth-century feminisation of pedagogical expertise\, placing women at the center of discussions on education and child development. The paper will highlight the paradoxical ideological constellation that shaped their project: an upper-class background combined with conservative moral views; openness to feminist concerns; aspirations for international intellectual exchange; and\, simultaneously\, elements of Russian imperial nationalism and cultural chauvinism on the eve of the First World War. The presentation will also draw on archival photographs and visual materials\, offering a tangible sense of their intellectual and social world. \nAbout the Speaker: Maxim Demin is a research fellow at the Ruhr University Bochum (Germany). His main interest is post-Hegelian philosophy and its intellectual development in German-speaking countries during the nineteenth century. Before moving to Bochum\, he taught for nearly a decade at the National Research University – Higher School of Economics (HSE) in St. Petersburg and Moscow\, offering courses in critical thinking\, philosophy of science\, metaethics\, and moral psychology. His current project explores Russian philosophical and public debates on the emergence of studies of human and animal psychology and mental phenomena\, tracing the transfer of psychological knowledge from the early nineteenth century to the early Soviet regime. \nPatricia Guevara Wozniak – The Metaphysical Tenacity of Barbara Skarga – Metaphysics in Totalitarianism \nContrary to twentieth-century proclamations of the “death of metaphysics” and the erosion of truth\, Barbara Skarga persistently defended the metaphysical dimension of human existence. For Skarga\, metaphysicality constitutes the core of being; its eradication would entail a loss of humanity itself. Her philosophical stance gains particular significance when considered against the backdrop of totalitarian experience\, including her imprisonment in the Gulag. Skarga’s reflection on metaphysics centers on the notion of the source of being\, explored primarily through the categories of time\, evil\, and experience. In a series of philosophical essays\, she emphasizes both the difficulty and the ethical-intellectual value of seeking the origins of being. She critically engages classical conceptions of time—physical\, psychological\, and cosmological—while foregrounding lived temporality as structured by finitude. Her analysis of evil exposes philosophy’s enduring struggle to comprehend it: as privation of good\, corruption of human nature\, or an inescapable dimension of social violence\, paradoxically accompanied by utopian visions of moral redemption. Addressing experience as a source of being\, she enters into dialogue with thinkers such as Plotinus\, Husserl\, and Heidegger. After returning from the Gulag in 1955 and completing her studies\, Skarga joined the Institute of Philosophy and Sociology of the Polish Academy of Sciences\, remaining associated with it throughout her career. Although her early academic choices were shaped by Adam Schaff’s centrally planned research agenda\, they ultimately became foundational to her intellectual development and to the formation of the Warsaw School of the History of Ideas. Skarga’s work can be divided into five stages: studies of Polish and French positivism; research on non-positivist currents in nineteenth-century French philosophy\, culminating in her engagement with Bergson; a metaphilosophical reflection on the methodology of the history of philosophy; a “post-critical” metaphysics informed by phenomenology and hermeneutics; and\, finally\, moral and civic essays affirming the durability of European values. Rather than offering rigid definitions\, Skarga reveals the plurality of meanings and historical configurations through which metaphysical questions persist. \nAbout the Speaker: Patricia Guevara Wozniak is a Doctor of Humanities in the field of philosophy\, editor\, academic lecturer\, and educator. A graduate of the Academy of Film and Television. She has collaborated with the Academy of Art and Design and with Pedagogium – the University of Social Sciences in Warsaw. She is currently a lecturer at Kozminski University. She is a beneficiary of the Culture in the Network program awarded by the Minister of Culture and National Heritage and administered by the National Centre for Culture. She is the editor-in-chief of the nationwide monthly Remedium (remedium-psychologia.pl)\, funded by the Ministry of Health and administered by the National Centre for the Prevention of Addictions\, a professional magazine providing up-to-date information on modern methodologies of education and prevention.
URL:https://historyofwomenphilosophers.org/event/new-voices-maxim-demin-patricia-guevara-wozniak/
LOCATION:zoom
CATEGORIES:Talk
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://historyofwomenphilosophers.org/wp-content/uploads/Poster-New-Voices-1-1-scaled.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Paris:20260602T163000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Paris:20260602T180000
DTSTAMP:20260508T162735
CREATED:20260224T102644Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260224T103350Z
UID:32767-1780417800-1780423200@historyofwomenphilosophers.org
SUMMARY:New Voices | Lectures by Jake Nicholas Brooks & Kaimé Guerrero Valencia
DESCRIPTION:The New Voices on Women in the History of Philosophy network\, which is open to early-career researchers in the broadest sense\, is hosted by the Center for the History of Women Philosophers and Scientists in Paderborn. The objective of New Voices is to establish a forum and network for international early-career researchers in the field of female philosophers\, scientists\, and writers in the history of philosophy\, and to promote their work. \nIn the Spring of 2026\, the New Voices Talk Series will once again embrace a spirit of collaboration. This joint project represents a partnership between three universities: the University of Paderborn\, the Saint Joseph University of Beirut\, and the University of Lorraine. The organizers are: Dr. Jil Muller; Dr. Marguerite El Asmar Bou Aoun; Dr. Daniel Fischer and Dr. Katia Raya. \nEveryone is welcome to attend. Please register here and you will get the Zoom-Link after registration. \n_______ \nJake Nicholas Brooks – Autonomy Beyond Kant: Butler\, Tronto\, and Interdependence \nThe aim of this contribution is to highlight – from a standpoint of intersectional critique – the limitation of the Kantian conception of autonomy\, grounded on a male and autonomous subject\, that has shaped Western philosophical and theological discourses. The contribution will develop along two complementary lines. First\, drawing on Butler’s critique of the State of Nature tradition\, it will show how the subject of modern philosophy has always been conceived as already adult\, male\, and autonomous\, thus masking the condition of dependency inherent to human beings. Butler’s analysis reveals how this framework is produced through exclusions of those identities\, which are shaped by gender oppression and racialization. Butler’s work demonstrates that dependency is not a deviation from the norm\, rather a constitutive feature of human life. Secondly\, relying on Tronto’s care ethic\, the contribution will argue that humanity is better understood as grounded on interdependence\, where care relationships are not only fundamental for democratic societies\, but also for a responsible and adequate care of human beings. Tronto’s analysis highlights how the unequal distribution of care labor – which is historically borne by women or racialized and marginalized groups – is grounded on “passes” given to men\, that exempt them from care responsibilities. Through Tronto’s theory it will become clear that a model of humanity grounded on interdependence and responsibility is necessary for a more equal ethical and political life. Through this two-fold analysis\, this contribution aims at demonstrating the necessity for an ontological shift: it is necessary to overcome the conception of humanity as male-centered\, autonomous and self-made\, to a vision of humanity as interdependent\, needy\, vulnerable\, and relational. \nAbout the Speaker: Jake Nicholas Brooks is MA graduate with honors in Philosophy at University of Rome “La Sapienza”. His research interests revolve around Political Philosophy\, Feminist Theories\, and Gender Studies. He carried out a thesis on the Habermasian conception of progress. He has published an article in double-blind peer review for Quaderni Leif – ethical and moral journal from the University of of Catania – on Tronto’s ethics’s of care and Simone Weil’s perspective on war. He is currently working on a paper for Etica-Mente\, another journal of University of Catania\, concerning Tronto’s conception of interdependence. \nKaimé Guerrero Valencia – Intervening Assemblages of Trans-formation/Action: Beatriz Nascimento (1942-1995) \nThis paper examines the intellectual\, artistic\, and political contributions of Beatriz Nascimento (1942–1995)\, a leading figure of Brazil’s Black Movement. It situates her work at the intersection of historiography\, aesthetics\, and political theory\, showing how she developed innovative conceptual and methodological tools to contest colonial structures of knowledge and create new practices of Black autonomy. Through an interdisciplinary analysis of her essays\, poetry\, archival materials\, and the documentary Ôrí (1989)\, the paper argues that Nascimento\, by mobilizing writing\, film\, and activism as intertwined strategies\, elaborates a distinct theoretical\, methodological\, and ethical approach that redefines Black historiography\, advances the conception of a Black utopia\, and reconfigures the quilombo (maroon societies) as a political and existential category. At the core of Nascimento’s oeuvre is the concept of trans-formação/ação\, a neologism that denotes processes of transformation enacted through language. She theorizes language not as a neutral medium but as a site of material and historical change\, capable of unsettling hegemonic orders and generating new forms of collective subjectivity. The paper demonstrates how she strategically combined academic\, poetic\, and cinematic registers to transform language itself into an instrument of resistance. Nascimento’s work establishes the conditions for new forms of Black historiography in which freedom is articulated not as an abstract universal but as a lived and collective practice. Her oeuvre constitutes an embodied\, aesthetic\, and political historiography of the Black diaspora\, in which the quilombo functions as both archive and horizon of freedom\, and Black utopia materializes through collective practices of memory\, writing\, and resistance. \nAbout the Speaker: Kaimé Guerrero Valencia were born in Quito\, Ecuador\, and has been living in Berlin for ten years. They studied sociology and political science at the Pontificia Universidad Católica del Ecuador\, followed by a MA degree in interdisciplinary Latin American studies with a gender profile at the Free University of Berlin. They are currently completing their PhD in the Collaborative Research Center Intervening Arts in the Faculty of Humanities at the University of Duisburg-Essen. Their research interests include the intersections between aesthetic\, political and scientific processes in the production of alternative forms of word-making.
URL:https://historyofwomenphilosophers.org/event/new-voices-talk-by-jake-nicholas-brooks-kaime-guerrero-valencia/
LOCATION:zoom
CATEGORIES:Talk
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://historyofwomenphilosophers.org/wp-content/uploads/Poster-New-Voices-1-1-scaled.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Paris:20260609T163000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Paris:20260609T180000
DTSTAMP:20260508T162735
CREATED:20260224T102933Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260224T103414Z
UID:32769-1781022600-1781028000@historyofwomenphilosophers.org
SUMMARY:New Voices | Lectures by Marianne Najm Abou-Jaoude & Roula Azar Douglas
DESCRIPTION:Marianne Najm Abou-Jaoude – Beneficent Communication as Power \nThis presentation proposes a three-level framework—safe\, responsible and beneficent—to analyse and foster constructive forms of women’s agency in contemporary digital media ecologies. “Safe” designates not engaging in practices and structures that include violence\, exploitation and manipulation online and offline. “Responsible” refers to doing no harm\, ensuring fairness and structural justice. “Beneficent” goes further\, namely actively promote the flourishing of others\, create conditions for dialogue and build the common good\, and is presented as the key to reimagining women’s power in and through media. Drawing on case studies of women communicators in religious\, civic and grassroots community contexts\, this research examines digital practices through the three cumulative levels of positive ethics in communication to illuminate how such engagements challenge exclusionary structures in theology and philosophy.  A few case studies examples would be first\, women moderating encrypted messaging groups that coordinate neighborhood mutual aid and emotional support while establishing clear norms of safety and verification. A second examines women leaders in faith-based digital communities who use livestreams and social media to host spaces of shared discernment\, interreligious encounter and reconciliation. A third considers women running community radio and podcast collectives that platform the voices of migrant\, indigenous or otherwise marginalised women\, combining journalistic rigour with participatory storytelling. \nAbout the Speaker: Marianne Najm Abou Jaoude is a telecom engineer finishing her doctoral research at Sophia University Institute near Florence in Italy. Her thesis concerns ethics of AI and the responsibility of everyone in building a safe and peaceful future. She developed a framework about a digital oath that includes beneficence in communication and systems design\, and the role of technology such as generative AI in peacebuilding and depolarization. Her work examines progressive ethical levels and the concept of collaborative positive ethics to foster human-centric innovation and inclusive digital communication. \nRoula Azar Douglas – Women’s Digital Voices and the Reconfiguration of Public Debate \nIn the contemporary digital landscape\, social media platforms\, blogs\, and online communities have emerged as significant spaces where women articulate political\, philosophical\, religious\, or secular positions. Far from being peripheral\, these digital arenas are vital sites for rethinking legitimacy\, influence\, and participation in public discourse. This paper examines how women — from secular thinkers and educators to feminist digital activists\, as well as Christian pastors in Europe and Muslim scholars in the Arab world — use digital media to challenge traditional frameworks\, reinterpret doctrines or social norms\, and create alternative spaces for reflection\, critique\, and debate. Through selected case studies\, the paper analyzes strategies these women employ to reach diverse audiences: the mobilization of storytelling and personal narrative\, the use of pedagogical tools\, and the deliberate cultivation of online communities that function as safe spaces for questioning and dissent. It also considers aesthetic and rhetorical choices — such as visual branding and accessible language — that enhance the effectiveness of their digital presence. Particular attention is devoted to how these actors navigate visibility in environments where religious\, cultural\, or political expectations can restrict women’s public expression. This includes facing harassment\, censorship\, or community backlash\, while leveraging alliances\, digital solidarity networks\, and transnational audiences to amplify their voices. The study highlights how digital platforms enable women to bypass traditional gatekeepers and establish new forms of authority rooted in experience\, authenticity\, and community engagement. Ultimately\, it sheds light on how online spaces are reshaping women’s participation in intellectual and spiritual debates\, highlighting both persistent obstacles and emerging opportunities for more inclusive\, plural\, and transformative dialogue. \nAbout the Speaker: Roula Azar Douglas is a Lebanese-Canadian researcher\, journalist\, writer\, and academic interested in the role of media in shaping social realities. She is the founder and president of the Union de la presse francophone – Liban (UPF Liban)\, a mentor with the Global Thinkers Forum in London\, and serves on the editorial board of the Middle East edition of the scientific journal Hermès. Douglas coordinates the National Observatory of Women in Research (CNRS-L) and contributes to a research project on gender equality with the Diane Chair at USJ and the French Institute for Research and Development (IRD). She also oversees a weekly page on universities\, research\, and youth for L’Orient-Le Jour and is the author of Le jour où le soleil ne s’est pas levé (2018) and Chez nous\, c’était le silence (2007).
URL:https://historyofwomenphilosophers.org/event/new-voices-talk-by-marianne-najm-abou-jaoude-roula-azar-douglas/
LOCATION:zoom
CATEGORIES:Talk
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://historyofwomenphilosophers.org/wp-content/uploads/Poster-New-Voices-1-1-scaled.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20260622T160000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20260622T180000
DTSTAMP:20260508T162735
CREATED:20260420T082516Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260428T105742Z
UID:32988-1782144000-1782151200@historyofwomenphilosophers.org
SUMMARY:Prof. Dr. Panagiotis Agapitos on Gendered voices of philosophical analysis: The ascetic teacher Makrina (†379) and her brother Gregory
DESCRIPTION:The talk examines the way in which Gregory of Nyssa (c. 335 – c. 395) presents his older sister Makrina (c. 327–379) in two interconnected works as a teacher and philosopher—the one work ‘biographical’ (Letter on the Life of Holy Makrina\, Spring 382)\, the other ‘theological’ (Inquiry About the Soul Conducted With His Own Sister Makrina\, Winter 383/84). It has been generally assumed by previous scholars (primarily theologians\, but also philologists) that the voice of Makrina in these two works is\, in fact\, the voice of Gregory\, who was a philosophically trained orator and mystical theologian. However\, a closer literary and stylistic analysis of the texts reveals that this assumption is erroneous\, and that Gregory actually conveyed a particular philosophical voice for Makrina distinct from his own. We are thus in a position to appreciate the role of Makrina in the philosophical and theological debates in the Greek East of the Roman Empire at the end of the fourth century\, and to grasp the philosophical relation of Gregory to Makrina within these two works. \n  \nAbout the speaker: Panagiotis Agapitos is Fellow of the Gutenberg Forschungskolleg at the University of Mainz\, after having served as Professor of Byzantine Literature at the University of Cyprus (1992–2020). His research interests focus on textual and literary criticism\, with an emphasis on Byzantine rhetoric and its performance\, poetics\, erotic fiction\, he representation of death in Byzantine literature and the archaeology of Medieval Greek manuscripts. Over the past forty years\, he has published some ninety scholarly papers\, three single-authored studies\, the first critical edition of the thirteenth-century verse romance Livistros and Rhodamne (2006)\, an English translation of this romance for Liverpool University Press (2021)\, and an edited volume Between History and Fiction: Medieval Narratives between History and Fiction: From the Centre to the Periphery of Europe\, 1100-1400 (2012). He is currently writing a narrative history of of Byzantine literature under contract with Cambridge University Press. He has a side interest in crime fiction and has published three “Byzantine mystery novels” (2003–2009) and two short stories. \n  \nFor further question and the Zoom-Link\, please write to: contact@historyofwomenphilosophers.org.
URL:https://historyofwomenphilosophers.org/event/lecture-by-prof-dr-panagiotis-agapitos-on-makrina-the-younger/
LOCATION:Paderborn University\, Warburger Str. 100\, Paderborn\, NRW\, 33098\, Germany
CATEGORIES:Talk
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20260702T160000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20260702T180000
DTSTAMP:20260508T162735
CREATED:20260420T121048Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260420T122131Z
UID:32993-1783008000-1783015200@historyofwomenphilosophers.org
SUMMARY:Colloquium | Dr. Regina Müller on Digital and Health Inequalities: Building Blocks for a Structural Ethics
DESCRIPTION:tba
URL:https://historyofwomenphilosophers.org/event/talk-by-dr-regina-muller-on-digital-and-health-inequalities-building-blocks-for-a-structural-ethics/
LOCATION:Paderborn University\, Warburger Str. 100\, Paderborn\, NRW\, 33098\, Germany
CATEGORIES:Talk
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20260703T110000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20260704T170000
DTSTAMP:20260508T162735
CREATED:20260420T080305Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260420T122257Z
UID:32983-1783076400-1783184400@historyofwomenphilosophers.org
SUMMARY:Seminar | Husserl and Stein on the Relation between Motivation and Causality
DESCRIPTION:Course Description\nBoth Edmund Husserl and Edith Stein assume a fundamental distinction between the domains of nature and mind. Accordingly\, natural and mental events are governed by different kinds of laws. While natural events are subject to causal laws\, the domain of the mental is structured by a specific form of causality—namely\, motivation. \nThe seminar aims to examine selected texts by Husserl and Stein in order to understand the distinction between causality and motivation. \nOrganizer: Dr. Henning Peucker (Paderborn University\, Germany) & Prof. Dr. Mette Lebech (Maynooth University\, Ireland) \nSchedule\nFirst Block: \n\nFriday\, July 3\, 2026\n\n11:00–13:00 (Room C 4 234)\n14:00–18:00 (Room E 2 304)\n\n\nSaturday\, July 4\, 2026\n\n10:00–17:00 (Room E 2 304)\n\n\n\nSecond Block: \n\nFriday\, July 10\, 2026\n\n11:00–13:00 (room not specified)\n14:00–18:00 (room not specified)\n\n\nSaturday\, July 11\, 2026\n\n10:00–17:00 (room not specified)
URL:https://historyofwomenphilosophers.org/event/seminar-husserl-and-stein-on-the-relation-between-motivation-and-causality/
LOCATION:University Paderborn\, Warburger Str. 100\, Paderborn\, Nordrhein-Westfalen\, 33098\, Germany
CATEGORIES:Seminar
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20260710T100000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20260711T170000
DTSTAMP:20260508T162735
CREATED:20260420T080637Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260420T122228Z
UID:32985-1783677600-1783789200@historyofwomenphilosophers.org
SUMMARY:Seminar | Husserl and Stein on the Relation between Motivation and Causality
DESCRIPTION:Course Description\nBoth Edmund Husserl and Edith Stein assume a fundamental distinction between the domains of nature and mind. Accordingly\, natural and mental events are governed by different kinds of laws. While natural events are subject to causal laws\, the domain of the mental is structured by a specific form of causality—namely\, motivation. \nThe seminar aims to examine selected texts by Husserl and Stein in order to understand the distinction between causality and motivation. \nOrganizer: Dr. Henning Peucker (Paderborn University\, Germany) & Prof. Dr. Mette Lebech (Maynooth University\, Ireland) \nSchedule\nFirst Block: \n\nFriday\, July 3\, 2026\n\n11:00–13:00 (Room C 4 234)\n14:00–18:00 (Room E 2 304)\n\n\nSaturday\, July 4\, 2026\n\n10:00–17:00 (Room E 2 304)\n\n\n\nSecond Block: \n\nFriday\, July 10\, 2026\n\n11:00–13:00 (room not specified)\n14:00–18:00 (room not specified)\n\n\nSaturday\, July 11\, 2026\n\n10:00–17:00 (room not specified)
URL:https://historyofwomenphilosophers.org/event/seminar-husserl-and-stein-on-the-relation-between-motivation-and-causality-2/
LOCATION:University Paderborn\, Warburger Str. 100\, Paderborn\, Nordrhein-Westfalen\, 33098\, Germany
CATEGORIES:Seminar
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20260716T160000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20260716T180000
DTSTAMP:20260508T162735
CREATED:20260420T121321Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260420T122206Z
UID:32995-1784217600-1784224800@historyofwomenphilosophers.org
SUMMARY:Colloquium | Prof. Dr. Michaela Haase on Normativity and Responsibility: Explorations at the Interface of Business Ethics and Moral Philosophy
DESCRIPTION:tba
URL:https://historyofwomenphilosophers.org/event/talk-by-prof-dr-michaela-haase-on-normativity-and-responsibility-explorations-at-the-interface-of-business-ethics-and-moral-philosophy/
CATEGORIES:Talk
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260727
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20260801
DTSTAMP:20260508T162735
CREATED:20260113T110600Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260316T101618Z
UID:32507-1785110400-1785542399@historyofwomenphilosophers.org
SUMMARY:Libori Summer School 2026
DESCRIPTION:The History of Women Philosophers and Scientists\nSave the date: July 27 – July 31\, 2026 – Paderborn University\n+++More information about CfP and program coming soon+++
URL:https://historyofwomenphilosophers.org/event/libori-summer-school-2026/
LOCATION:L-Building\, Paderborn University
CATEGORIES:Summer School
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20260727T093000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20260727T120000
DTSTAMP:20260508T162735
CREATED:20260506T151528Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260506T151528Z
UID:33073-1785144600-1785153600@historyofwomenphilosophers.org
SUMMARY:10th Anniversary of the Center for the History of Women Philosophers and Scientists
DESCRIPTION:📅 27 July 2026 \n🕤 09:30–12:00 \n📍 University of Paderborn\, Room L3.204 (with optional online participation) \n  \nWe warmly invite you to join us in celebrating the Center’s tenth anniversary – a special occasion that marks an impressive success story. \nSince its foundation in 2016 by Prof. Dr Ruth E. Hagengruber with the support of Svenja Schulze\, then Minister for Science and Innovation of the State of North Rhine-Westphalia\, the Center has developed into an internationally recognised illuminating exemplar of research. \nThrough groundbreaking publications\, a wide range of high-calibre events\, and innovative teaching and research formats\, it has had a lasting impact on the visibility of women in the history of philosophy and science and has played a decisive role in reorienting academic discourse. \nThe anniversary offers an opportunity to look back on this development\, to celebrate key milestones and to look ahead together to future projects. \nPlease make a note of the date – the detailed programme and the official invitation will follow shortly.
URL:https://historyofwomenphilosophers.org/event/10th-anniversary-of-the-center-for-the-history-of-women-philosophers-and-scientists/
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR