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Donation challenge
December 15, 2007
Dr Stanley Ho has pledged HK$500 million to support HKU. Under the “Stanley Ho Alumni Challenge” (何鴻燊校友挑戰計劃) every dollar you give will be matched dollar for dollar, up to HK$100 million a year for the next few years. This means if you donate $100 to the Philosophy Department, it will receive $200.
Now is a great time to help support the Philosophy Department! Your donation can make a difference. For example, even small sums of money can help us provide more prizes for our best students.
For more details about the donation challenge, see this page. Please contact the Dept if you would like to make a donation.

The hottest thing in philosophy – Not scifi, but “x-phi”
December 9, 2007Dr. Hawley found an article in the NY Times Magazine about the “experimental philosophy” movement. The article mentions Hong Kong! Some of the research was carried out by Dr. Ron Mallon when he was in the HKU Philosophy Department.

Professor Ci won Research Output Prize
November 28, 2007Professor Ci Jiwei has been awarded a HKU Research Output Prize for his latest book, The Two Faces of Justice (Harvard University Press, 2006).


Philosophy good for your career
November 27, 2007Professor Chris Fraser from CUHK found this article in the UK newspaper Guardian:
I think, therefore I earn
Philosophy graduates are suddenly all the rage with employers. What can they possibly have to offer?
“A degree in philosophy? What are you going to do with that then?”
Philosophy students will tell you they’ve been asked this question more times than they care to remember.
“The response people seem to want is a cheery shrug and a jokey ‘don’t know’,” says Joe Cunningham, 20, a final-year philosophy undergraduate at Heythrop College, University of London.
A more accurate comeback, according to the latest statistics, is “just about anything I want”.
Figures from the Higher Education Statistics Agency show philosophy graduates, once derided as unemployable layabouts, are in growing demand from employers. The number of all graduates in full-time and part-time work six months after graduation has risen by 9% between 2002-03 and 2005-06; for philosophy graduates it has gone up by 13%.
It is in the fields of finance, property development, health, social work and the nebulous category of “business” that those versed in Plato and Kant are most sought after. In “business”, property development, renting and research, 76% more philosophy graduates were employed in 2005-06 than in 2002-03. In health and social work, 9% more.
The Higher Education Careers Services Unit (Hecsu), which also collates data of this kind, agrees philosophers are finding it easier to secure work. Its figures show that, in 2001, 9.9% of philosophy graduates were unemployed six months after graduation. In 2006, just 6.7% were. On average, 6% of all graduates were unemployed six months after graduation.
In 2001, 9.3% of philosophy graduates were in business and finance roles six months after graduation. In 2006, 12.2% were. In 2001, 5.3% were in marketing and advertising six months after graduation. In 2006, 7.3% were.
It is particularly significant that the percentage finding full-time work six months after graduation has risen, since the number of philosophy graduates has more than doubled between 2001 and 2006. In 2001, UK universities produced 895 graduates with a first degree in the discipline; in 2006, they produced 2,040.
And it is so popular with its graduates that many go on to postgraduate study rather than join the workforce. Charlie Ball, who runs Hecsu’s labour market analysis, says: “More philosophy graduates are being produced, and they are much less likely to be unemployed than five years ago.”
Philosophers have always come in handy in the workplace with their grounding in analytical thinking. Why, only now, are they so prized by employers?
Open mind
Lucy Adams, human resources director of Serco, a services business and a consultancy firm, says: “Philosophy lies at the heart of our approach to recruiting and developing our leadership, and our leaders. We need people who have the ability to look for different approaches and take an open mind to issues. These skills are promoted by philosophical approaches.”
Fiona Czerniawska, director of the Management Consultancies Association’s think tank, says: “A philosophy degree has trained the individual’s brain and given them the ability to provide management-consulting firms with the sort of skills that they require and clients demand. These skills can include the ability to be very analytical, provide clear and innovative thinking, and question assumptions.”
Deborah Bowman, associate dean for widening participation at St George’s, University of London, which offers medicine and health sciences courses, says philosophers are increasingly sought after by the NHS: “Graduates of philosophy who come in to graduate-entry medicine, or to nursing courses, are very useful. Growth areas in the NHS include clinical ethicists, who assist doctors and nurses. Medical ethics committees and ethics training courses for staff are also growing. More and more people are needed to comment on moral issues in healthcare, such as abortion.”
Being on an ethics committee of the NHS is something Cunningham is looking into. “It would be a direct application of my skills,” he says.
The popular philosopher Simon Blackburn, a professor at Cambridge University, sees the improving career prospects of philosophy graduates as part of a wider change of public perception. “I guess the public image of a philosopher has tended to concentrate on an ancient Greek in a toga, or some unwashed hippy lying around not doing very much,” he says. “I do detect a change in the way the public sees philosophers. I have been pleasantly surprised by the number of people who come to philosophy events nowadays.”
Blackburn can take some credit. The user-friendly books on philosophy that he and other philosophers such as AC Grayling, Stephen Law, Julian Baggini, Nigel Warburton and Alain de Botton write have made their way into the mainstream.
Course design
Those in charge of designing university courses have also become sensitive to claims that their subject has no relevance to the modern day.
Blackburn says: “In the years after the second world war, there was a sort of Wittgensteinian air about philosophy, which meant practitioners were proud of the fact that they appeared slightly esoteric and were not doing anything practical. There was very little political philosophy, and moral philosophy was disengaged from people’s actual moral problems, and that did lead to the subject being marginalised. That has changed. Political philosophy is a central part of the Cambridge course.”
Jonathan Lowe, professor of philosophy at Durham University, agrees that courses’ concern with the real world has accelerated in the past five years.
“It’s probably because of the new financial arrangements for students that courses have had to prove they are applicable to real world issues,” he says. “And the teaching methods have changed. There are more student-led sessions. Students have to argue on their feet and give presentations. That probably shows at interviews.”
News that employers and the public hold philosophers in higher regard should presumably be cause for celebration? Not entirely, says Blackburn. “It is also slightly worrying, because people turn to philosophers when they feel less confident and more insecure.”
http://education.guardian.co.uk/higher/news/story/0,,2213665,00.html

[Seminar] Goldstein: Unconscious decisions, Banburismus and the Brain
September 28, 2007Wednesday Oct 3rd 5:00 – 7:00 pm
Main Building, Room 305
University of Hong Kong
Unconscious decisions, Banburismus and the Brain
Prof. Laurence Goldstein
University of Kent
Abstract
Banburismus is a process originally invented by Alan Turing to sort promising coding hypotheses from non-promising ones in attempting to decipher a coded message. There exists a neural counterpart to this process responsible for our unconscious decisions and which accounts for the behaviour of an individual subject of a Sorites-experiment. This paper relates that empirical finding to a philosophical solution of the general Sorites paradox.
NB: Professor Goldstein is one of the founders of the HKU BCogsc Programme, and was the Head of the HKU Philosophy Department.
Co-sponsored by:
Cognitive Science program (BCogSc)
Philosophy Department

Dr. Cook – recent activities
September 13, 2007Forthcoming publication:
“The Septième Promenade of the Rêveries: A Peculiar Account of Rousseau’s Botany?” In J. O’Neal, ed., The Nature of Rousseau’s Reveries, special volume of Studies on Voltaire and the Eighteenth Century (early 2008).
Invited speaker:
“La traduction de Rousseau en tant que réception,” colloquium Equipe Rousseau, Université de Paris-Sorbonne, Paris, France, 24 May 2008.
Colloquium on botanical gardens and herbaria, Linnean Society, London, 15 May 2008.
“The Herbarium as an instrument of social reform,” Herbarium Workshop, Institut für Geschichte der Medizin, Naturwissenschaft und Technik, Ernst-Haeckel-Haus, Friedrich-Schiller-Universität Jena, Germany, 11 December 2007.
“The disciple critiques the Master: Jean-Jacques Rousseau and Linnaean nomenclature,” Les mots et les choses au XVIIIe siècle: la science, “langue bien faite?” Université Lumière-Lyon 2, 22 September 2007.
Recent Conference papers
“Between Praxis and Episteme: the herbarium as boundary object,” International Society for the History, Philosophy, and Social Studies of Biology, Exeter, U.K., 26 July 2007.
“Communicating science at a distance: Jean-Jacques Rousseau’s botanical correspondence,” Twelfth International Congress on the Enlightenment, Montpellier, France, 10 July 2007.
“Early-Modern European ‘linguistic imperialism’ in botany: The case of Chinese Plants,” British Society for the History of Science, University of Manchester, U.K., 28 June 2007.

Two CERG research grants for HKU Philosophy
September 12, 2007The results for the 2007-08 Hong Kong Research Grants Council (RGC) Competitive Earmarked Research Grant (CERG) exercise were announced over the summer. Dr. Cook and Professor Hansen each obtained a large grant. Congratulations to them!
Professor Hansen
A philosophical approach to the Daode Jing
Dr Cook
Jean-Jacques Rousseau and Botany, the salutary science

Conference on Buddhism and Daoism
September 12, 2007Emptiness and nothingness: Conference on Buddhism and Daoism

Funded by the Louis Cha Fund for East/West Studies
Friday 5 – Sat 6, October, 2007
Dept of Philosophy
The University of Hong Kong
This conference is open only to invited participants. For more details, please contact Dr. Joe Lau
Speakers
Miri Albahari, University of Western Australia
“Clarifying the nature of witness-consciousness”
Graham Priest, University of Melbourne
“The structure of emptiness”
Chad Hansen, University of Hong Kong
“Dao as a mereological non-thing”
Jonathan Chan, Baptist University of Hong Kong
“How to understand Dao – A pragmatic approach”
Leo Cheung Kam Ching, Baptist University of Hong Kong
“Laozi’s Dao as a Structured Whole and Its Ineffability”
Chris Fraser, Chinese University of Hong Kong
“Psychological Emptiness in the Zhuangzi”
Zhihua Yao, Chinese University of Hong Kong
“Empty Subject Terms in Buddhist Logic”
Joe Lau, University of Hong Kong
“Emptiness, dispositionalism, and conceptual constructions”

2007-2008 semester
September 11, 2007- Dr. Martin is now the Chair of the Department.
- Professor Ci will be on sabbatical in the 2007-08 academic year.