Podcasts
You can watch the podcasts in your browser by simply clicking on the link or save them to your harddrive by right-clicking the link and selecting "save as." Due to the large file size some of the podcasts may take a while to load in your browser.
Keynote Address |
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| • | Martha Nussbaum, Ernst Freund Distinguished Service Professor of Law and Ethics, University of Chicago. Capabilities and Disabilities (podcast) 50:20. 193 MB | |
| • | Michael Bérubé, Paterno Family Professor in Literature, Pennsylvania State University. Response (podcast) 18:03. 57.8 MB | |
| • | Question & Answer Session (podcast) 39:20 203 MB | |
| Keynote Address Chair: Serene Khader, Assistant Professor of Philosophy, Wheaton College |
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| • | Leslie Francis, Professor and Chair of the Philosophy Department, Alfred C. Emery Professor of Law, University of Utah (podcast) & Anita Silvers, Professor of Philosophy, San Francisco State University. Rethinking “Conceptions of the Good” in Light of Intellectual Disabilities (podcast) 20:30 127 MB / 28:03 210 MB | |
| • | Question & Answer Session (podcast) 7:50 58.1 MB | |
Panel: Alzheimer’s Disease |
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| • | Agnieszka Jaworska, Associate Professor of Philosophy, University of California, Riverside. The Ethics of Treatment of Individuals Whose Status as Persons is Thought to be Compromised or Uncertain (podcast) 31:54 164 MB | |
| • | Bruce Jennings, Department of Epidemiology and Public Health, Yale School of Medicine. Agency and Moral Relationship in Dementia (podcast) 23:13 107 MB | |
| • | Jim Nelson, Professor of Philosophy, Michigan State University. Alzheimer’s Disease and Socially Extended Mentation (podcast) 21:13 93.2 MB | |
| • | Hilde Lindemann, Professor of Philosophy, Michigan State University. Holding One Another (Well, Wrongly, Clumsily) in a Time of Dementia (podcast) 23:02 115 MB | |
| • | Question & Answer Session (podcast) 21:31 116 MB | |
| Expert Panel Chair: Peter Williams, Professor of Preventive Medicine, Vice Dean of Academic Affairs, and Head of the Division of Medicine in Society, Stony Brook University School of Medicine |
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| • | Douglas Biklen, Dean, School of Education, Syracuse University; Professor, Disability Studies; Director, Facilitated Communication Institute, Syracuse University. Presuming Competence: Why "Mental Retardation" is an Unhelpful Idea (podcast) 35:42 281 MB | ||
| • | James C. Harris, M.D., Psychiatry & Behavioral Sciences, Johns Hopkins School of Medicine. A Developmental Perspective on the Emergence of Moral Personhood (podcast) 36:34 226 MB | ||
Provost Lecture-Keynote |
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| • | Peter Singer, Ira W. DeCamp Professor of Bioethics, University Center for Human Values, Princeton University. Speciesism and Moral Status (podcast) 47:24 268 MB | ||
| • | Question & Answer Session (podcast) 49:40 365 MB | ||
Panel: Agency & Responsibility |
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| • | David Shoemaker, Associate Professor of Philosophy, Bowling Green State University. Responsibility, Agency, and Cognitive Disability (podcast) 31:20 172 MB | ||
| • | Cynthia Stark, Associate Professor of Philosophy, University of Utah. Reasons, Persons, and Capabilities (podcast) 23:00 155 MB | ||
| • | Question & Answer Session (podcast) 10:24 63 MB | ||
Keynote Address |
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| • | Ian Hacking, Professor Emeritus, Collège de France (Chaire de philosophie et histoire des concepts scientifiques) and University Professor Emeritus, University of Toronto. How We Have Been Learning to Talk About Autism (podcast) 42:07 264 MB | ||
| • | Victoria McGeer, Princeton University Center for Human Values. Response (podcast) 28:56 196 MB | ||
| • | Question & Answer Session (podcast) 30:30 201 MB | ||
Panel: Cognitive Disability and the Concerns of Justice |
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| • | Sophia Wong, Assistant Professor of Philosophy, Long Island University. Duties of Justice to Citizens with Cognitive Disabilities (podcast) 25:25 90.2 MB | • | Licia Carlson, Expository Writing Program, Harvard University, Conference Co-Organizer. Unmasking Intellectual Disability in Philosophical Discourse (podcast) 29:25 113 MB |
| • | Anna Stubblefield, Associate Professor of Philosophy; Affiliate, Afro-American Studies Department and American Studies, Rutgers University, Newark. The Entanglement of Race and Cognitive Disability (podcast) 26:26 122 MB | ||
| • | Question & Answer Session (podcast) 30:36 175 MB | ||
Keynote Address |
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| • | Daniel Wikler, Mary B. Saltonstall Professor of Ethics and Population Health, Department of Population and International Health, Harvard School of Public Health. Paternalism and the Moderately Intellectually Disabled (podcast) 48:04 217 MB | ||
| • | Question & Answer Session (podcast) 12:43 67.7 MB | ||
| Chair: Lorella Terzi, Senior Lecturer, School of Education, Roehampton University | |||
| • | Jeffrey P. Brosco, M.D., Ph.D., Associate Director, Clinical Services, Mailman Center for Child Development. Limits of the Medical Model: Historical Epidemiology of Cognitive Disabilities in the US (podcast) 40:32 232 MB | ||
| • | Question & Answer Session (podcast) 14:49 79.1 MB | ||
Keynote Address |
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| • | Jonathan Wolff, Professor and Department Chair, University College London, Philosophy. Cognitive Disability in A Society of Equals (podcast) 35:40 175 MB | ||
| • | Henry Richardson, Professor of Philosophy, Georgetown University. Response (podcast) 17:40 90.8 MB | ||
| • | Question & Answer Session (podcast) 15:11 84.5 MB | ||
Keynote Address |
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| • | Jeff McMahan, Professor of Philosophy, Rutgers University. Cognitive Disability, Cognitive Enhancement & Moral Status (podcast) 43:20 345 MB | ||
| • | Eva Kittay, Professor of Philosophy, Stony Brook University; Conference Co-Organizer. Response: High Stakes of Personhood (podcast) 27:30 145 MB | ||
| • | Question & Answer Session (podcast) 47:10 369 MB | ||