The Faculty of Arts & Social Sciences at UNSW is pleased to offer So, what? 
Public Lectures in contemporary humanities and social sciences.
Professor Philip Pettit
Corporate Persons, Commercial, Ecclesiastical, and Political
Tuesday 25 February, 6pm

[Philip Pettit]


Abstract: Why should incorporated bodies count as legal persons? And what 
rights and responsibilities should they have? Should they enjoy rights that may 
trump the rights of individuals? Should they be able to compete with 
individuals for political influence? Should they be held responsible for the 
wrongdoing of their members or agents? And do such questions call for similar 
answers with corporate persons as different as companies, unions, churches, 
parties and states? The philosophy of incorporation, shaped by Roman jurists, a 
Papal bull and the South Sea Bubble, may help to shed some light on these 
issues.


Biography: Philip Pettit is L.S. Rockefeller University Professor of Politics 
and Human Values at Princeton, and Distinguished Professor of Philosophy at the 
ANU. His books include Republicanism (1997), The Economy of Esteem (2004), with 
G.Brennan; Group Agency (2011) with C. List; On the People’s Terms (2012); and 
Just Freedom (2014). He is a Fellow of the Australian Academies of Humanities 
and Social Sciences as well as the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, the 
British Academy and the Royal Irish Academy. Common Minds: Themes from the 
Philosophy of Philip Pettit, ed G.Brennan et al, appeared from OUP in 2007.


For venue location details, and to RSVP, please see: 
https://www.arts.unsw.edu.au/about-us/community-engagement/so-what-lecture-series/
_______________________________________________
SydPhil mailing list: http://bit.ly/sydphil

New archive: http://bit.ly/SydPhilArchive

To UNSUBSCRIBE, change your MEMBERSHIP OPTIONS, find ANSWERS TO COMMON 
PROBLEMS, or visit our ONLINE ARCHIVES, please go to the LIST INFORMATION PAGE: 
http://bit.ly/sydphil ... and if you can't get to that page, try the EMERGENCY 
PAGE: http://bit.ly/SydPhilEmergency

Reply via email to