Lecture Series in Practical Agency: Quinn White
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Lecture Series in Practical Agency: Quinn White

By Yeoh Tiong Lay Centre for Politics, Philosophy & Law

Overview

The Yeoh Tiong Lay Centre for Politics, Philosophy and Law is delighted to host Prof Quinn White for the 25/26 Lecture Series programme.

Title

'I love you,' 'Don't worry about it': A theory of non-deontic normative powers.

Abstract

Normative powers are often assumed or defined to be abilities to change requirements by one’s say so. Promise and command generate duties (and so requirement); consent waives them. I argue that alongside such deontic powers, we enjoy a suite of non-deontic powers: abilities to shape non-requiring interpersonal norms by our say so. Suppose that we are meeting and we explicitly agreed to talk for an hour, but I see that the day is really getting away from you; it would be helpful to you to end early. My keeping you is permissible but still interpersonally defective—it’s rude, imposing, graceless, etc. You can change that by your say so; you could, for instance, tell me “don’t worry about it!” Your say so is not deontic consent as it did not change what was permissible; but it did make a normative difference, rendering my carrying on no longer graceless or rude. I defend a set of three atomic non-deontic powers that I call “allowance,” “assurance,” and “pressure” (analogues of consent, promise, and command). Molecular powers, most importantly the power exercised in telling another “I love you,” are built out of atomic ones. The upshot is a novel theory of ubiquitous, understudied normative phenomena and a picture on which the deontic and non-deontic dimensions of interpersonal life are continuous.

Speaker Bio

Quinn White is an Assistant Professor of philosophy at Harvard University. From 2020-22, he was at the University of Nebraska–Lincoln, and received my Ph.D. from MIT in 2019. His research focuses on the ethics of love and interpersonal relationships, which, he argues, is pretty much all of ethics. He has projects in honesty and discretion, partiality, consent, normative powers more generally, paying it forward, and forgiveness. He also has interests in love and the special permissions and obligations it can bring—and, perhaps more strangely, explores the idea that love of all, agape, can serve as a (even the) central ideal of practical reasoning.

Time

17:00-19:00

Date

Wednesday 10 December 2025

Location

Ante Room SW1.17, Somerset House East Wing

Strand Campus, Strand, London, WC2R 2LS

Category: Other

Good to know

Highlights

  • 2 hours
  • In person

Location

Somerset House East Wing

Strand

London WC2R 1LA United Kingdom

How do you want to get there?

Organized by

Free
Dec 10 · 5:00 PM GMT