B. A. C. A. P.
BOSTON AREA COLLOQUIUM IN ANCIENT PHILOSOPHY
27TH ANNUAL PROGRAM2004-2005
All lectures begin at 7:30 pm unless otherwise noted.
FALL SEMESTER
14 October, at Holy Cross College
Eric Brown
Philosophy, Washington University
“Wishing for Fortune, Choosing Activity: Aristotle on External Goods and Happiness”
Commentator: Gary Gurtler, Philosophy, Boston College
For further information: msim@holycross.edu
28 October, at Clark University
Henry Mendell
Philosophy, California State University at Los Angeles
“How to Cut Plato’s Line”
Commentator: Randall Rose, Philosophy, Brown University
For further information: mpakaluk@clarku.edu
18 November, at Boston University
Alfredo Ferrarin
Philosophy, University of Pisa
“Aristotle on Phantasia”
Commentator: Klaus Brinkmann
(This lecture begins at 4 pm.)
For further information: roochnik@bu.edu
SPRING SEMESTER
24 February, at Boston College
Jean-François Pradeau
Philosophy, University of Paris X-Nanterre
“The Law According to Plato”
Commentator: Randall Baldwin Clark, Associate, Goodwin Procter LLP
For further information: gurtler@bc.edu
31 March, at Boston College
Fran O’Rourke
Philosophy, University College, Dublin
“Aristotle and the Metaphysics of Metaphor”
Commentator: Ioanna Patsioti, Philosophy, Deree College
For further information: cleary@bc.edu
7 April, at Dartmouth College
Anthony Price
Philosophy, Birkbeck College
“Aristotelian Particularism”
Commentator: Michael Pakaluk, Philosophy, Clark University
For further information: Margaret.r.graver@dartmouth.edu
28 April, at Brown University
Thomas Johansen
Philosophy, University of Edinburgh
“In Defense of Inner Sense: Aristotle on Perceiving that One Perceives”
Commentator: Aryeh Kosman, Philosophy, Haverford College
For further information: Mary_Louise_Gill@brown.edu
All lectures begin at 7:30 pm unless otherwise noted.
Inquiries may be sent to: Michael Pakaluk, Director, BACAP (mpakaluk@clarku.edu)
The Proceedings of the Boston Area Colloquium in Ancient Philosophy are now published by Brill. Back issues may be obtained by contacting John Cleary or Gary Gurtler, S.J., Editors.
Our project for enriching teaching and scholarship in ancient philosophy will continue this year through a series of public lectures and associated seminars. Events in this series are fully supported by grants from the participating institutions: Boston College, Boston University (the Humanities Foundation), Brown University, Clark University, Dartmouth College, Harvard University, and Holy Cross College.