KJuris: Social Conventions as Sui Generis

KJuris: Social Conventions as Sui Generis

By KJuris at Dickson Poon School of Law

Overview

The Yeoh Tiong Lay Centre for Politics, Philosophy and Law is delighted to host Prof Dale Dorsey for the 2025/26 KJuris programme.

Title:

Social Conventions as Sui Generis.

Abstract:

Others’ expectations of our behavior, and our expectations of theirs, frequently involve social conventions: the right way to queue for a bus, how to behave in a concert audience, how to conduct oneself in the presence of a distinguished guest, the written and unwritten rules of professional sports. Furthermore, our expectations seem reasonable: these social conventions do appear to exert a normative pull. But why? In this talk, I argue for the suggestion that social conventions are normatively significant because they are, in fact, the social conventions in which we participate. I canvass and reject an assimilationist alternative, according to which social conventions are significant because they are morally significant. Instead, I hold that the normativity of social conventions is direct.

Speaker bio:

Dale Dorsey is Professor of Moral Philosophy and Tutorial Fellow at Somerville College, Oxford. He works broadly in ethics, including metaethics and the history of ethics.

Location:

Ante Room SW1.17 Somerset House East Wing, Strand Campus, King's College London

Time:

17:00-19:00

Category: Community, Other

Good to know

Highlights

  • 2 hours
  • In person

Location

SW1.17, Somerset House East Wing

Strand

London WC2R 2LS United Kingdom

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Organized by

KJuris at Dickson Poon School of Law

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Free
Dec 17 · 5:00 PM GMT