Conference Program
The 45th International Hume Society Conference
Hosted by the Institute of Philosophy,
Research Centre for the Humanities,
Hungarian Academy of Sciences
Budapest, Hungary
July 23th-27th 2018
Directors
Miren Boehm (University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee)
Tamas Demeter (Hungarian Academy of Sciences)
Mark Spencer (Brock University)
Margaret Watkins (Saint Vincent College)
The Hume Society is pleased to announce its 45th annual conference.
Program:
Monday, 23 July
Rachel Cohon (University at Albany, SUNY)
Tito Magri (Sapienza University of Rome)
Amy Schmitter (University of Alberta)
1) Pedro Faria (University of Cambridge): �Justice, Economic Activity and the Reframing of Hume�s Social Theory, 1740-1752�
Commentator: Ferenc Horcher (Hungarian Academy of Sciences)
2) Sarah Paquette (Portland State University): �Belief Revisions in the Context of Hume�s Treatise and Contemporary Psychology�
Commentator: Katharina Paxman (Brigham Young University)
Tuesday, 24 July
1) Nathan Sasser (Greenville Technical College): �The Vulgar Belief in Body is Defeasibly Justified�
Commentator: Yongguang Nong (University of Edinburgh)
2) Mikko Tolonen (University of Helsinki) and Ville Vaara (University of Helsinki): �A Quantitative Approach to Royalist and Whig Sources in Hume�s History of England�
Commentator: Mark Towsey (University of Liverpool)
1) Alexis Glenn (Brown University): �Hume�s History as Virtuous Hermeneutics: Toward a Humean Sense of Piety�
Commentator: Gregory Todd (Independent Scholar)
2) Dan Kervick (Independent Scholar): �Hume Against the Geometers: Extension and Geometry in Hume�s Treatise�
Commentator: Donald Baxter (University of Connecticut)
James Harris (University of St. Andrews)
Hsueh Qu (National University of Singapore)
Jacqueline Taylor (University of San Francisco)
1) Jason Fisette (University of Nevada, Reno): �Politeness and the Common Good in Hume�s Political Philosophy�
Commentator: Manuel Vasquez Villavicencio (Universit� du Qu�bec � Montr�al)
2) Todd Ryan (Trinity College): �Philo�s Second Circumstance: Malebranche and the General Law Theodicy in Hume�s Dialogues
Commentator: Lewis Powell (University at Buffalo, SUNY)
Wednesday, 25 July
Author: Dennis Rasmussen (Tufts University): The Infidel and the Professor: David Hume, Adam Smith, and the Friendship That Shaped Modern Thought
Critics:
Michael Gill (University of Arizona)
John Scott (University of California, Davis)
1) Lorenzo Greco (University of Oxford): �Varieties of Humean Virtue Ethics�
Commentator: Jennifer Welchman (University of Alberta)
2) Tom Pye (King�s College, Cambridge): �Hume, Montesquieu, and English History�
Commentator: Marc Hanvelt (Carleton University)
1) Laura Nicol� (Lichtenberg Kolleg): �The Line and the Circle: the Natural History of Religion and the French�
Commentator: Andre Willis (Brown University)
2) Dan O�Brien (Oxford Brookes University): �Hume and Virtue Epistemology�
Commentator: Ann Levey (University of Calgary)
1) Bowen Chan (University of Toronto): �Scepticism, Custom, and Hume: Philosophy�s Place in Common Life�
Commentator: Kar�nn Durland (Austin College)
2) Getty Lustila (Brown University): �Enthusiasm and Modesty in Hume�s History�
Commentator: Liz Goodnick (Metropolitan State University)
Thursday, 26 July
Kate Abramson (Indiana University, Bloomington)
Stefanie Rocknak (Hartwick College)
Anik Waldow (University of Sydney)
1) Lorraine Besser (Middlebury College): �A Humean Theory of Compassion�
Commentator: Esther Kroeker (University of Antwerp)
2) Naohito Mori (Kochi University): �On Whether the Tudor Government was an �Absolute Monarchy�: Reconsidering Hume�s View of the Rise of the Civilized Society�
Commentator: Max Skjonsberg (University of York)
1) Peter Millican (University of Oxford): �Hume�s Decisive Turn Away from Egoism�
Commentator: John P. Wright (Central Michigan University)
2) Wade Robison (Rochester Institute of Technology): �Hume, Descartes, and Adam: Hume�s Project�
Commentator: Karen Valihora (York University)
Friday, 27 July
1) Alison McIntyre (Wellesley College): �Does Anger Represent Its Object as Evil? Hume vs. Malebranche and Hutcheson at T 2.3.3.5�
Commentator: Angela Calvo de Saavedra (Pontificia Universidad Javeriana)
2) Ryu Susato (Keio University): ��Barometer of the Nation�: Hume�s View of Usury and Interest in the History of England�
Commentator: Spiros Tegos (University of Crete)
1) Keith Hankins (Chapman University) and John Thrasher (Monash University): �The Puzzle of Hume�s Politics�
Commentator: William Lemmens (University of Antwerp)
2) Christopher Williams (University of Nevada, Reno): �Absent Matters of Fact�
Commentator: Ruth Weintraub (Tel-Aviv University)
1) Wendel de Holanda Pereira Campelo (Federal University of Minas Gerais): �Hume�s Principle concerning the Existence of Mind-Independent Objects�
Commentator: Benjamin Nelson (University of Connecticut)
2) Amyas Merivale (University of Oxford): �The Integrity of Hume�s Four Dissertations�
Commentator: Jane McIntyre