Wednesday, September 7, 2011

CONTEMPORARY PERSPECTIVES ON BUDDHIST ETHICS

OCTOBER 5TH-7TH, 2011
LOW LIBRARY, COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY
cONFERENCE ABSTRACT

Buddhism addresses a wide variety of issues that fall within the traditional philosophical categories of ethics, metaphysics, and epistemology. Buddhist ethics, a burgeoning field within Buddhist studies, aims to identify the different ethical and metaethical positions advanced in Buddhist texts, and evaluate them in light of contemporary discourse. Researchers in the mainstream of philosophy and psychology have begun to appreciate the promise of Buddhist ethical discourse—from Buddhist metaphysical accounts of the nature of the person and freedom, to their psychological accounts of attention training and emotional regulation.

Moreover, with the occidental surge of popular interest in Buddhism, Western teachers and practitioners have recently started to refine their understanding of Buddhist ethics in light of current philosophical and empirical approaches to morality. This conference, entitled “Contemporary Perspectives on Buddhist Ethics,” aims to advance both of these projects throughconstructive transdisciplinary dialogue.

This event comes out of an ongoing series of groundbreaking dialogues, in the Columbia Society for Comparative Philosophy, which initially began with a multidisciplinary conference on human consciousness entitled “Mind & Reality.” It features two days of panel discussions that will be convened in the historic rotunda within Low Library on the campus of Columbia University. Panel topics address provocative questions concerning the naturalization of Buddhist ethics, the nature of Buddhist ethical theory, the function of Buddhist narrative literature, the application of Buddhist ethics to social issues, the moral psychology of Buddhism, and free-will. The keynote speakers are Karl H. Potter, Damien Keown, and Walter Sinnott-Armstrong.

Conference Participants

Plenary Address: Karl H. Potter (Professor Emeritus in the Department of Philosophy at the University of Washington)

Keynote Address: Damien Keown (Professor of Buddhist Ethics at Goldsmith College, University of London, UK)

Keynote Address: Walter Sinnott-Armstrong (Chauncey Stillman Professor in Practical Ethics and the Kenan Institute for Ethics at Duke University)

Presenters:

Naomi Appleton, University of Oxford, UK
Willoughby Britton, Brown University
Christian Coseru, College of Charleston
Georges Dreyfus, Williams College
Jonathan Gold, Princeton University
Christopher Gowans, Fordham University
Charles Hallisey, Harvard Divinity School
Andrew Olendzki, Barre Center for Buddhist Studies
David Pizarro, Cornell University
Graham Priest, CUNY Graduate Center
Christopher Queen, Harvard University
Mark Siderits, Seoul National University, KR
Evan Thompson, University of Toronto, CA
Robert Thurman, Columbia University
Sara McClintock, Emory University
Jan Westerhoff, University of Durham, UK
Walter Sinnott-Armstrong, Duke University Barbra Clayton, Mount Allison University, CA Daniel Cozort, Dickinson College Owen Flanagan, Duke University Charles Goodman, SUNY Binghamton William Grassie, Metanexus Institute Damien Keown, University of London, UK Jin Y. Park, American University Karl H. Potter, University of Washington Jesse Prinz, CUNY Graduate Center Riccardo Repetti, Kingsborough College Barry Schwartz, Swarthmore College Lynne Tirrell, University of Massachusetts Karma Lekshe Tsomo, University of San Diego

Friday, September 2, 2011

The CUNY Mindfulness Series

The CUNY Mindfulness Lecture Series                                                              
Date: Second Thursdays, Fall 2011
Time: 6:30 - 7:30 PM
Address: The Graduate Center, CUNY
365 Fifth Avenue, Thesis Room 4441
New York, NY 10016
(212) 817-7000

Description: The CUNY Mindfulness Lecture Series will bring together scientists, scholars and students to present and discuss cross-disciplinary research and theory relative to the science and practice of mindfulness. Mindfulness will be explored through the fields of physics, neuroscience, philosophy and psychology. This series will offer CUNY students and the community opportunities to participate in the advancement of learning in this field.

Lectures will be presented at the Graduate Center on the second Thursday of each month at 6:30pm during the Fall semester of 2011.  The dates and lecture titles are planned as follow:


1. Techniques and Benefits of Mindful Practice (Jonathan Kaplan, Ph.D)
September 08, 2011

2. Changes in Brain Structure and Function with Mindful Practice (Zoran Josipovic, Ph.D, NYU)
October 13, 2011

3. The Origins and Philosophy of Mindfulness (Lama Migmar Tseten, Harvard University)
November 10, 2011

4. Meditation and the Focused Mind in Academia (David Forbes, Ph.D, Brooklyn College/CUNY)
December 08, 2011


Please join us to work with students and scholars to explore the emerging science of mindful practice.

For more information contact:
Stephen Redenti, Ph.D.                                      David Forbes, Ph.D.
Assistant Professor                                           Associate Professor
Biology and Biochemistry                                   School Counseling Program
Lehman College/CUNY                                     Brooklyn College/CUNY                                  
stephen.redenti@lehman.cuny.edu                      dforbes@brooklyn.cuny.edu 
718-960-2236                                                    718-951-5938