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Tim Crane, President/CEO, Wintrust, joins John Williams to talk about the upcoming Wintrust Magnificent Mile Lights Festival! Tim explains what the festival means for the central business district and how you can spend your entire day enjoying the city. Tim also discusses the health of the banking business and his forecast for Chicago business in 2025.
Tim Crane, President/CEO, Wintrust, joins John Williams to talk about the upcoming Wintrust Magnificent Mile Lights Festival! Tim explains what the festival means for the central business district and how you can spend your entire day enjoying the city. Tim also discusses the health of the banking business and his forecast for Chicago business in 2025.
Tim Crane, President/CEO, Wintrust, joins John Williams to talk about the upcoming Wintrust Magnificent Mile Lights Festival! Tim explains what the festival means for the central business district and how you can spend your entire day enjoying the city. Tim also discusses the health of the banking business and his forecast for Chicago business in 2025.
Steve Grzanich has the business news of the day with the Wintrust Business Minute. The head of Chicago’s Wintrust Financial says the bank will be a buyer not a seller as it moves forward. CEO Tim Crane has been in charge at Wintrust since last May and says he hopes the bank will make new […]
Tim Crane, President/CEO, Wintrust and Kimberly Bares, President/CEO, The Magnificent Mile Association, join Jon Hansen to talk about the upcoming Wintrust Magnificent Mile Lights Festival!
Tim Crane, the President of Wintrust, along with The Wintrust Magnificent Mile Lights Festival founder Marc Schulman joins Lisa Dent to discuss the country’s largest evening holiday parade celebration happening Saturday, November 19, that will feature performances by The Pointer Sisters, Debbie Gibson, and more! Follow The Lisa Dent Show on Twitter:Follow @LisaDentSpeaksFollow @SteveBertrand Follow […]
In our new CONVOCO! Podcast Corinne M. Flick speaks with Tim Crane, Professor of Philosophy at the Central European University (CEU) in Vienna, about:Why Equality is about Dignity and Respect
In this episode of the Parker's Pensées Podcast, I'm joined by Dr. Tim Crane (legendary philosopher) to discuss several of his papers. We discuss Dr. Frank Jackson's knowledge argument and what it really proves, Leibniz's Mill argument and the explanatory gap, and theories of mental content and intentionality. Find Dr. Crane's papers here: http://www.timcrane.com/ If you like this podcast, then support it on Patreon for $3, $5 or more a month. Any amount helps, and for $5 you get a Parker's Pensées sticker and instant access to all the episode as I record them instead of waiting for their release date. Check it out here: Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/parkers_pensees If you want to give a one-time gift, you can give at my Paypal: https://paypal.me/ParkersPensees?locale.x=en_US Check out my merchandise at my Teespring store: https://teespring.com/stores/parkers-penses-merch Check out my blog posts: https://parkersettecase.com/ Check out my Parker's Pensées YouTube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCYbTRurpFP5q4TpDD_P2JDA Check out my other YouTube channel on my frogs and turtles: https://www.youtube.com/c/ParkerSettecase Check me out on Twitter: https://twitter.com/trendsettercase Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/parkers_pensees/ Time Is Running by MusicLFiles Link: https://filmmusic.io/song/6203-time-is-running License: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/parkers-pensees/support
Vad är kärnan i religiös tro? I sin intressanta bok The Meaning of Belief: Religion from an Atheist's Point of View (Harvard University Press, 2017) försöker den ateistiske filosofen Tim Crane att så ärligt och rättvisande som möjligt beskriva vad han uppfattar som kärnan i ett religiöst förhållningssätt. Kärnan är, menar Crane, att man har en "religiös impuls" som är att se denna värld i relation till en större, transcendent moralisk verklighet som man på olika sätt försöker vara öppen för och orientera sitt liv efter. I sin bok ger Crane många bra beskrivningar av religiös tro och tillbakavisar de ateistiska tänkare som framförallt ser religiös tro som en misslyckad form av vetenskap. Hållpunkter i programmet: 3.50 Presentation av Tim Crane 5.25: Spaning utifrån Stormens utveckling om "The Triumph of the Therapeutic" och existentiell smärta. Länk: Jennifer A Freys artikel om lycka som ett sätt att leva. 12.20: Presentation av The Meaning of Belief 16: Crane kritiserar de som tror att religionen primärt handlar om att förklara uppkomsten av vissa fenomen i Universum. 17: Den transcendenta moraliska ordningen står inte emot, utan inkluderar och går utöver, det goda i världen. 20: Tim Crane som en pessimistisk ateist. 31: Hur lokaliserar man etisk och rationell normativitet i en naturalistisk världsbild? 42.50: Apropå Lapo Lappins analys av hur den svenska Coronastrategins normativa ställningstaganden presenterades som uttryck för rent empiriska slutsatser. 36.50: Är människans förmåga att ställa de yttersta, existentiella frågorna nyckeln till Universums mening, eller uttryck för ett tänkande som gått fel? 44.50: Hur skulle en motsvarande bok som riktar sig till troende ser ut? Det vill säga en bok som vill nyansera troende människors perspektiv. Länkar: Lapo Lappins artikel om hur Sveriges normativa ställningstaganden i Cronapandemin tenderade att läggas fram som uttryck för "ren empirisk vetenskap" i svensk offentlighet. Jennifer A. Freys podcast: "Sacred and profane love".
Segment 1: Tim Crane, President, Wintrust, joins John to talk about what is moving the market today, the economic outlook for the rest of the year, why it’s a good time to refinance, how Wintrust is continuing to assist with PPP and the importance of making all of their services accessible. Segment 2: Melanie Lieberman, […]
Mitől lehet izgalmas hívők számára is egy vállaltan ateista gondolkodó? Tim Crane: A hit jelentése könyve erre nagyszerű válaszokat ad...
I ask the philosopher Tim Crane five questions about himself. Tim Crane is Professor of Philosophy at the Central European University. He is the author of "The Mechanical Mind" (1995/2003), "The Objects of Thought" (2013), and "The Meaning of Belief" (2017).
Tim Crane is a world leading philosopher whose areas of research gravitate towards the study of the mind. His book, The Mechanical Mind, has introduced thousands of people to the central ideas which unite Artificial Intelligence, Philosophy of Mind and Cognitive Science. He is currently the Head of Department at the Central European University, having previously been the Knightbridge Professor of Philosophy at the University of Cambridge.Conversation outline: 00:00 The problem of mental representation10:38 Can a computer think? Is the Turing Test satisfactory?14:15 Can a robot think?18:32 What is the Computational Theory of Mind?20:20 The Language of Thought Hypothesis26:33 Do neural networks implement our language of thought?31:32 Can deep neural networks achieve a complexity which brings about awareness or AGI?33:03 What is general intelligence?34:29 Are there necessary conditions for intelligence?38:00 What is the mechanical view of the human mind?42:35 Consciousness46:32 Can we have free will on the mechanical picture?50:58 Can God account for the explanatory gap between science and consciousness?54:40 Comments on aspects of religionhttps://www.twitter.com/tedynenu
The TLS’s philosophy editor Tim Crane guides us through a selection of reviews and essays from this week’s issue, including on the future of AI and what Thomas Hobbes, Susan Sontag, Montaigne and the trolley problem can tell us about our present predicament; the novelist Will Eaves re-reads Daniel Defoe’s A Journal of the Plague Year, “a caravan of episodes, made up of people going through the same horror in different ways”, and ponders a big-screen adaptation… See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Tim Crane plädiert dafür, dass Religion nicht nach Maßgabe naturwissenschaftlicher Kriterien gemessen werden will, sondern ein - gemäß den eigenen Regeln - schlüssiges Weltbild erzeugt. Das Unbegreifliche gehört dazu. Der Atheist kann nicht gegen die Richtigkeit von Glaubensinhalten ankämpfen, sondern ist vielmehr aufgefordert, die Grenzen seiner Toleranz auszuloten. Rezension von Andrea Gnam. Übersetzt von Eva Gilmer Suhrkamp Verlag ISBN 978-3-518-58739-3 186 Seiten 22 Euro
Wie würde ein Atheist den Begriff »Religion« definieren? Wie kann ein Dialog zwischen Anhängern verschiedener Glaubensrichtungen stattfinden? Und welchen Beitrag kann Religion bei der Bewältigung schicksalhafter Ereignisse leisten? In dieser Folge von Suhrkamp espresso stellen wir vier Bücher zum Thema Glaube und Religion vor. »Die Bedeutung des Glaubens« von Tim Crane versucht, so breit und so offen wie möglich die Frage zu diskutieren, was Religion für Menschen bedeutet. Anhand seiner Definition zum Begriff der Religion fordert der britische Philosoph und Atheist Gläubige und Ungläubige dazu auf, in einen produktiven Dialog zu treten. Sibylle Lewitscharoff und Najem Wali betrachten in ihrem Buch »Abraham trifft Ibrahîm« neun Figuren, die sowohl in der Bibel als auch im Koran vorkommen. In ihrem Roman »Was man sät« erzählt Marieke Lucas Rijneveld eindringlich und poetisch über das Aufwachsen in einer streng gläubigen Familie, die am Tod des jüngsten Sohnes zerbricht. Außerdem stellen wir Thomas Bauers »Die Vereindeutigung der Welt« vor. Das Buch ist im Reclam Verlag erschienen und beschreibt den Verlust der Vielfalt in der Welt im Allgemeinen und in der Religion im Besonderen. Alle Bücher der Folge im Überblick:
Jill Lepore traces the history of conspiracy theories and the conditions that allow them to thrive; Tim Crane talks us through whether we have free will or not, and why it is still a problem; Michael Caines looks at non-traditional approaches to criticismBooksCONSPIRACY THEORIES AND THE PEOPLE WHO BELIEVE THEM, edited by Joseph E. Uscinski CONSPIRACIES OF CONSPIRACIES: How delusions have overrun America, by Thomas Milan Konda THE STIGMATIZATION OF CONSPIRACY THEORY SINCE THE 1950s: ‘A plot to make us look foolish’, by Katharina ThalmannTHE AMERICAN CONSPIRACIES AND COVER-UPS: JFK, 9/11, the Fed, rigged elections, suppressed cancer cures, and the greatest conspiracies of our time, by Douglas Cirignano REPUBLIC OF LIES: American conspiracy theorists and their surprising rise to power, by Anna Merlan A LOT OF PEOPLE ARE SAYING:The new conspiracism and the assault on democracy, by Russell Muirhead and Nancy L. Rosenblum HARVESTER OF HEARTS: Motherhood under the sign of Frankenstein, by Rachel Feder THE HUNDREDS, by Lauren Berlant and Kathleen Stewart TUNNEL VISION, by Kevin Breathnach ON THE LITERARY MEANS OF REPRESENTING THE POWERFUL AS POWERLESS, by Steven Zultanski The Limits of Free Will: Selected essays by Paul Russell Aspects of Agency: Decisions, abilities, explanations, and free will by Alfred R. Mele Self-Determination: The ethics of action – Volume One by Thomas Pink See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
The comedian and writer Helen Lederer joins us to discuss gender and comedy and the new Comedy Women In Print Prize; Lucy Dallas considers a clutch of novels in which animals might offer a little respite from human company; the TLS’s philosophy editor Tim Crane guides us through the riches of this week’s philosophy issue, including how the advent of biological immortality might augur “the greatest inequality experienced in all human history” and what happened when Michel Foucault took LSD in Death Valley To Leave with the Reindeer by Olivia Rosenthal, translated by Sophie LewisAnimalia by Jean-Baptiste del Amo, translated by Frank WynneThe Animal Gazer by Edgardo Franzosini, translated by Michael F. Moore“The last mortals: why we are especially unfortunate to die, when our near-descendants could be immortal", by Regini Rini – see this week’s TLS (in print and online)Foucault in California: A true story, wherein the great French philosopher drops acid in the Valley of Death by Simeon Wade See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Today I talk to Tim Crane about his book The Meaning of Belief: Religion from an Atheist's Point of View.Tim was Knightbridge Professor of Philosophy at the University of Cambridge and a Fellow of Peterhouse from 2009. He is currently the Head of Department and Professor of Philosophy at Central European University.In the interview, Tim explains why the claim of some scientists that all philosophical questions will eventually become scientific questions is false. We discuss what religion is and why the so-called New Atheists work with an incomplete conception of religion. Believing is not just about accepting cosmological and moral propositions but also centrally involves what Tim calls, the "religious impulse" and an aspect of identification. Tim argues that indicating the fault of a religion is in a way a self-flattering intellectual project and calls for reflection on whether the kind of arguments put forward by New Atheists ever work. After going into the rationality of religious beliefs, we end by exploring whether the question of the meaning of life is tremendously important or only seems that way but is, in fact, an ill-formed one. I hope you'll enjoy this conversation as much as I did!
Dr Craig continues his discussion on Tim Crane's recent book on how atheists tend to 'get it wrong'.
Many think the recent book by atheist philosopher Tim Crane is an important work. Including atheist Keith Parsons. Dr. Craig weighs in.
Weekly JourneywithJesus.net postings, read by Debie Thomas. Essay by Debie Thomas: *Life on the Threshold* for Sunday, 11 February 2018; book review by Dan Clendenin: *The Meaning of Belief; Religion from an Atheist's Point of View* by Tim Crane (2017); film review by Dan Clendenin: *Graduation* (2016, Romania); poem selected by Dan Clendenin: *The Opening of Eyes* by David Whyte.
This is a public lecture by Tim Crane, Knightbridge Professor of Philosophy. It is part of the New Directions in the Study of the Mind project, supported by the John Templeton Foundation.
With Stig Abell and Thea Lenarduzzi – TLS Philosophy editor Tim Crane grapples with the mind-body problem and "what it means to be the kind of creatures we are", plus the year that brightened Nietzsche's outlook, and Biscuit the dog's self-consciousness; Korean American author Min Jin Lee on how Korean literature approaches the difficult dream of reunification and what a new collection of stories, The Accusation by the pseudonymous author "Bandi", "the first work of fiction written by a North Korean author presumed still to be alive and living in the country”, tells us about life in that deeply mysterious land; finally, the great Alasdair Gray, author of Lanark, reads "From Vers Doré by Gérard de Nerval", a new work first published in this week's TLS. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Weekly Seminar of the New Directions in the Study of the Mind Project, led by Tim Crane
Weekly Seminar of the New Directions in the Study of the Mind Project, led by Tim Crane
Weekly Seminar of the New Directions in the Study of the Mind Project, led by Tim Crane
Weekly Seminar of the New Directions in the Study of the Mind Project, led by Tim Crane
Weekly Seminar of the New Directions in the Study of the Mind Project, led by Tim Crane
Weekly Seminar of the New Directions in the Study of the Mind Project, led by Tim Crane
Weekly Seminar of the New Directions in the Study of the Mind Project, led by Tim Crane
With Stig Abell and Thea Lenarduzzi – James O'Brien on Brexit and the battle for Britain's soul; a (rather idiosyncratic) round-up of the best arts of 2016 with Arts editor Lucy Dallas; finally, in honour of the season, Philosophy editor and oenophile Tim Crane on the "champagne phenomenon"; see you in 2017. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Weekly Seminar of the New Directions in the Study of the Mind Project, led by Tim Crane
Weekly Seminar of the New Directions in the Study of the Mind Project, led by Tim Crane
Weekly Seminar of the New Directions in the Study of the Mind Project, led by Tim Crane
Weekly Seminar of the New Directions in the Study of the Mind Project, led by Tim Crane
Weekly Seminar of the New Directions in the Study of the Mind Project, led by Tim Crane
Weekly Seminar of the New Directions in the Study of the Mind Project, led by Tim Crane
Weekly Seminar of the New Directions in the Study of the Mind Project, led by Tim Crane
Weekly Seminar of the New Directions in the Study of the Mind Project, led by Tim Crane
As the first talk for the 2016/17 Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society, this year's Presidential Address marks the official inauguration of Professor Tim Crane (University of Cambridge) as the 109th President of the Aristotelian Society. The Society's President is elected on the basis of lifelong, exemplary work in philosophy. Please visit our Council page for further information regarding the Society's past presidents. The 109th Presidential Address will be chaired by Susan James (Birkbeck) - 108th President of the Aristotelian Society. Tim Crane is Knightbridge Professor of Philosophy at the University of Cambridge and a fellow of Peterhouse, Cambridge. Before coming to Cambridge in 2009 he taught at UCL for twenty years and founded the Institute of Philosophy in the University of London in 2005. He is the philosophy editor of the TLS and general editor of the Routledge Encyclopedia of Philosophy. Crane is the author of a number of books, including The Mechanical Mind (1995, 3rd edition 2016), Elements of Mind (2001), The Objects of Thought (2013) and Aspects of Psychologism (2014). He has defended a conception of the mind which rejects both scientistic reductionism and the idea that philosophy of mind should be insulated from science, and he has argued that intentionality — the mind’s direction on its objects, or its representational power — is the essential feature of the mind. This podcast is an audio recording of Professor Crane's address - 'The Unity of Unconsciousness' - at the Aristotelian Society on 3 October 2016. The recording was produced by the Backdoor Broadcasting Company.
Professor Colin McGinn, Professor of Philosophy at the University of Miami, delivers a public lecture at Madingley Hall on 19 November 2012. The lecture is chaired by Professor Tim Crane, Knightbridge Professor of Philosophy at the University of Cambridge, and introduced by Dr Rebecca Lingwood, Director of Continuing Education. Please note that the lecture proper begins at the 02:50 minute point in the video.
How can we talk about things that don't exist? Tim Crane explores this question in conversation with Nigel Warburton in this episode of the Philosophy Bites podcast. Philosophy Bites is made in association with the Institute of Philosophy.
What sort of minds do other animals have? Tim Crane discusses this intriguing question with Nigel Warburton in this episode of the Philosophy Bites podcast. Philosophy Bites is made in association with the Institute of Philosophy.
Professor Tim Crane gives his inaugural lecture as Knightbridge Professor of Philosophy: What is Distinctive About Human Thought?
Transcript -- Philosophy professor Tim Crane explains what he sees to be the main philosophical issues in the area of Artificial Intelligence
Philosophy professor Tim Crane explains what he sees to be the main philosophical issues in the area of Artificial Intelligence
A detailed discussion with Dr Barry Smith and Professor Tim Crane about thought experiments, their implications for language and for thought and the legitimacy of their use in philosophy
Transcript -- A detailed discussion with Dr Barry Smith and Professor Tim Crane about thought experiments, their implications for language and for thought and the legitimacy of their use in philosophy
What is the mind and how does it relate to our bodies? How can something physical think? These are fundamental questions in the philosophy of mind. Tim Crane addresses these difficult issues in this interview for Philosophy Bites.