Descartes and Elisabeth of Bohemia on Emotions and Emotional Control
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In this talk, Ariane Schneck will add to these efforts by focusing on the later, lesser-known parts of the correspondence between Descartes and Elisabeth. In these letters, in which they discuss classical moral-ethical themes like virtue, the role of emotions and the happy life, Elisabeth not only objects to Descartes’s claims, but she does so from her own distinctive philosophical position that can be reconstructed from her remarks. Moreover, Schneck will show that Elisabeth’s arguments influenced Descartes’s thinking significantly and that he even changed some of his central claims due to Elisabeth’s interventions. This talk thus aims to establish not only Elisabeth as a genuine thinker but also as a powerful female philosopher who exerted historical influence.
*AUC is a tobacco-free community. Smoking is only permitted in designated areas.
**A photo ID is required for entry. Facial recognition is required at all times.
Speakers
Ariane Schneck
Assistant Professor of Philosophy
Bielefeld University, Germany
Specialization:
- Early Modern Philosophy (esp. Descartes and Elisabeth of Bohemia)
- Philosophy of Mind (esp. Philosophy of Emotions), Feminist Philosophy, Aesthetics
Mario Hubert
Assistant Professor, Department of Philosophy
AUC
Before joining the Department of Philosophy at The American University in Cairo (AUC), Mario Hubert was the Howard E. and Susanne C. Jessen postdoctoral instructor in the philosophy of physics at the California Institute of Technology from 2019 to 2022. Hubert also received an Early Postdoc Mobility Fellowship from the Swiss National Science Foundation for conducting research as a postdoctoral fellow at Columbia University and New York University between 2018 and 2019.
His research focuses on the ontology and epistemology of modern physics, such as classical mechanics, electrodynamics, and quantum mechanics. He is particularly interested in the following questions: What exists according to our best physical theories? and How can we know and understand what exists?
Hubert’s article When Fields Are Not Degress of Freedom, co-written with Vera Hartenstein, has received an honorable mention in the 2021 BJPS Popper Prize Competition, which is awarded to the article judged to be the best published in that year’s volume of The British Journal for the Philosophy of Science.
Hubert is an ordinary trustee of the Philosophy of Physics Society and a Fellow at the John Bell Institute for the Foundations of Physics.