Calendar
If any member of staff or student wishes to post an event, please contact Gemma Basterfield at Gemma dot Basterfield at warwick dot ac dot uk.
Thursday, June 04, 2026
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Summer Seminar 2026: Thomas Nagel, The View from NowhereC1.11/15Week 2: Thursday 7th May 12noon–2pm – Introduction + Chapter 1 Mind Week 3: Thursday 14th May 12noon–2pm – Chapter 2 Mind and Body Week 4: Thursday 21st May 12noon–2pm – Chapter 3 The Objective Self Week 5: Thursday 28th May 12noon–2pm – Chapter 4 Knowledge Week 6: Thursday 4th June 12noon–2pm – Chapter 5 Thought and Reality Week 7: Thursday 11th June 12noon–2pm – Chapter 6 Freedom Week 8: Thursday 18th June 12noon–2pm – Chapter 7 Value Week 9: Thursday 25th June 12noon–2pm – Chapter 8 Ethics Week 10: Thursday 2nd July 12noon–2pm – Chapter 9 Living Right and Living Well Week 11: Thursday 9th July 12noon–2pm – Chapter 10 Birth, Death, and the Meaning of Life |
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WMA Talk: Dorit Bar-On (University of Connecticut): 'Four Milestones in the Evolution of Human Pragmatic Communication鈥.S0.20Dorit Bar-On (University of Connecticut): 'Four Milestones in the Evolution of Human Pragmatic Communication鈥. Abstract: So-called Protolanguage is a theoretical construct designed to help explain the phylogenetic emergence of human language from animal communication systems. In Expression, Communication, and Origins of Meaning (forthcoming, OUP), I argue that Protolanguage ought to be conceived as pragmatically (and therefore psychologically) intermediate, and this places certain substantive constraints on the psychological capacities with which we can credit our nonlinguistic ancestors. In particular, we should not credit them with a capacity for Gricean mindreading and the ability to entertain language-like thoughts. In this talk, I describe four proposed hypothetical milestones on our ancestors鈥 path toward a pragmatically intermediate Protolanguage (鈥淧IP鈥), relying on a combination of empirical and theoretical considerations. These milestones can be used to describe a phylogenetic trajectory leading from an ancestral communication system that resembled existing forms of animal communication to PIP. Clarifying the character of – the fourth milestone – and of the preceding three milestones, should, I believe, also shed some light on our ancestor鈥檚 progression from PIP to human linguistic pragmatic communication. |
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