[SydPhil] 7th Eastern Hemisphere Language & Metaphysics Network meeting: Thursday, January 11, 2024

Kristie Miller kristie.miller at sydney.edu.au
Fri Dec 15 08:44:21 AEDT 2023


Dear all, 
> The 7th online meeting of the Eastern Hemisphere Language & Metaphysics Network will take place on Thursday, January 11, 2024. Please see below for details.  
> 
> We hope to see you online!
> 
> 
> Best wishes, 
> 
> Hsiang-Yun Chen (Academia Sinica)
> Heather Dyke (University of Otago)
> Naoya Fujikawa (University of Tokyo)
> Kristie Miller (University of Sydney)
> Nikolaj Jang Lee Linding Pedersen (Yonsei University)
> Joseph Ulatowski (University of Waikato)
> Jeremy Wyatt (University of Waikato)
> Yiwen Zhan (Beijing Normal University)
> 
> 
> EHLM website <https://ehlm.org/>
> 
> 
> Zoom registration here <http://>.
> 
> Schedule (China, Taiwan, Singapore, Hong Kong)
> 9.00 - 9.10am: introductory remarks.
> 9.10 - 9.45am: Szu-Yen Lin (Soochow University) - Interpreting Titles and Categories in Art".
> 9.45 - 9.55am: Comments by Matteo Ravasio (Peking University). 
> 9.55 - 10.20am: Q & A.
> 10.20 - 10.30am: Break.
> 10.30 - 11.05am: Jeonggyu Lee (Sungkyunkwan University) - Retroactive Continuity and Fictional Facts.
> 11.05 - 11.15am: Comments by Junyeol Kim (Chungbuk National University). 
> 11.15 - 11.40am: Q & A.
> 11.40 - 11.45am: Closing remarks.
> 
> Japan, Korea: +1 hrs.
> Sydney & Melbourne: +3 hrs.
> New Zealand: +5 hrs.
> 
> Szu-Yen Lin  <https://philpeople.org/profiles/szu-yen-lin?fbclid=IwAR193wMLTf7lotmrGowESPfphqjXs5HUxjk5xIXtdB__n6-Ezwm8oy09uE4>(Soochow University, Taiwan): Interpreting Titles and Categories in Art. 
> Ontological contextualism in contemporary analytic philosophy of art is the position that an artwork’s identity and contents are determined in part by its relation to the relevant contextual factors holding at the time when it was created. Among these are a work’s title and the author’s categorial intention. It is generally agreed that before we interpret a work, we should correctly identify it by, for example, viewing it under the right title or locating it in the artistic category to which the author intended it to belong. I argue that some contextual factors—titles and categories in particular—cannot be accepted as they are without being interpreted. Only when we have an account of interpreting titles and categories can we proceed to interpret works.
> 
> Jeonggyu Lee <https://philpeople.org/profiles/jeonggyu-lee> (Sungkyunkwan University): Retroactive Continuity and Fictional Facts. 
> This paper deals with the phenomenon of retroactive continuity, or retcon for short, which is a literaldevice where the truth-value of a proposition in an earlier fictional work is changed by a later work. The primary aim of this paper is to provide the most compelling explanation for retroactive continuity. I first defend the metaphysical view about fiction, according to which when retconning occurs, a fictional work changes its property of containing a proposition while preserving its identity. I then argue that this view is theoretically preferable to all other competing approaches.
> 
> 

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