Texas A&M's 2nd Annual International Virtual Conference of Philosophy (Published Proceedings)

Page 6

The International Virtual Conference of Undergraduate Philosophy Introduction The International Virtual Conference of Undergraduate Philosophy (IV-CUP) is an annual meeting between universities worldwide hosted by Texas A&M University. The first IV-CUP occurred in the spring of 2016, but in 2020 was revived as an annual tradition by Aletheia, Texas A&M’s undergraduate journal of philosophy. Each year, the participating universities submit their top undergraduate papers in philosophy to one another for analysis and commentator review. Once responses are prepared, a one-day conference is held for the scholars and commentators to present their arguments, counterarguments, and engage in philosophical discourse. After the conference comes to an end, all works from the contributors are published in these proceedings. The Structure of the IV-CUP The order of publishing reflects the structure of the conference. Six scholars are assigned two commentators from different universities to interact with following their presentation. The conference proceeds by alternating the order of the scholars’ 15-minute presentations depending on the university they represent. After a presentation, the first of two assigned commentators provide a five-minute response and then have a five-minute discourse with the scholar. Once the ten minutes are complete, the process repeats with the second commentator. After all contributors have offered their work, questions are taken from the audience until the next scholar’s presentation.

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Second Response to Holden Hill Ken Matheson, St. Francis Xavier University

3min
pages 96-100

First Response to Holden Hill Natashia Gushue, St. Francis Xavier University

2min
pages 94-95

Joe MacMaster, St. Francis Xavier University

23min
pages 70-79

Holden Hill, Texas A&M University

15min
pages 86-93

First Response to Joe MacMaster Kate Girvin, Texas A&M University

2min
pages 80-81

Second Response to Diego Lavado Jordan Morgan, St. Francis Xavier University

2min
pages 68-69

Second Response to Joe MacMaster: How Does One Conceptualize Outside of Conceptual Space? Eris-Jake Donohue, Texas A&M University

3min
pages 82-85

First Response to Diego Lavado Emily Matthews, St. Francis Xavier University

2min
pages 66-67

The Elimination of Metaphysics Ken Matheson, St. Francis Xavier University

14min
pages 42-51

On Our Birthright: An Exploration of Hegel’s Two Agencies Diego Lavado, Texas A&M University

12min
pages 58-65

Second Response to Ken Matheson Simon Holmes, Texas A&M University

3min
pages 56-57

First Response to Ken Matheson Daniel Lightsey, Texas A&M University

3min
pages 52-55

First Response to Francis Gregg: The Place of Artificial Intelligence in Psychological Therapy Aidan Peters, St. Francis Xavier University

10min
pages 32-39

Artificial Intelligence and Therapy Francis Gregg, Texas A&M University

10min
pages 24-31

Eric Nash, Texas A&M University

7min
pages 20-23

Second Response to Francis Gregg Spencer MacKeen, St. Francis Xavier University

3min
pages 40-41

First Response to Marshall Gillis Archana Murthy, Texas A&M University

4min
pages 18-19

Wasting Away in Megista Genê-Ville: The Blending of Change and Rest Marshall Gillis, St. Francis Xavier University

18min
pages 8-17

The International Virtual Conference of Undergraduate Philosophy

1min
page 5

Acknowledgments

0
pages 6-7
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