---------- Forwarded message ---------
De : James Openshaw <jamesopensh...@gmail.com>
Date: mer. 4 mai 2022 à 15:46
Subject: Reference in Remembering Workshop and Student Bursaries
To: <philo...@liverpool.ac.uk>, <phom...@univ-grenoble-alpes.fr>
Cc: Kourken Michaelian <michaelian.kour...@gmail.com>, DENIS PERRIN <
denis.per...@univ-grenoble-alpes.fr>


*Workshop announcement and student bursaries: Reference in Remembering*

We are pleased to announce the Reference in Remembering Workshop, to be
held in-person at the Université Grenoble Alpes on June 30th–July 2nd 2022.
A full schedule of talks can be found below. Colleagues interested in
attending should please contact me for registration information.

Website: http://phil-mem.org/events/2022-reference.php
Organisers: James Openshaw; Kourken Michaelian; Denis Perrin.

This workshop is funded by the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and
innovation programme under the Marie Sklodowska-Curie grant agreement (no.
101032391), and also by the CNRS GDR Mémoire, the Institut de Philosophie
de Grenoble, and the Centre for Philosophy of Memory.

1. STUDENT BURSARIES

We invite applications from Masters and PhD students for some limited
travel and accommodation bursaries, kindly funded by the CNRS GDR Mémoire.
Students interested in attending the workshop should email (1) a copy of
their academic CV and (2) a brief, one-paragraph account of how the
conference’s theme interacts with their research interests to
jamesopensh...@gmail.com. The application deadline for bursaries is Friday
May 20th.

2. THEME

Episodic memory enables us to consciously ‘relive’ experienced events from
our past. You might remember making coffee this morning and sensorily
recall what it was like to smell the coffee grounds or to see the kettle
reach a boil. Success in this activity requires that there be a certain
relationship between your present act of remembering and the past event in
question. First, something must ‘fix’ or determine that your memory is
about that particular event, rather than, say, a similar event the previous
morning. Second, the memory must be suitably accurate. By analogy, success
in uttering ‘This is blue’ requires, for its evaluability, that ‘This’
refers to a particular object and, for its truth, that the predicate
accurately characterises the referred-to object. Though these observations
are simple, what we might call the *reference-fixing* and *accuracy*
conditions of episodic remembering remain obscure. The thriving work on
memory in philosophy and the sciences suggests that continued progress
requires more attention—and new approaches—to these particular issues. The
primary aim of the workshop is to cast new light on the multi-faceted
relationship between reference, singular thought, and remembering by
bringing together, for the first time, researchers specialising on these
topics.

3. SCHEDULE

Day 1 – Thursday June 30th
Location: MACI Amphitheatre, Université Grenoble Alpes

09:20–09:30. Welcome.

09:30–10:40. François Recanati, ‘Pure memory’.

10:40–11:00. Coffee break.

11:00–12:10. Nikola Andonovski, ‘Engrams as mental files: A moderately
optimistic proposal’.

12:10–13:30. Lunch.

13:30–14:40. Rachel Goodman (and Aidan Gray), ‘Thinking (and filing) across
time’.

14:40–15:50. Michael Barkasi, ‘Remembering what your brain doesn’t’.

15:50–16:10. Coffee break.

16:10–17:20. Sarah Robins, ‘The target of remembering’.

19:30. Dinner.

Day 2 – Friday July 1st
Location: MACI Amphitheatre, Université Grenoble Alpes

09:30–10:40. Kristina Liefke & Markus Werning, ‘Parasitic mnemonic
reference’.

10:40–11:00. Coffee break.

11:00–12:10. Kourken Michaelian & James Openshaw, ‘Reconstructing
reference’.

12:10–13:30. Lunch.

13:30–14:40. Imogen Dickie, ‘The role of episodic memory in present-tense
demonstrative thought’.

Group activity, flexible evening plans.

Day 3 – Saturday July 2nd
Location: CTL Amphitheatre, Université Grenoble Alpes

09:00–10:10. Christoph Hoerl, ‘Singular thought without temporal
representation?’

10:10–10:30. Coffee break.

10:30–11:40. Denis Perrin (and Christopher McCarroll), ‘Veridical
remembering: Accuracy and authenticity in episodic memory’.

11:40–12:50. Manuel García-Carpintero, ‘Memory-based reference, IEM and
presupposition-failure’.

---
Dr. James Openshaw
Marie Skłodowska-Curie Individual Fellow
Centre for Philosophy of Memory
www.jamesopenshaw.com

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