The provisional programme can be downloaded by clicking on this link: FE2019 provisional programme.
The book of (short) abstracts is here.
A list of all contibuting speakers and their respective talks can be found below. Please click on the titles to see the extended abstracts of these papers.
- Ilaria Canavotto (University of Amsterdam) and Alessandro Giordani (Catholic University of Milan). Causation and Accountability in Dynamic Action Logic.
- Hein Duijf (University of Amsterdam), Allard Tamminga (University of Groningen), and Frederik Van De Putte (Ghent University). An Impossibility Result on Methodological Individualism.
- Jobst Heitzig (Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research) and Sarah Hiller (Free University of Berlin). Measures of individual and groupwise ex-post and ex-ante responsibility in extensive-form games with unquantifiable uncertainty.
- Constanze Binder (Erasmus University Rotterdam). Moral Responsibility and Individual Choice Sets.
- Nicolas Cote (London School of Economics). Liberalism and Social Choice.
- Justin Bruner (University of Groningen). Inequality and Majority Rule.
- Korbinian Rüger (Oxford University). Aggregation and Equality.
- Aleks Knoks and Eric Pacuit (University of Maryland). Reason-Based Choice for Groups.
- Olivier Roy and Soroush Rafiee Rad (University of Bayreuth). Deliberation, Single-Peaknedness, and Voting Cycles.
- Kai Spiekermann (London School of Economics). Epistemic Network Injustice.
- Kacper Kowalczyk (Oxford University). Yet another argument against anti-aggregation.
- Satoru Suzuki (Komazawa University). Measurement-Theoretic Foundations of Weighted Utilitarianism.
- Tomi Francis (Oxford University). A Strengthened Impossibility Theorem in Population Axiology.
- Christian Tarsney (Oxford University). Vive la Différence? Structural Diversity as a Challenge for Metanormative Theories.
- Stef Frijters, Joke Meheus, and Frederik Van De Putte (Universiteit Gent). Quantifying over the indexes of obligation operators.
- Chris Meacham (University of Massachusetts). Utilitarianism, Consent, and the Self-Other Asymmetry.
- Jon Marc Asper (University of Missouri). Subjective Values should be Sharp.
- Abelard Podgorski (National University of Singapore). The Self-Esteem Theorem.
- Andras Szigeti and György Barabás (Linköping University). Collectivizing Justice: A Novel Argument for Quota-Based Affirmative Action.
- Michael Deigan (Yale University). Rational Partiality and Objective Value.