Ethics Bowl – student volunteers needed!

USU is hosting an Ethics Bowl on Saturday, Nov 10.  The event will last much of the day.  We are in need of at least 4 moderators.  Students can fill that role so I am looking for some student volunteers.  It should be fun – you’ll get to hear some interesting moral dilemmas and various arguments on all sides.  No special training or expertise required to serve as a moderator.  You just need to be able to watch a clock to keep teams within their time limits.  You’ll get a free lunch to boot!

Let me know if you are interested by emailing me: harrison.kleiner@usu.edu

Another lecture next week

An embarrassment of riches next week.  Hemming lectures on Tuesday, and then another philosophy lecture on Thursday:

John Crosby of Franciscan University of Steubenville will be presenting a talk titled “The Phenomenology of Love”.  It should be an excellent talk, of particular interest to those interested in 20th century continental thought.  I expect his paper to draw from the work of Karol Wojtyla (John Paul II) and the great – and widely under-appreciated – Catholic philosopher Dietrich von Hildebrand.

Dr. Crosby’s lecture will be in Main 304 on Thursday Nov 1 at 4:00pm.

Philosophy Lecture on Tuesday

Laurence Paul Hemming will be returning to USU next week.  He has lectured here before and has been very well received.  He is very capable on a wide range of subjects (his last talk was on Zeno’s paradox), but is probably best known for his work on Heidegger (his book Heidegger’s Atheism was well received) as well as work on Nietzsche.

He will be here next Tuesday (Oct 30) at 3:30 pm in Animal Science 314.  The title of his talk will be ‘Rationalising the Animal in Humanity: Philosophy and the Birth of Thinking’.

Everyone is also welcome to his public lecture at the St Thomas Aquinas Catholic Church at 7pm Tuesday.  Hemming has published an excellent book on the liturgy, and his lecture that evening is titled ’Why worship is the source and summit of our lives as Catholics?’.

Church address: 725 South 250 East in Hyde Park.  Drive north from campus on 800 East for  few miles.  A little past 2900 North, you enter into Hyde Park (and the street number changes to 250E).  You will see the church on the left a few blocks later.

“I tweet, therefore I @”

He sighed, finally understanding why some artists stopped painting, why explorers stopped exploring and why Guns N’ Roses should’ve only released one album. He knew he existed, not just because he’d spent years of his life proving it, but because if he didn’t, he wouldn’t feel the crushing weight of everyone’s expectations pressing down on his slender shoulders.

He twirled the end of his goatee, staring blankly at the wall, until his thoughts were interrupted by a text message. It was a picture of Galileo, holding up the “Father of Modern Science” mug Descartes had sent. “Thanks bro. — GG,” he’d typed.

Read the rest here.