Hi everyone,

This week’s speaker in the University of Sydney Philosophy Seminar Series is 
Jessica Gelber (University of Toronto).

The title of Jessica’s talk is “Aristotle on Interspecies Relations”. Here’s 
the abstract for Jessica’s talk:

Scientific explanations of the relations that hold between kinds (what I am 
calling “relational facts”) is challenging (if not impossible) by the lights of 
Aristotelian science. However, Aristotle is aware that there are many such 
facts:


  *   In Historia Animalium, various ways that kinds of living organisms are 
related to other kinds of living organisms – being predators of one kind or 
prey for another, for example — appear to be treated as regularly occurring 
features of their lives, just as the shapes and sizes of their body parts or 
their manners of reproduction are.
  *   In his Politics, Aristotle even seems to claim that living kinds that 
humans use (for food and assistance) are naturally there to be used by us.

I argue that we ought to take these reports about relational facts at face 
value, rather than try to contextualize or dismiss them. I propose that 
Aristotle has a much richer conception of the natures or essences of living 
beings than is traditionally thought, and consequently he does have the 
resources to explain the relations between living kinds using the principles 
that his science countenances.

The talk will take place on Wednesday the 8th of March at 3:30 p.m. in the 
Philosophy Seminar Room (N494) in the Quadrangle and will be simulcast via 
Zoom: https://uni-sydney.zoom.us/j/88699564848.

The talk will be followed by drinks and informal discussion at the Rose. All 
welcome!

Enquiries about the seminar series can be directed to 
ryan....@sydney.edu.au<mailto:ryan....@sydney.edu.au>

Ryan Cox
Associate Lecturer in Philosophy
Discipline of Philosophy
School of Humanities
University of Sydney
ryan....@sydney.edu.au<mailto:ryan....@sydney.edu.au>


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