Robert Brandom är University Distinguished Professor of Philosophy at University of Pittsburgh. Hans intresse ligger huvudsakligen i språkfilosofin, medvetandefilosofin och logiken. Han är mest känd för sitt projekt att utföra den Wittgensteinianska uppgiften att förklara mening genom användning.
Tidigare Pufendorfföreläsare är: Lisa Barrett (2024), Jonathan Dancy (2023), Amie L. Thomason (2022), Thomas Metzinger (2021), Daniel Dennett (2020), Susan Wolf (2019), Simon Blackburn (2018), Frans de Waal (2017), Michael Bratman (2016), Cristina Bicchieri (2015), Herbert H. Clark (2014), Christine Korsgaard (2013), Nancy Cartwright (2012), Nicholas Humphrey (2011), T.M. Scanlon (2010), Robert Stalnaker (2009), François Recanati (2008), Patricia Churchland (2007), John R. Searle (2006), Philip Pettit (2005), David Armstrong (2004), and Margaret Boden (2003).
In English:
The Department of Philosophy at Lund University is delighted to announce that Professor Robert Brandom is this year’s Pufendorf laureate. He will deliver three lectures on the topic “Vocabularies of Reason”: 20 May: “Reasoning and Representing”, 21 May: “Logic and the Structure of Reasons” and 22 May: “Roles and Reasons”. The three lectures will take place at 15.15-17 via Zoom. More information will be provided.
Robert Brandom is a University Distinguished Professor of Philosophy at University of Pittsburgh. His interests lie mainly in the philosophy of language, the philosophy of mind and logic. He is best known for his project to fulfil the Wittgensteinian task of explaining meaning as use.
Previous Pufendorf Lectures: Lisa Barrett (2024), Jonathan Dancy (2023), Amie L. Thomason (2022), Thomas Metzinger (2021), Daniel Dennett (2020), Susan Wolf (2019), Simon Blackburn (2018), Frans de Waal (2017), Michael Bratman (2016), Cristina Bicchieri (2015), Herbert H. Clark (2014), Christine Korsgaard (2013), Nancy Cartwright (2012), Nicholas Humphrey (2011), T.M. Scanlon (2010), Robert Stalnaker (2009), François Recanati (2008), Patricia Churchland (2007), John R. Searle (2006), Philip Pettit (2005), David Armstrong (2004), and Margaret Boden (2003).