Dr Anastasia N Artemyev Berg

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Dr Anastasia N Artemyev Berg Corpus Christi College Trumpington Street Cambridge, Cambridgeshire CB2 1RH (+44) 7951 716464 aa2044@cam.ac.uk http://anastasiaberg.com Employment Education 2017- Dorothy and Gaylord Donnelley Postdoctoral Research Fellow in, Corpus Christi College, Cambridge University (three year appointment) Specialization Dissertation 2017 PhD Joint Degree with the Committee on Social Thought and the Department of, (August 2017) 2013 MA Committee on Social Thought, 2009 BA with Honors in English and American Literature and Language, Harvard University AOS Kant, Ethics, Moral Psychology (esp. Theory of the Emotions) AOC Early Modern, 19 th Century German Title Freedom, Feeling and Character: The Unity of Reason and Sensibility in Kant s Practical Committee Robert Pippin (Chair), James Conant, Matthew Boyle, Stephen Engstrom Abstract The dominant reception of Kant accords him the view that our capacity for feeling and our capacity for self-determination are essentially independent of one another. The negative aim of the dissertation is to argue against this standard interpretation; the positive aim is to offer an alternative. I demonstrate that the standard interpretation is not only alien to our ordinary ways of self-understanding but that it moreover threatens the internal coherence of the Kantian account itself. I develop an alternative by examining Kant s account of how reason motivates the agent: first, in the account of the feeling of moral respect, and, second, in the account of moral character. I argue that moral respect does not name one particular feeling among many but that implicit in Kant s account is idea that human feeling is a unique mode of self-consciousness disclosing the subject to herself as rational and efficacious, i.e., as a moral agent. The distinctively human capacity for feeling emerges as the form of self-consciousness constitutive of practical agency, i.e., of freedom. This understanding of feeling allows us to reevaluate Kant s account of moral character. I argue that character is the activity of maintaining one s identity as a practical agent an activity that consists in maintaining the agent s structure of motivation. I then attend to the apparent tension between Kant s rigorism the claim that an agent is of either wholly good or wholly evil character and his nuanced account of the grades of moral imperfection. To do this we must recognize the acquisition of moral character as a form of rational accomplishment: the development and determination of our rational capacities for feeling. Thus, on this alternative interpretation of Kant s account, feeling and character do not oppose, but are rather the constitutive conditions of freedom.

Under Review for Publication You Can t Move without Being Moved: A Kantian Account of Human Feeling and its Ethical Significance Invited Presentations Feb 2017 Feb 2017 Feb 2017 Nov 2017 Jun 2017 Jun 2017 TBD Sources of Knowledge: A Workshop with Andrea Kern, TBD Society of German Idealism and Romanticism, APA Session on Conceptions of Matter and Form, 2018 meeting of the Central Division of the APA TBD German Workshop, On Wittgenstein s Lecture on Ethics, Cambridge University Feeling Summer Conference on Irad Kimhi s Manuscript, Thinking and Being, Leipzig University An Argument Against the Incorporation Thesis Hylomorphism in Kant and German Idealism Workshop, Zentrum für Literaturund Kulturforschung (ZfL), Berlin Refereed Conference Presentations Nov 2017 Jun 2017 Apr 2017 Apr 2017 Mar 2017 Jun 2016 Apr 2016 Mar 2016 Sep 2015 Jul 2015 Evil or Only Immature? Reconciling Freedom and the Complexity Of Moral Evil, 2017 Southern North American Kant Society Study Group, Tulane University You Can t Move without Being Moved: On the Moral Significance of The Human Capacity for Feeling, Leuven Kant Conference, KU Leuven You Can t Move without Being Moved: On the Moral Significance of The Human Capacity for Feeling, Eastern Study Group Meeting of the North American Kant Society, George Washington University. (Recipient of the travel prize for best graduate student paper. Candidate for the Marcus Herz prize) Evil or Only Immature? On Acquiring Moral Character in Kant, The Conference on the Problem Evil in European Modern and Contemporary, Bishop s University You Can t Move without Being Moved: On the Moral Significance of The Human Capacity for Feeling, The Northwestern Society for the Theory of Ethics and Politics (NUSTEP), Eleventh Annual Conference, Northwestern University Moral Character, Kant s Gesinnung and Aristotle s Hexis. Summer Conference on the work of Aryeh Kosman, Leipzig University. How Can There Be Rational Feeling? Monistic Critique of the Incorporation Thesis, The 2016 Graduate Conference at UIUC Making Sense of Kant s Moral Respect: A Case for Non-Pathological Feeling, 2016 APA Central Division Meeting (Winner of a graduate student travel stipend) Kant s Gesinnung as Aristotelian Energeia: the Deed Outside Time, UK Kant Society Annual Conference jointly organized by North American Kant Society, on Kant on Politics and Religion On The Unity of Sensibility and Reason in Practical Life in Engstrom s Kant, Summer Conference on the work of Stephen Engstrom, Leipzig University

Commentaries May 2016 Comments on Garrett Bredeson s Reinach, Natorp, and Early Phenomenology s Engagement with the Kantian Tradition. North American Kant Society Third Biennial Meeting, Emory University. (Invited) University Workshop Presentations May 2017 Apr 2017 Jun 2016 Mar 2016 Nov 2015 Habit and Responsibility, An Aristotelian Proposal, Practical Workshop, Evil or Only Immature? On Acquiring Character in Kant, German Workshop, The Unity of Logos and Erōs in Plato s Phaedrus The unity of Soul and Body of a Living Being, Literature and Workshop, Imputation of Moral Constitution, Practical Workshop, University of Chicago. Moral Respect, A Case for Non-Pathological feeling, German Workshop,. Honours 2017 Travel Prize for best graduate student paper, Eastern Reading Group, North American Kant Society. (Candidate for Marcus Herz prize). 2016-2017 William Rainey Harper Dissertation Year Fellowship Dissertation Completion Fellowship, 2016-2017 John U. Nef Fellowship, Dissertation Writing Fellowship (Declined) 2016 Graduate Student Travel Stipend to Central APA 2015-2016 John U. Nef Fellowship, Dissertation Writing Fellowship Division of the Social Sciences Summer Research Grant 2015 2014-2015 Marshall and Deborah Wais Fellowship, Dissertation Writing Fellowship 2014 John U. Nef Summer Language Study Fellowship 2009-2014 Fellowship, Tuition and stipend for five years of graduate study 2011 John U. Nef Summer Language Study Fellowship Teaching Experience Stand-alone Instructor W 2017 S 2016 W 2015 Women and Madness:, Literature and Psychoanalysis Self-designed upper-level undergraduate course. The Emotions: and Psychoanalysis, Self-designed upper-level undergraduate course, listed in departments of:, and Comparative Human Development. Philosophical Perspectives on The Humanities II:, Humanities Core Course: Early Modern and Literature

F 2015 Philosophical Perspectives on The Humanities I: Humanities Core Course: Ancient and Literature Course Assistant S 2015 W 2014 S 2013 W 2013 S 2011 W 2010 Introduction to Ethics Course Assistant for Professor Ben Callard Greek Thought and Literature II, Writing Intern for Prof. Alain Bresson Designed seminars on academic writing for first-year college students, in conjunction with a Humanities Core course, and graded student papers Philosophical Perspectives on The Humanities III, Writing Intern for Prof. Anubav Vasudevan Designed seminars on academic writing for first-year college students, in conjunction with a Humanities Core course, and graded student papers Human Being and Citizen II, Writing Intern for Prof. Justin Steinberg Designed seminars on academic writing for first-year college students, in conjunction with a Humanities Core course, and graded student papers Classics of Social and Political Thought III, Course Assistant for Prof. Lisa Wedeen Classics of Social and Political Thought II, Course Assistant for Dr. Mara Marin Pedagogical Training July 2016 Seminar on Course Design, Center for Teaching & Learning, Winter 2016 Individual Teaching Consultation, Center for Teaching & Learning, Observed and taped by a professional teaching consultant, met individually to receive feedback and pedagogical advice Mar 2015 Climate-focused pedagogy workshop: diversity and inclusion. Department, Sep 2015 Workshop on Teaching in the College, Center for Teaching & Learning, Two-day intensive training for serving as a lecturer in undergraduate classes Sep 2014 Workshop on Teaching in the College, Center for Teaching & Learning, Two-day intensive training for serving as a teaching assistant in undergraduate classes Spring 2013 Pedagogies of Writing, Writing Center, Quarter-long course on teaching effective writing in humanities core classes Service Article Referee for Kantian Review 2016-2017 Coordinator, German Workshop 2015-2017 Student Affairs Assistant, Committee on Social Thought Chair-student liaison, fielded prospective students inquiries, coordinated visits, maintained department website 2014-2016 Coordinator, Committee on Social Thought Colloquium Invited visiting speakers, students and faculty to present, made travel arrangements,

organized dinners and receptions, advertised events Research Languages Native English, Hebrew, Russian Professional German Non-Academic Editorial Work Editor for the Point Magazine Graduate Coursework (* denotes audit) Ancient of Mind Kant and 19 th C. German philosophy Analytic Plato, Laws: N. Tarcov (A 09) Plato s Aesthetics: G. R. Lear (A 09)* Plato on Beauty and Truth: G. R. Lear (A 12)* Plato s Sophist: I. Kimhi (W12)* Self-Consciousness / Unconsciousness: J. Lear & S. Rödl (W 10)* Subjects, Consciousness and Self-Consciousness: C. Peacock (W 11)* Thinking and Being I: I. Kimhi (W 12)* Thinking and Being II: I. Kimhi (S 12)* Language and Self-Consciousness: D. Finkelstein & I. Kimhi (S 14)* Theories of Judgments and Propositions, I. Kimhi (W 14)* Kant s Ethics: C. Vogler (A 10) History of, Kant and the 19 th Century: M. Forster (S 10)* Kant s Transcendental Deduction: R. Pippin & J. Conant (S 10) Practical Reason: S. Engstrom (W 14)* Hegel s Science of Logic: R. Pippin (W 12) Hegel s Science of Logic: R. Pippin (W 14 )* Hegel s Science of Subjective Logic: R. Pippin (W 15)* Birth and Death of the Metaphysical Proof of the Existence of God, Descartes and Kant: J. L. Marion (S 10)* Wittgenstein s Later : D. Finkelstein (S 11) Wittgenstein s Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus: J. Conant (W 12)* Wittgenstein s Philosophical Investigations: I. Kimhi (A 14)* Forms of Philosophical Skepticism: J. Conant (W 11)

References Robert Pippin (Dissertation Committee Chair) Evelyn Stefansson Nef Distinguished Service Professor of Social Thought,, and in the College r-pippin@uchicago.edu James Conant (Dissertation Committee member) Chester D. Tripp Professor of Humanities, Professor of, and Professor in the College jconant@uchicago.edu Matthew Boyle (Dissertation Committee member) Professor of mbboyle@uchicago.edu Stephen Engstrom (Dissertation Committee member) Professor of University of Pittsburgh engstrom@pitt.edu David Wellbery LeRoy T. and Margaret Deffenbaugh Carlson University Professor in the Department of Germanic Studies, Comparative Literature, Committee on Social Thought, and the College wellbery@uchicago.edu Irad Kimhi Associate Professor John U. Nef Committee on Social Thought and the College ikimhi@uchicago.edu Jason Bridges (teaching reference) Associate Professor of bridges@uchicago.edu

Dissertation Overview Title: The Unity of Reason and Sensibility in Kant's Practical Kant s moral philosophy is often interpreted as turning on a sharp opposition between freedom and feeling. I argue in my dissertation that not only is this a misreading of Kant, but that he, properly read, is one of the most forceful critics of such a dualistic conception of our practical cognitive capacities and is moreover an insightful guide toward a coherent non-dualistic view of this relationship. The dominant reception of Kant attributes to him a picture in which we are essentially rational, free beings capable of self-determination, and yet also are at subject to our feelings forces produced by nature and habituation, outside of our rational control. On this interpretation, Kant is but one more proponent, albeit a very influential one, of the traditional view that emotions are irrational and therefore at best a matter of indifference and at worst an obstacle to a life of freedom and rationality. This putative dualism, I argue in Chapter 1, is not only alien to our common ways of selfunderstanding but it threatens the internal coherence of the Kantian account. It renders incoherent the idea that we can incorporate the pursuit of the objects of our emotions, i.e., of our particular concerns, into even morally permissible actions, and, more gravely still, it renders unintelligible the idea of moral motivation itself: In a picture where our affective lives are divorced from our lives as free and rational beings, it becomes impossible to see how a concern with the right thing to do could ever per se be what moves us to act. Commentators have recognized that the feeling of moral respect holds the key to Kant s understanding the relation of reason and feeling in Kant. I argue that the manner in which they have attempted to spell out the role of respect in Kant s practical philosophy nevertheless fails to appreciate what is philosophically most distinctive and profound in Kant s account of the distinctive role of feeling in the life of a practical rational agent. In Chapter 2, I argue that implicit in Kant s account of the feeling of moral respect is the remarkable and previously unrecognized idea that human emotion is a unique mode of selfconsciousness of self-revelation and self-understanding one which discloses the subject to herself as rational, embodied and capable of freely determining how she acts in the world. Human emotion, the distinctive human capacity for feeling, emerges on this account as the form of self-consciousness constitutive of practical agency, i.e., of freedom. This reading of moral respect opens an entirely new perspective on the topic of moral character. On standard accounts of Kant s practical philosophy character is interpreted as an aggregate of dispositions to act that are due to forms of mere empirical habituation. This renders completely mysterious how character is supposed to play the role that it does on Kant s account. I argue in Chapter 3, drawing on an Aristotelian understanding of the logical structure of capacities and activities, that character is rather the activity of maintaining one s identity as a practical agent. In Chapter 4, I go on to argue that maintaining a practical self-understanding is grounded, in turn, in the cultivation of capacities for feeling, which reflect and reveal our understanding of ourselves as rational. They thereby constitute a necessary condition of our being subject to the demands of reason. Finally, I argue that the idea of the the acquisition of character must play a wholly different role in Kant s practical philosophy than that accorded to it on standard readings. In my reading, the acquisition of character emerges as a rational accomplishment: the development and determination of our uniquely rational capacities for feeling. The resulting account of feeling and moral character not only resolves the problem of moral motivation that has also vexed much Kant commentary but offers an understanding of practical cognition in which nothing can be further from the truth than the idea that our capacity of feeling is necessarily a threat to our freedom and an obstacle to ethical life. On the contrary, it emerges as a necessary condition of both.