LEM/ EPHE

Les Platonismes de l’Antiquité Tardive

Octobre 2022

Description et organisation

Vendredi 21 octobre 2022, 16h-18h15, via Zoom.

La vie intellectuelle de la fin de l’Antiquité est caractérisée par un fort intérêt porté aux « principes » (archai) : principes de la réalité, principes du monde, principes de la connaissance. Quelle que soit la façon dont on regroupe les intellectuels de la fin de l’Antiquité – polythéistes ou chrétiens, philosophes ou théologiens −, tous parlent, explicitement ou implicitement, des principes. Certains cherchent même activement à déterminer ce que sont les principes (par ex., Origène, Plotin, Porphyre, Damascius, les gnostiques, les Hermétistes, les théurgistes). Cette recherche est pour eux capitale, afin d’établir la manière dont la réalité est structurée, de réfléchir à la place des êtres humains dans le monde et aux puissances qui affectent leur vie, de penser dans quelle mesure nous sommes libres, comment nous pouvons atteindre la connaissance, ainsi qu’obtenir le bonheur ou le salut. La recherche des principes (métaphysiques ou théologiques) est ainsi un thème important en lui-même et pour la formation éthique. Le Programme des rencontres 2022-2023 du projet de recherche Les Platonismes de l’Antiquité tardive propose d’explorer cette thématique des « principes » (archai) dans le monde intellectuel de la fin de l’Antiquité. Il examinera différentes questions, telles que : comment les principes disent la réalité, comment ils expliquent les relations entre les mondes divin et humain et dans quelle mesure le bonheur et le salut sont possibles pour les humains étant donné la structure de la réalité.

Programme

The “Archaeology” of Gnosis: On the Inner Life of the Gnostic First Principle

Zlatko Plese (University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill)
My talk examines various Gnostic responses to one of the central issues of metaphysical monism: the emergence of reality from a self-contained unitary first principle. In addition to the imagery of plenitude, overflow, and self-extension, Gnostic traditions consistently deploy the analogy with human cognitive processes to account for the passage from initial unity to plurality: they describe the unfathomable first principle as a self-searching absolute which, in the process of its gradual self-actualization, experiences the same series of changing dispositions and affections as the mind of the developing human. Contrary to Plotinus’ assertion that “when speaking of the One, we actually speak of our own experiences” (Enn. VI.9 [9] 49-54), Gnostic traditions propose exactly the opposite: when speaking of ourselves and our dispositions and experiences, we actually speak of the One.

First Principles on Classic Gnostic Texts and Plotinus

Tuomas Rasimus (University of Helsinki)
My paper discusses the ways key classic gnostic texts (Eugnostos, the source behind Irenaeus’ AH 1.30, Apocryphon of John, Zostrianos and Allogenes) explain the generation of first principles. I argue that these texts make use of established Neopythagorean solutions of monistic derivation (by self-duplication, self-division, or exteriorization) but combine them with biblical speculations about the image and likeness of God. In doing so, the gnostic authors came up with creative solutions and set vocabulary that foreshadowed Plotinus’ procession-and-return scheme, including the famous being-life-mind triad (as well as its variant, the existence-life-blessedness triad). We know from Porphyry’s biography that Plotinus had gnostic friends and that Greek versions of Zostrianos and Allogenes circulated in Plotinus’ seminars. I aim to show that Plotinus was influenced by his gnostic friends but modified their solutions to be compatible with Plato (Sophist 248e in particular). The influence was probably mutual and would explain the full-blown Neoplatonism of Zostrianos and Allogenes.

Contact

Projet pluriannuel de recherches dirigé par Luciana Soares Santoprete, Anna Van den Kerchove, George Karamanolis, Éric Crégheur et Dylan Burns.

The zoom link for each conference will be sent the week before to all those who have already registered last year. For those who are not yet in our mailing list, to receive the zoom link of the conferences, please send a message to sympa@services.cnrs.fr from the address you want to subscribe to the list. In the subject line of your message, type in: subscribe lesplatonismes. Leave the message body blank. You will receive a confirmation e-mail.

Lien

https://cnrs.academia.edu/LucianaGabrielaSoaresSantoprete

https://lem-umr8584.cnrs.fr/?Luciana-Gabriela-Soares-Santoprete

Centre Léon Robin

TRIADES ET TRINITÉ

Structures ontologiques et cognitives

Description et organisation

Dans le cadre  du programme L’héritage philosophique de l’Antiquité du Centre Léon Robin (CNRS/Sorbonne Université) le séminaire organisé par Anca Vasiliu commencera en février 2023 et portera pour un troisième et dernier volet sur Triades et Trinité. Structures ontologiques et cognitives. Il se tiendra une fois par mois à la Maison de la recherche de Sorbonne Université,28 rue Serpente (M. Odéon), Ier étage, salle D116, les jeudis, de 13h à 17h, sauf pour la dernière séance, le 8 juin, de 14h30 à 18h30.

Programme

16 Février, 13h-17h

George Karamanolis (Univ. de Vienne), Similitudes entre Plotin et l’Origène chrétien concernant le schéma des principes ontologiques (triade, trinité)

Harold Tarrant (Univ. of Newcastle, Australia), Amélius: triade démiurgique et triade des matières

23 Mars, 13h-17h

Rosella Saetta-Cottone (Centre Léon Robin, Sorbonne Univ.), La triade Muse/Amour/Haine chez Empédocle. Le témoignage d’Hippolyte de Rome

Enrico Volpe (Univ. of Salerno), The Hesiodic Triad Uranus, Kronos and Zeus in Plotinus and Proclus

 13 Avril, 13h-17h

Marco Zambon (Univ. de Padoue), Trinitarisme prénicéen : Eusèbe de Césarée

Johannes Zachhuber (Univ. of Oxford, Trinity College), La philosophie trinitaire de Grégoire de Nysse   

11 Mai, 13h-17h

Silvia Fazzo (Univ. Piemonte Orientale), Doctrines trinitaires chez Eusèbe de Verceil et Nicolas de Damas

Anca Vasiliu (Centre Léon Robin, Sorbonne Univ.), L’Esprit dans la Trinité selon Basile de Césarée et Grégoire de Nazianze, en partant de Plotin

 8 Juin, 14h30-18h30

Kristell Trego (Univ. de Fribourg), Triades à l’école de Baghdad (sous réserve)

Dragos Calma (Univ. College, Dublin), L’ontologie kinétique: Albert le Grand contre Thomas d’Aquin

Lien

http://www.centreleonrobin.fr/agenda/icalrepeat.detail/2022/06/09/448/-/triades-et-trinite

Sources Chrétiennes – HISOMA

 Sources et méandres des lettres grecques

Textes, manuscrits et éditions de l’époque patristique et byzantine

Description and organization

Colloque international à l’occasion des 80 ans des Sources Chrétiennes, le Mercredi 14 Septembre 2022.

L’Institut de Recherches Historiques de la Fondation Nationale (grecque) de la Recherche Scientifique, à Athènes, l’École française d’Athènes, HiSoMA et l’Association des Amis de Sources Chrétiennes, en collaboration avec l’Institut des Sciences humaines d’Athènes, organisent ce colloque exceptionnel  manifestant les liens scientifiques qui unissent ces institutions dans le domaine de la recherche sur les textes patristiques et byzantins.

Rassemblant des spécialistes grecs et français, la journée tentera en effet de répondre à cette question : comment les textes grecs patristiques et byzantins ont-ils été composés et diffusés à travers les siècles ? Correspondances, influences, historiographie, tradition manuscrite, édition, traduction, réception : la perspective chronologique, volontairement large, ira de l’Antiquité aux Sources Chrétiennes.

Programme

9.00-9.40

Accueil des participants Prises de parole institutionnelles : Maria Christina CHATZIIOANNOU (IRH/FNRS) Véronique CHANKOWSKI (EFA) Guillaume BADY (SC, CNRS HiSoMA) Pierre SALEMBIER, sj (ISH) Eleonora KOUNTOURA GALAKI (IRH/FNRS) Stéphane GIOANNI (Université Lyon 2, HiSoMA) La collection des Sources chrétiennes au laboratoire HiSoMA : une collaboration d’excellence entre l’Association des Sources Chrétiennes et le Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique.

9.40-10.55 — Session 1 (présidée par Eleonora KOUNTOURA GALAKI, IRH/FNRS) : Échanges patristiques Stéphanos EFTHYMIADIS (Open University, Chypre) Langage et discours spirituels dans la Correspondance de Barsanuphe et Jean de Gaza (SC 426, 427, 450, 451, 468). Guillaume BADY (SC, CNRS HiSoMA) Les lettres du prêtre Constance accompagnant le recueil épistolaire de Jean Chrysostome. Catherine BROC-SCHMEZER (Université Lyon 3, HiSoMA) D’où viennent les parentés entre Jean Chrysostome et Ephrem ?

10.55-11.10 Pause

11.10-13.00 — Session 2 (présidée par Stéphane GIOANNI, Université Lyon 2, HiSoMA) : Hagiographie Théodora ANTONOPOULOU (Université d’Athènes) The Life of John Chrysostom by George of Alexandria: Textual Criticism and the Contribution of the Life by Nicetas David. Charis MESSIS (Université d’Athènes) L’hagiographie dans les Sources Chrétiennes : la présence d’une « absence ». Syméon PASCHALIDIS (Université de Thessalonique) – Demosthénis KAKLAMANOS (Université de Thessalonique) La contribution des Sources Chrétiennes à l’édition de textes hagiographiques et hymnographiques byzantins : évaluation – suggestions. Stratis PAPAIOANNOU (Université de Crète) Authors and Collections, between Modern and Premodern Conceptions.

13.00-14.30 Déjeuner

14.30-15.40 — Session 3 (présidée par Anastasia G. YANGAKI, IRH/ FNRH) : Textes, transferts et diachronie (1) Manolis PAPOUTSAKIS (Bibliothèque Nationale de Grèce) A new approach to the study of Romanos the Melodist. Dominique GONNET (SC, HiSoMA, AASC) L’apport des Pères grecs à la langue et à la littérature syriaques. Zissis MELISSAKIS (IRH/FNRS) Συλλογή ασκητικών και πατερικών κειμένων σε δύο κώδικες του 14ου αιώνα.

15.40-16.00 Pause

16.00-17.10 — Session 4 (présidée par Laurianne MARTINEZ-SÈVE, EFA) : Textes, transferts et diachronie (2) Maria GEROLYMATOU (IRH/FNRS) Πατερικά έργα στη Βιβλιοθήκη της Μονής Πάτμου (12oς-14oς αιώνας). Marie-Gabrielle GUÉRARD (SC, CNRS HiSoMA) L’Épitomé sur le Cantique des Cantiques de Procope : quelques remarques à propos de copistes grecs actifs à Venise au milieu du 16e  s. et de leurs commanditaires. Jean REYNARD (SC, CNRS HiSoMA) J. Vaz Motta traducteur de Grégoire de Nysse.

17.10-17.40 Anna LAMPADARIDI (SC, CNRS HiSoMA) Conclusions et mot de clôture autour du programme européen Marie Curie IF Horizon 2020 no 892782 : Translating the « Father of Translation ». Linguistic and Cultural Transfers in Byzantium.

Contact

Pour assister à distance à la journée d’études, veuillez vous inscrire en cliquant sur le lien zoom ci-dessous :  https://us06web.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_SRZXFwV2TWasisw8RGKrpw

Lien

https://sourceschretiennes.org/recherche/colloque/2022-09-14/sources-meandres-lettres-grecques-textes-manuscrits-editions-epoque

Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México

Ancient Philosophy and its Reception Seminar SIFAR

Programme

August 24, 2022

Barbara Sattler (Ruhr-Universität Bochum)

The role of Proportions in Plato’s Timaeus – a possible rapprochement of body and soul?

This session will be broadcasted by Zoom at noon Mexico City time. Anyone interested should let the conveners know in advance at rsalles@unam.mx. 

Contact

Ricardo Salles – rsalles@unam.mx

Laboratoire d’études sur les monothéismes

Programme des jeudis du LEM 2021-2022

Description et organisation

Le témoin est une personne ou une chose qui a pour rôle d’authentifier un fait ou un discours. L’irruption du divin dans l’histoire, surtout sous une modalité sensible, appelle la présence de garants sans lesquels la mémoire de l’événement ne saurait se fixer. Si la Bible connaît des objets-témoins, comme la stèle dressée par Josué lors du pacte de Sichem, voire des objets théophores, comme les Tables de la Loi ou l’Arche d’Alliance, elle met d’abord l’accent sur l’homme-témoin : le patriarche, le prophète, le roi, et plus encore le peuple d’Israël dans son ensemble, qui doit attester de la présence agissante de Yahvé (Is 43, 9-10 ; 44, 8 ; 55, 4). Dans le Nouveau Testament, récapitulant en sa personne tout le peuple élu, Jésus est appelé à rendre témoignage (à la Vérité, à son Père, à lui-même), par son enseignement et par sa vie. Cette double dimension se retrouve dans le témoignage que ses disciples seront appelés à rendre en Église : le μαρτύριον, sanglant ou non-sanglant, est d’abord un « témoignage ». Cette conception de l’idée de « martyr » caractérise aussi le concept de shahid que l’on trouve dans la tradition musulmane. En passant des réalités mystériques, exprimées par le langage de la théologie, à la réalité socio-historique, la vie des croyants continue à s’appuyer sur des témoins sans lesquels une multitude d’actions seraient impossibles. La tradition rabbinique, quant à elle, s’interroge longuement sur le statut du témoin et la valeur de son témoignage. La notion de témoignage – public ou privé, écrit ou oral, ordinaire ou extraordinaire, officieux ou officiel – permet d’inscrire les religions dans l’histoire. À la croisée des approches théologique, juridique et historique, le présent cycle de conférences se propose d’étudier les diverses formes prises par l’acte d’attestation dans le champ religieux, dans les textes-sources comme dans les traditions postérieures qui, au nom de la véracité ou de la légitimité, croient nécessaire, pour garantir la survie de la communauté croyante voire de la croyance elle même, de recourir à des « témoins ».

Programme

10 novembre 2022, 14h (RdC, salle 100) Sylvio De Franceschi : « Témoignage et crédibilité : débats français sur la définition de l’assentiment religieux au tournant des xviie et xviiie siècles. » Philippe Castagnetti : « Témoigner dans un procès de canonisation au xviiie siècle : normativité juridique et réalité narrative. »

15 décembre 2022, 14h (3e étage, salle 3.01) Pierluigi Piovanelli : « Témoins et témoignages à l’origine des premières traditions sur Jésus. » Vincent Déroche : « Les témoins paradoxaux dans le christianisme byzantin. »

9 février 2023, 14h (3e étage, salle 3.01) Brigitte Tambrun : « Hérétiques ou témoins d’une vérité falsifiée ? Jacques Souverain, Samuel Crell et le retour d’Artémon. » Sylvain Trousselard : « Dire le miracle : les interventions divines dans les Douze contes moraux. »

9 mars 2023, 14h (RdC, salle 100) Ève Feuillebois : « Témoins de l’Un au miroir des coeurs : le saint, le maître spirituel et le double céleste chez Najm al-Din Kubra (1145-1221). » Daniel De Smet : « Le martyre d’al-Husayn préfiguré par deux “témoins” chrétiens : Jean-Baptiste et Jésus, d’après quelques textes shi’ites. »

6 avril 2023, 14h (3e étage, salle 3.01) Sébastien Fray : « Témoins et témoignages dans l’hagiographie des xe et xie siècles. Autour d’Aurillac, Conques et Figeac. » Daniel Odon Hurel : « Quels témoins monastiques dans le monachisme bénédictin contemporain (xixe -fin du xxe s.) ? »

15 juin 2023, 14h (RdC, salle 100) Marie-Odile Boulnois : « Autour de Dt 19, 15 : “Sur la bouche de deux ou trois témoins”. » Anna Van den Kerchove : « “Bienheureux celui qui rendra le témoignage” (Melchisédek, NH IX, 1). Le véritable témoignage selon quelques écrits de Nag Hammadi. »

Renseignement Claire Raynal – claire.raynal@cnrs.fr,  01 88 12 02 74.

Contact

claire.raynal@cnrs.fr

Centre de colloques du Campus Condorcet 3e étage, salle 3.01 ou RdC, salle 100

(Texte des organisateurs)

Lien

https://lem-umr8584.cnrs.fr/IMG/pdf/jeudisdulem2022-2023.pdf

Durham University

Project Academy Workshop 3

Philip of Opus, Hermodorus of Syracuse, the Index Academicorum

Description and organization

Speakers, Respondents, and Chairs: Edoardo Benati (SNS-Pisa), Matilde Berti (Durham), Giulia Bonasio (Durham), Carlo Cacciatori (Durham), Giulia De Cesaris (KU Leuven), Pia De Simone (Trier), Eyjólfur Emilsson (Oslo), Kilian Fleischer (Wϋrzburg), Roberto Granieri (KU Leuven), Phillip Horky (Durham), Claudia Luchetti (Tϋbingen), Irmgard Männlein-Robert (Tϋbingen), Maria Cristina Mennutti (Durham), Anna Marmodoro (Durham), Federico Petrucci (Torino), Alessio Santoro (Lyon), Cesare Sinatti (Durham), Karl-Heinz Stanzel (Tϋbingen)

Project Academy is a partnership of scholars based in Durham and Tϋbingen, with the aim of developing a major initiative in the study of the Platonic tradition. At the heart of this project will be a series of critical editions, English and German translations, and commentaries of the fragments (and testimonies) of the members of Plato’s Early (or ‘Old’) Academy (ca. 380–266 BCE). Despite the historical importance of the Early Academy, the fragments of those philosophers who were its members are generally inaccessible: they have never been translated into English or German as a whole, and many of the most recent critical editions date from forty years ago and are difficult to obtain. The English-language editions will eventually be published in the new book series Cambridge Texts and Studies in Platonism (Cambridge University Press).

The third workshop in Durham, delayed from April 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic, will focus on the methodological and philosophical problems related to three figures of significant interest to the history of Early Platonism: Plato’s amanuensis Philip of Opus, the metaphysician Hermodorus of Syracuse, and the historian/s who contributed to the Index Academicorum, the papyrus history of the Academy found in Herculaneum. Previous workshops treated Speusippus of Athens (Durham, February 2019) and Xenocrates of Chalcedon (Tϋbingen, November 2019). The final workshop in Tϋbingen (TBD) will focus on figures of importance to the later period of the Early Academy, including Polemo of Athens, Crantor of Soli, and Crates of Athens.

 If you would like to participate in this workshop or have other questions concerning Project Academy, please email the Durham co-organizer, Phillip Horky (Phillip.Horky@Durham.ac.uk) by Monday 13 June, 12pm GMT. We have limited funds to support early career scholars and postgraduate students to attend the workshop in person. If you are an early career scholar or postgraduate student and would like to be considered for funding support, please email Dr Horky with a description of why you would like to attend the workshop (200 words or less) and a short provisional budget of travel costs by Monday 13 June, 12pm GMT. If you would like to attend the workshop remotely, please email Dr Horky  by Monday 20 June, 12pm GMT, stating your wish to attend via Zoom.

Programme

Contact
Philip Horky
Link
Foro di Studi Avanzati Gaetano Massa 2022

FSA Roma Annual Conference 2022

Philosophy, Theology, Aestetics, Religion from Antiquity to the Renaissance

Description and organization

7th annual conference of the Foro di Studi Avanzati Gaetano Massa 2022: Renaissance, Ancient, Medieval and Modern Patterns. Philosophy, Theology, Aestetics, Religion from Antiquity to the Renaissance. From 27th to 31st May 2022.

FSA Gateano Massa is a Network whose purpose is to provide an intellectual setting where scholars of philosophy, theology, religion and classics gather to share and compare their perspectives on the meaning and significance of their collective research

Programme

May 27 Friday: Foro di Alti Studi Gaetano Massa

16h: Introduction – Robert M. Berchman [FSA/Roma]. In Memoria. Robert Lima [1935-2022]. Claudia D’Amico [Universidad de Buenos Aires, ARG]; Jose Maria Zamora [Universidad Autonoma de Madrid, ESP]. John D. Turner [1937-2021]. Luciana Gabriela Soares Santoprete [CNRS/LEM, France]; Robert M. Berchman [FSA/Roma].

16h30: Presentation of FSA Academic Fellows: Presenters. Giuseppe Muscolino [Universita degli Studi di Catania, Italia] and Michele Olzi [Universita degli Studi dell’Insubria Varese e Como, Italia]. Michele Abbate, [Universita degli Studi di Salerno, Italia]; Clelia Attanasio [University of Cambridge, UK], Alvaro Campillo Bo [University College Dublin, IRL], Dylan Burns [University of Amsterdam, NL]; Ivana Costa [Universidad de Buenos Aires, Argentina], Marisa Divenosa [Universidad de Buenos Aires, Argentina], Mark Edwards [University of Oxford, UK],Giada Fiorese [Universita degli Studi dell’ Insubria, Varese e Como, Italia], Odile Gilon, [Centre de Recherche en Philosophie, Université Libre de Bruxelles, BLG], Svetla Slaveva-Griffin, [Florida State University, USA], Christian Hengstermann [Universitaet Wuppertal, BRD]; Christoph Horn, [Universitaet Bonn, BRD], Anna Mamodoro, [Durham University and University of Oxford, UK], Gareth Polmeer [Royal College of Art, UK]; Rafaella Palmisano [Universita degli Studi dell’ Insubria Varese e Como, Italia], Daniel Regnier [St. Thomas More College, Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, Canada], Luciana Gabriela Soares Santoprete [CNRS/LEM, France], Fabrizio Sciacca [Universita degli Studi di Catania, Italia], Erasmo Silvio Storace [Università degli Studi dell’Insubria, Varese e Como, Italia], Daniella Taormina [Universita degli Studi di Roma ‘Tor Vergata’] Matthew Vanderkwaak [University College Dublin, IRL], Giuseppe Vitale [Universtity College Dublin, IRL/University of Cologne, BRD], Valentina Zaffino [Pontifica Universita Lateranese, Citta del Vaticano].

16h50: Presentation of FSA Arts Fellows: Presenter. Alessandro Sbordoni, [Associazione Nuova Consonanza/Roma, Italia], Roberto Fabbriciani [Associazione Nuova Consonanza/Roma, Italia],

RENAISSANCE PATTERNS

17h00-19h00: Light and Vision in Marsilio Ficino Moderator Douglas Hedley [University of Cambridge, UK] « Ficino on the Metaphysics of the Diaphanous » Anna Corrias [University of Cambridge, UK]] “Ficino on Vision in the Commentary on Plotinus’ Enneads » Stephen Gersh, [University of Notre Dame, USA] « Demiurgy and Light in Ficino » Denis Robichaud [University of Notre Dame, USA] “Ficino’s De Sole and his Metaphysics of Light” Valentina Zaffino [Pontifica Universita Lateranese, Citta del Vaticano]

19h00: Discussion

May 28 Saturday: Foro di Alti Studi Riccardo Campa

ANCIENT AND RENAISSANCE PATTERNS

9h00-11h00: Mathematics: Mapping Epistemologies. Moderator Svetla Slaveva-Griffin [Florida State University, USA] “Applying Number to the Continuum” Anna Marmodoro [Durham University and University of Oxford, UK] “Crantor and the Epistemological and Mathematical Tale of the Old Academy” Svetla Slaveva-Griffin [Florida State University, USA] “Arithmos and Episteme: A ‘Neopythagorean’ Epistemology of Mathematics” Robert M. Berchman [FSA/Roma].

9h45: Discussion “Plotinus and Frege on Numbers” Christoph Horn, [Universitaet Bonn, BRD] « Aspects of Mathematics in Iamblichus », Daniela Taormina [Universita degli Studi di Roma ’Tor Vergata’ Italia]

10h30: Discussion

11h00-1230: Aesthetics of the Self: Moderator Paolo Bellini [Università degli Studi dell’Insubria, Varese e Como, Italia] « Towards an Agathological Self: Aesthetics of the Self in the light of Plato and Plotinus » Salvatore Lavecchia [Universita degli Studi di Udine, Italia], Henosis in Plotinus and Proclus: Beyond the Self (-identity) Michele Abbate [Universita degli Studi di Salerno, Italia] « Selfhood Unbound: Sensus in Bernardino Telesio and Tommaso Campanella » Guido Giglioni [Universita di Macerata, Italia]

12h30: Discussion 1300: Common Lunch: Casa Maria Immacolata

ANCIENT, MEDIEVAL AND RENAISSANCE PATTERNS

15h00-16h45: Aesthetics of the Self: Moderator Salvatore Lavecchia [Universita degli Studi di Udine, Italia] “”Shadows of Themselves: Plato on Self, Being and Interiority” Eric Perl [Loyola Marymount University, USA]. « Metapsychology and Metaphysics of the Self’ John Hendrix [Roger Williams University, USA] « The Composer’s Imagination: Musical Disposition According to Al-Fârâbî » Daniel Regnier [St. Thomas More College, Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, Canada]

16h45: Discussion

17h15-19h30: Mapping Mind, Language and Intentionality. Moderator Valentina Zaffino, [Pontifica Universita Lateranese, Citta del Vaticano, Italia]. “Proclus’ Metaphysics of Language: Theurgic Intentionality” Jose Manuel Redondo [UNAM, Mexico City, Mexico] “Eriugenia’s de Pradestinatione Liber and the Notion of Primordial Cause” Ezequiel Luduena [Universidad de Buenos Aires, Argentina] “Richard of St. Victor: The Reception of Denys the Areopagite Through the Translation of Eriugena” Clelia Attanasio [University of Cambridge, UK] « Free-Will and Responsibility: Human Mind in Cudworth’s Treatises » Natalia Strok [Universidad de Buenos Aires/Universidad Nacional de La Plata/CONICET, Argentina]

19h30: Discussion

May 29 Saturday: Foro di Alti Studi Patrick Atherton

ANCIENT AND MEDIEVAL PATTERNS

9h00-9h45: Nous in the Greek Patres. Moderator: Isidoros Katsos [University of Oxford, UK] “Ethical Intelletualism in Antiquity and the Patristics: The Birth of Original Sin” Ilaria Ramelli [University of Oxford and Durham University, UK]

9h45: Discussion

10h00-11h00:Plotinus’ Role in Shaping Augustine’s Conception of Mind. Moderator Stephen Gersh [University of Notre Dame, USA]. “Mind in the Confessions of Augustine” Mark Edwards [University of Oxford, UK] “Plotinus in de Trinitate Joseph O’Leary [Sophia University and Nanzan University, JP]

11h00: Discussion

11h30-12h30: Later Platonism and Gnosticism: Moderator: Eric Perl [Loyola Marymount University, USA]. “Toucher Dieu : la critique antignostique de Plotin (Enn. 3.2–3 [47–48] ” Luciana Gabriela Soares Santoprete [CNRS-LEM, France] “Plotinus ‘On Providence’ “ Another Engagement with the ‘Tripartite Tractate” (NHC I,5)” Dylan Burns [University of Amsterdam, Netherlands]

12h30: Discussion Lunch/Open MEDIEVAL PATTERNS

14h00-16h00:Thinking Causes: Fluxus: Moderator Dragos Calma [University College Dublin, IRL] “Influentia: A Way of Questioning Causes in Roger Bacon’s Questiones supra Librum de causis” Odile Gilon [Centre de Recherche en Philosophie, Université Libre de Bruxelles] “Flow and Creation in Albert the Great’s De causis et processu universitatis” Maria Evelina Malgieri [University College Dublin, IRL] “Anima Nobilis in Albert the Great, Thomas Aquinas and Giles of Rome” Matthew Vanderkwaak [University College Dublin, IRL] 1530: Discussion

16h00 -17h30: Thinking Causes: Fluxus: Moderator: Daniel Regnier [St. Thomas More College, Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, Canada] “Bonum est unuscuiusque rei essentia: Berthold of Moosburg’s Radical Agathology” Giuseppe Vitale [Universtity College Dublin, IRL/University of Cologne, BRD] « A Renaissance Reception of Proclus’ Commentary in Euclid: Alessandro Piccolomini and the New Foundations of Mechanics » Alvaro Campillo Bos [University College Dublin, IRL]

17h30: Discussion

21h00: Concerto/Sala Casella/Accademia Filarmonica Romana/ Via Flamina 118, Roma. “Improvisationi: Musica e Cultura” Alessandro Sbordoni, [Associazione Nuova Consonanza/Roma] “Improvizationi Acoustici” Roberto Fabbriciani e Alessandro Sbordoni, [Associazione Nuova Consonanza/Roma]

May 30 Monday: Foro di Alti Studi John D. Turner

ANCIENT, MEDIEVAL AND RENAISSANCE PATTERNS

9h00-10h30: Roman Religions: Moderator Moderator Svetla Slaveva-Griffin [Florida State University, USA] “I culti orientali a Roma in eta imperiale” Luciano Albenese [Universita degli Studi di Roma, La Sapienza, Italia], “Incontro e assimilazione (systasis) con Helios nei papiri magici. Alcune osservazioni» (Meeting, petitioning, reaching (systasis) God Helios in the Magical Papyri. Some Remarks) Giuseppe Muscolino [Universita degli Studi di Catania [Italia], “Rules for Reading and ‘Becoming Like God’ in the Anonymous Prolegomena to Plato’s Philosophy” Jose Maria Zamora [Univerdidad Autonoma de Madrid, ESP]

10h30: Discussion

11h00-13h00: Rethinking Cusanus. Moderator Claudia D’Amico [Universidad de Buenos Aires, Argentina] « The Liber de causis in De Coniecturis of Nicholas of Cusa: The Concept of reditio completa » Victoria Arroche [Universidad de Buenos Aires, Argentina] « Conjectural Self-Knowledge » in the De Coniecturis of Nicholas of Cusa » Claudia D’Amico [Universidad de Buenos Aires, Argentina] “The Power of Imagination in Nicholas of Cusa’s Ars coniecturalis” Jose Gonzales Rios, [Universidad de Buenos Aires/CONICET, Argentina] 1230: Discussion Lunch/Open RENAISSANCE, MODERN AND ANCIENT PATTERNS

14h00-16h00: Varieties of English Platonism. Moderator Mark Edwards [University of Oxford, UK] “The Platonic Soteriology of Shakespeare’s Late Plays”, Christian Hengstermann [Universitaet Wuppertal, BRD] “Between Florence and Tuebingen: The Neglected Historiographical Significance of the Cambridge Platonists”, Douglas Hedley [Clare College, Cambridge, UK] ”Frames of inner Vision: Kathleen Raine and Philip Sherrard as Contemporary Cambridge Platonists” Gareth Polmeer [Royal College of Art, UK)

15h30: Discussion

16h00-18h00: Justice and Fictions [Co-Sponsored by the International Society for Socratic Studies] Moderator: Claudia Marsico [Universidad de Buenos Aires, Argentina] « The Primitive Polis, Facts and Fictions » Ivana Costa [Universidad de Bueonos Aires, Argentina]. “Antisthenes, the Cyclops, and the Healthy Polis in Republic, II” Claudia Marsico [Universidad de Buenos Aires, Argentina] “Justice and Piety in Plato’s Euthyphro” Marisa Divenosa [Universidad de Buenos Aires, Argentina]

17h30: Discussion

18h00-19h30: Drama and Fictions [Co-Sponsored by the International Society for Socratic Studies]: Moderator Denis Robichaud [University of Notre Dame, USA] “Plato’s Laches as a Philosophical Drama. Similarities between the Laches and the Charmides. » Inbal Cohen-Taber [St. Mary’s College/Maryland, USA] “Socrates’ Burial and Euclides” Menahem Luz, [University of Haifa, Israel]

19h30: Discussion

21h00: Banquetto/Trattoria da Aldone e Giacomino, Via Enio 55, Roma

May 31 Tuesday: Foro di Alti Studi Jacob Neusner

ANCIENT, RENAISSANCE, AND MODERN PATTERNS

9h30-10h30: Anabaseis and Katabaseis in Jung’s Psychology: Moderator: Luciana Gabriela Soares Santoprete [CNR-LEM, France] « Theurgy in Jung and Neoplatonism: Comparative Phenomenology. » Bruce MacLennan [University of Tennessee, Knoxville, USA] “Time and the Soul” Alan Cardew, [University of Essex, UK]

10h30: Discussion

11h00-13h30: “Knowledge: Cultural and Political Myths in the 19th and 20th Centuries: Moderator Erasmo Silvio Storace [Università degli Studi dell’Insubria, Varese e Como, Italia], “Power, and Salvation in the Post-Modern Age” Paolo Bellini [Università degli Studi dell’Insubria, Varese e Como, Italia] “Civilizational Mythology” Fabrizio Sciacca [Università degli Studi di Catania, Italia] “Body: Between Politics and Mythopoiesis” Raffaella Palmisano [Università degli Studi dell’Insubria Varese e Como, Italia] « Simulacra of Totality: Filling the post-modern Void through Cloakroom Communities » Giada Fiorese [Università degli Studi dell’Insubria, Varese e Como, Italia] “Politics of Sexuality: Contemporary Perspectives on Sex, Power, and Desire” Michele Olzi [Università degli Studi dell’Insubria, Varese e Como, Italia].

13h30: Discussion

14h00: Business Meeting: Presenters Michele Olzi [Università degli Studi dell’Insubria, Varese e Como, Italia]; Robert M. Berchman [FSA Roma]; Claudia D’Amico [Universidad de Buenos Aires, Argentina]; Jose Maria Zamora [Universidad Autonoma de Madrid, ESP]. Proceedings: FSA Publications Report: FSA/Mimesis; FSA/Wipf&Stock FSA Conferences Report: Roma, Buenos Aires, Madrid FSA Legal and Financial Report: Institute at Caesars Head Ltd. Salem, SC/USA.

Contact

Robert Berchman – berchmanrob@earthlink.net

Eleonora Zeper – eleonora.zeper@gmail.com

Complete programm on the FSA’s Facebook page @FSAGaetanoMassa

Link

https://fsagaetanomassa.wordpress.com/

University of St Andwers

Philosophy and Religion

in Ancient Greece and the Islamic World

Description and organization

The School of Classics at St Andrews is holding a one-day workshop on the interface between philosophy and religion in the ancient Greek and Islamic worlds. The workshop will be held in person (School of Classics, Room S11) and online (via MS Teams).

Organisers: Olaf Almqvist (oha1@st-andrews.ac.uk) and Alex Long (agl10@st-andrews.ac.uk).

 

Programme

9.30am Olaf Almqvist, St Andrews
‘God is day night, winter summer, war peace, golden winged, two horned, and born from an egg: Reflections on the Orphic Protogonos and Presocratic Theology’

10.30am Tom Harrison, St Andrews
‘The unknowability of the divine in classical Greek thought’

[short break]

12 noon Zhenyu Cai, Cambridge
‘Al-Fārābī, Avicenna, and Averroes on Reason and Revelation’

[lunch]

1.30pm Fedor Benevich, Edinburgh
‘Personal Identity in Islamic Philosophy of Religion’

2.30pm Feriel Bouhafa, Cambridge
‘Different Grounds for Human Moral Obligation (Taklīf) in Islamic Theology and Philosophy’

[short break]

4pm Peter Adamson, LMU
‘Do Giraffes Have an Afterlife? A Muslim Theologian-Philosopher on Animal Souls’

Contact

agl10@st-andrews.ac.uk

oha1@st-andrews.ac.uk

Link

https://events.st-andrews.ac.uk/events/philosophy-and-religion-in-ancient-greece-and-the-islamic-world/

Foro di Studi Avanzati Gaetano Massa 2022

Renaissance, Ancient and Medieval Patterns

Modern and Postmodern Traces

Programme

May 27
Foro di Alti Studi <Gaetano Massa>

Auditorium

1600: Introduction: Robert M. Berchman [FSA/Roma]; Claudia D’Amico [Universidad de Buenos Aires, ARG]; Jose Maria Zamora [Universidad Autonoma de Madrid, ESP]; Michele Olzi [Universita degli Studi dell’Insubria Varese e Como, Italia].

1615: Presentation of FSA Academic Fellows: Giuseppe Muscolino [Universita degli Studi di Catania, Italia] Michele Abbate, [Universita degli Studi di Salerno, Italia];Alvaro Campillo Bo [University College Dublin, IRL], Dylan Burns [University of Amsterdam, Netherlands]; Mark Edwards [University of Oxford, UK], Giada Fiorese [Universita degli Studi dell’ Insubria, Varese e Como, Italia], Odile Gilon, [Centre de Recherche en Philosophie, Université Libre de Bruxelles, BLG], Svetla Slaveva-Griffin, [Florida State University, USA], Ryan Haecker, [University of Cambridge, UK], Christian Hengstermann [University of Muenster, BRD],Christoph Horn, [Universitaet Bonn, BRD], Anna Mamodoro, [Durham University and University of Oxford, UK], Dimitri Nikulin, [New School/NY, USA], Mark Nyvlt [Dominican University College, Ottawa, Canada], Raffaella Palmisano [Universita degli Studi dell’ Insubria Varese e Como, Italia], Daniel Regnier [St. Thomas More College, Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, Canada], Luciana Gabriela Soares Santoprete [CNRS/LEM, France]; Fabrizio Sciacca [Universita degli Studi di Catania, Italia], Daniella Taormina [Universita degli Studi di Roma ‘Tor Vergata’] Matthew Vanderkwaak [University College Dublin, IRL], Valentina Zaffino [Pontifica Universita Lateranese, Citta del Vaticano].

1645: Introduction of FSA Associate Societies: Salvatore Lavecchia [Universita degli Studi di Udine, Italia], Canadian Aristotelian Society [CAS] presented by Mark Nyvlt [Dominican University College, Ottawa, Ontario Canada]

RENAISSANCE PATTERNS

1700-1900: Light and Vision in Marsilio Ficino Moderator Douglas Hedley [University of Cambridge, UK] « Ficino on the Metaphysics of the Diaphanous » Anna Corrias [University of Toronto, Canada]
“Ficino on Vision in the Commentary on Plotinus’ Enneads » Stephen Gersh, [University of Notre Dame, USA], « Demiurgy and Light in Ficino » Denis Robichaud [University of Notre Dame, USA],

“Ficino’s De Sole and his Metaphysics of Light” Valentina Zaffino [Pontifica Universita Lateranese, Citta del Vaticano].

Cocktails

May 28
Foro di Alti Studi <Riccardo Campa>

Auditorium 2

ANCIENT, MEDIEVAL AND RENAISSANCE PATTERNS

900-1130: Aesthetics of the Self: Moderator Paolo Bellini [Università degli Studi dell’Insubria, Varese e Como, Italia]
« Towards an Agathological Self: Aesthetics of the Self in the light of Plato and Plotinus » Salvatore Lavecchia [Universita degli Studi di Udine, Italia],

Henosis in Plotinus and Proclus: Beyond the Self (-identity) Michele Abbate [Universita degli Studi di Salerno, Italia]
« Metapsychology and Metaphysics of the Self’ John Hendrix [Roger Williams University, USA]
Kevin Corrigan [Emory University, USA]

« Selfhood Unbound: Sensus in Bernardino Telesio and Tommaso Campanella » Guido Giglioni [Universita di Macerata, Italia]

1100: Discussion

Coffee Break

1130-1300: Mathematics: Mapping Epistemologies. Moderator Svetla Slaveva-Griffin [Florida State University, USA]
“Can the Unlimited be a Fundamental Element of Reality?” Anna Marmodoro [Durham University and University of Oxford, UK]

“Arithmos and Episteme: A ‘Neopythagorean’ Epistemology of Mathematics” Robert Berchman [FSA/Roma]. “Plotinus and Frege on Numbers” Christoph Horn, [Universitaet Bonn, BRD]

« On Cardinal and Ordinal Numbers with Reference to Aristotle and Plotinus, Dmitri Nikulin [The New School for Social Research, USA]
« Number as Power and Actuality in Plotinus, Svetla Slaveva-Griffin [Florida State University, USA]
« Aspects of Mathematics in Iamblichus », Daniela Taormina [Universita degli Studi di Roma ’Tor Vergata’ Italia]

1245: Discussion

1300: Lunch: Casa Maria Immacolata

1500-1630: Cusanus. Moderator Kevin Corrigan [Emory University, USA] Claudia D’Amico [Universidad de Buenos Aires]
Victoria Arroche Universidad de Buenos Aires]
——-

1630: Discussion

1700-1900: Mapping Intellect, Intentionality and Free-Will: Valentina Zaffino, [Pontifica Universita Lateranese, Citta del Vaticano].

“Proclus on Intellect” Eric Perl [Loyola Marymount University, USA].
Jose Manuel Redondo [UNAM, Mexico]
Ezequiel Luduena [Universidad de Buenos Aires]
« Free-Will and Responsibility: Human Mind in Cudworth’s Treatises » Natalia Strok [Universidad de Buenos Aires/Universidad Nacional de La Plata/CONICET, Argentina]

1845: Discussion

May 29
Foro di Alti Studi <Patrick Atherton>

Auditorium

900-1045: Platonic Reflections in Cambridge: Moderator Denis Robichaud [University of Notre Dame, USA] Douglas Hedley [University of Cambridge, UK],
Adrian Mihai [University of Cambridge, UK],
James Bryson [University of Cambridge, UK]

1045: Discussion

1100-1300: Thinking Causes: Fluxus: Moderator Dragos Calma [University College Dublin, IRL] “Influentia: a Way of Questioning Causes in Roger Bacon’s Questiones supra Librum de causis” Odile Gilon [Centre de Recherche en Philosophie, Université Libre de Bruxelles]
“Flow and Creation in Albert the Great’s De causis et processu universitatis” Maria Evelina Malgieri [University College Dublin, IRL]
“Anima Nobilis in Albert the Great, Thomas Aquinas and Giles of Rome” Matthew Vanderkwaak [University College Dublin, IRL]
« A Renaissance Reception of Proclus’ Commentary in Euclid: Alessandro Piccolomini and the New Foundations of Mechanics » Alvaro Campillo Bos [University College Dublin, IRL]

1300: Discussion:

Lunch/Open

3

EARLY MODERN AND MEDIEVAL PATTERNS

LATER ANCIENT PATTERNS

1500-1600: Nous in the Greek Patres. Moderator Isidoros Katsos [Hebrew University and University of Cambridge, UK]
“Ethical Intelletualism in Antiquity and the Patristics: The Birth of Original Sin” Ilaria Ramelli [University of Oxford and Durham University, UK]

1545: Discussion

1600-1745: Nous in the Greek Patres: Moderator Moderator Ilaria Ramelli [University of Oxford and Durham University, UK]
“God’ s Practical Reasoning in Origen’s Commentary on Genesis and De Principiis” Isidoros Katsos [University of Cambridge, UK],

“Christ as Wisdom, Word and Truth: Divine Intellect in Origen’s Reading of the Gospel of John” Christian Hengstermann [University of Muenster, BRD].
Daniel Tolan [University of Cambridge, UK],

1730: Discussion

Coffee Break

1800-1930: Plotinus’ Role in Shaping Augustine’s Conception of Mind. Moderator Stephen Gersh [University of Notre Dame, USA].

“Mind in the Confessions of Augustine” Mark Edwards [University of Oxford, UK]

 

“Plotinus in de Trinitate” Joseph O’Leary [Sophia University and Nanzan University, JP] 1915: Discussion
2030: Banquetto
May 30

Foro di Alti Studi <John D. Turner> Auditorium

ANCIENT PATTERNS

900-1045: Roman Religions: Moderator Alan Cardew, [University of Essex, UK]
« I culti orientali a Roma in età imperiale « Luciano Albanese [Universita degli Studi di Roma, La Sapienza, Italia],
“Incontro e assimilazione (systasis) con Helios nei papiri magici. Alcune osservazioni» (Meeting, petitioning, reaching (systasis) God Helios in the Magical Papyri. Some Remarks) Giuseppe Muscolino [Universita degli Studi di Catania [Italia],
Jose Maria Zamora [Univerdidad Autonoma de Madrid, ESP],

1030: Discussion

1045-1300: The Relationship Between the Divine and the Natural World in Theurgy and Neoplatonic Religion: Moderator Luciana Gabriela Soares Santoprete [CNRS – LEM, France];
“Varieties of Mystical Experience in Plotinus” John Bussanich [University of New Mexico, USA]
“The Ecocentric nature of Divination in Theurgy and Tibetan Religious Traditions” Crystal Addey [University College Cork, Ireland] and Dawn Collins [University of Wales Trinity St. David, UK]

“Water in Iamblichus’ Theory of Divination” Andreea-Maria Lemnaru-Carrez [Paris-Sorbonne IV, France] 1245: Discussion

Lunch/Open

ANCIENT AND MODERN PATTERNS

1430-1615: Gnosticism and Other Platonisms: Moderator Mark Edwards [University of Oxford, UK]
“Plotinus ‘On Providence’ (Enn. 3.2–3 [47–48]): Another Engagement with the ‘Tripartite Tractate’ (NHC I,5)”

Dylan Burns [University of Amsterdam, Netherlands]
“Toucher Dieu : la critique antignostique de Plotin” Luciana Gabriela Soares Santoprete [CNRS-LEM, France]
Kevin Corrigan, [Emory University, USA]

1600: Discussion

1615-1730: Anabaseis and Katabaseis in Jung’s Psychology: Moderator Crystal Addey [University College Cork, IRL].
« Jung’s Untergang and Übergang” Bruce MacLennan [University of Tennessee, Knoxville, USA]
“Time and the Soul” Alan Cardew, [University of Essex, UK]

1715: Discussion

Coffee Break

 

1730-1915: Musical Tropes: Moderator Stephen Gersh [University of Notre Dame, USA]

“Aristexonos” Mark Nyvlt [Dominican University College, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada]

« The Composer’s Imagination: Musical Disposition according to Al-Fârâbî » Daniel Regnier [St. Thomas More

College, Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, Canada]

“From Renaissance Conceptions of Harmony to Modern Music Pedagogy: Comenius on Music » Tomas

Nejeschleba [Palacky University, Ceska Republika]

1915: Discussion

2100-2200: Concerto/Discoteca di Stato – Palazzo Caetani/Via delle Botteghe Oscure.

Alessandro Sbordoni [Associazione Nuova Consonanza/Roma]

May 31
Auditorium
Foro di Alti Studi <Jacob Neusner>

ANCIENT, MODERN AND POSTMODERN PATTERNS

900-1030: Socratica: Sponsored by the International Society for Socratic Studies. Moderator Inbal Cohen- Taber [Technion University, Israel]
Claudia Marisco [Universidad de Buenos Aires, Argentina]
Menahem Luz [Unversity of Haifa, Israel]

Ivana Costa, [Universidad de Buenos Aires, Argentina]

1100-1230: Epicurea: Moderator Menahem Luz [University of Haifa, Israel] Pamela Gordon [University of Kansas, USA]
Inbal Cohen-Taber [Technion University, Israel]

Lunch/Open

1400-1600: Cultural and Political ‘Myths’ of Techgnosticism: Moderator Giada Fiorese [Universita degli Studi dell’ Insubria Varese e Como, Italia],
“Knowledge, Power, and Salvation in the Post-Modern Age” Paolo Bellini [Università degli Studi dell’Insubria, Varese e Como, Italia]

“Gnosis and Mysteries in F. W. J. Schelling’s Philosophy of Mythology” Fabrizio Sciacca [Università degli Studi di Catania, Italia]
“Body: Between Politics and Mythopoiesis” Raffaella Palmisano [Universita degli Studi dell’ Insubria Varese e Como, Italia].

“Pleromatic Modernities: Research notes towards a Definition of Techgnosis” Michele Olzi [Università degli Studi dell’Insubria, Varese e Como, Italia].
1600: Discussion

Coffee Break

1630: Business Meeting

Contact

Robert Berchman – berchmanrob@earthlink.net

Eleonora Zeper – eleonora.zeper@gmail.com

Link

https://fsagaetanomassa.wordpress.com/

KU Leuven

Leuven Colloquia on Ancient Platonism (LCAP)

Description and organization

The Leuven Colloquia on Ancient Platonism (LCAP) is a new lecture series on the history of ancient Platonism (from the Early Academy to Late Antiquity), traditionally an important field of study in Leuven. These lectures will be held on a monthly basis, starting in January 2022, hosted by the KU Leuven Institute of Philosophy and the De Wulf-Mansion Centre for Ancient, Medieval and Renaissance Philosophy and will be given by leading specialists in the history of Platonism. Each year the general theme will be narrowed down through the selection of a specific topic on which the invitees will be asked to speak. For the academic year 2021/2022 (second term only) the chosen topic is ‘principle’ (archê).

For each meeting there will be a 45-minute talk by the main speaker (possibly followed by a 15-minute response) and a 30-minute Q&A session.

Time & Place: 4-6 pm, Kardinaal Mercierzaal.

Programme

10 January 2022: Carlos Steel, KU Leuven. Metaphysicum: The Neoplatonic Background

21 February 2022: James Wilberding, Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin. TBA.

14 March 2022: Dorothea Frede, Universität Hamburg. Plato Taught: A Riddle of his Academy

11 April 2022: Ursula Coope, Oxford University. TBA

16 May 2022: Marwan Rashed, Université Paris-Sorbonne. Becoming, Construction and the Infinite in the Timaeus

Contact

Organizers Giulia De Cesaris, Roberto Granieri and Jan Opsomer – cap@kuleuven.be

(Text by the organizers) 

Link

https://hiw.kuleuven.be/dwmc/not-another-history-of-platonism/events/LCAP