Hi everyone,

This week's speaker in the University of Sydney Philosophy Seminar Series is 
Nicholas Southwood, (Australian National University)

The title of the talk is "Feasibility Beyond ‘Ought’ Implies ‘Can’". Here is an 
abstract for the talk:

Many of us are tempted by the idea that there is a Feasibility Requirement on 
the correctness or validity of certain normative claims about politics: claims 
about the laws and policies states ought to implement, the obligations we have 
regarding the organisation of social and political life, the institutional 
arrangements that justice requires us to bring about, and so on. But how 
exactly should we interpret this idea of a Feasibility Requirement? The 
standard interpretation treats it as a particular instance of the principle 
that “Ought” Implies “Can.” I argue that this is a mistake. The problem with 
the standard interpretation is that it cannot make sense of certain central 
feasibility-involving inferences. I propose a non-standard interpretation 
according to which the Feasibility Requirement is instead a specific instance 
of a stronger principle that I call the Feasible Demands Thesis. This holds 
that claims about what we ought to do, in order to be correct or valid, must 
not make infeasible explicit or implicit demands. Interpreting the Feasibility 
Requirement in terms of the Feasible Demands Thesis helps to undermine the 
primary motivation for embracing a kind of Revisionary Realism, according to 
which feasibility’s primary normative significance is not adequately captured 
by the idea of a Feasibility Requirement. We do not need to go beyond a 
Feasibility Requirement so long as it is correctly interpreted, or so I argue.

The seminar will take place at 3:30pm on Wednesday Sep 24 in the Philosophy 
Seminar Room (N494).

Enquiries about the seminar series can be directed to [email protected]

Ryan Cox
Lecturer in Philosophy
Discipline of Philosophy
School of Humanities
University of Sydney
[email protected]
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