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DTSTART:19960101T000000 END:STANDARD BEGIN:STANDARD TZNAME:GMT TZOFFSETFROM:+0100 TZOFFSETTO:+0000 DTSTART:19961027T020000 RRULE:FREQ=YEARLY;BYMONTH=10;BYDAY=-1SU END:STANDARD END:VTIMEZONE BEGIN:VEVENT DTSTAMP:20260501T123950Z DTSTART;VALUE=DATE-TIME:20221012T161500 DTEND;VALUE=DATE-TIME:20221012T180000 SUMMARY:Philosophy Department Colloquium TZID:Europe/London UID:20221012-8a17841a823a80fd018263a0ab295056@warwick.ac.uk CREATED:20221007T092313Z DESCRIPTION:The first Colloquium will take place at 4:15-6:00pm\, Wednesd ay 12 October in S0.17. The meeting will be in-person\, with an online o ption for those who can't be on campus Note the slightly adjusted start time of 4.15pm for the first Colloquium. Speakers: Susana Monsó (UNED) & Eze Paez (Pompeu Fabra) Talk: Why death still harms animals who only ha lf get it: Ethical implications of the minimal concept of death (w/ Eze Paez) Abstract: In a series of recent works (Monsó 2021\; 2022\; Monsó & Osuna-Mascaró 2021)\, I have defended the idea that the concept of deat h is not circumscribed to the human species\, but rather that many anima ls can understand death\, at least to some extent. The core of my argume nt is the idea that the ‘minimal concept of death’ (‘MCoD’) requires lit tle cognitive complexity and that the cognition required for it is fairl y common in the animal kingdom. However\, the MCoD refers to the capacit y that an animal has to understand what has happened when another has di ed\, but does not indicate that the animal has any notion of her own per sonal mortality. As such\, it is not immediately obvious what ethical im plications follow from it. Indeed\, accounts of the prudential badness o f death that make it dependent on an individual’s concept of death hinge on the ethical importance of having an awareness of one’s own future de ath (e.g.\, Cigman 1981\; Belshaw 2012\, 2015\; Rollin 2015)\, so the pr esence of an MCoD in animals might not alter the extent to which death i s thought to directly harm animals. In this talk (developed together wit h Eze Paez)\, I will show that\, contrary to this first impression\, the deintellectualised account of the concept of death that I have defended does modify how we ought to think about the badness of death for animal s\, even in those cases in which animals do not develop a notion of deat h as something that will inevitably befall them. I will develop this arg ument in three steps. First\, I will summarise my theory regarding the d istribution of the MCoD in nature. Second\, I will give an overview of d ifferent accounts of the badness of death and how they relate to individ uals’ understanding of death. Lastly\, I will show how the truth of my a nalysis would entail that\, even on the most stringent and demanding acc ounts\, death harms many more animals than is often presupposed. LOCATION:S0.17/MS Teams CATEGORIES:Home Page,Departmental Colloquium LAST-MODIFIED:20221007T092313Z ORGANIZER;CN=Clare Simpson: END:VEVENT END:VCALENDAR