Hart Hall, Room 3201, University of California, Davis
The Development of Character: Attachment Theory and the Moral Psychology of Vice and Virtue
Conference 3: Attachment, Vice and Psychopathology
If you would like to attend the conference, please email Emma.harte@tss.ox.ac.uk. Please note that spaces are very limited.
3rd April
Rachana Kamtekar (Philosophy, Arizona), ‘Aristotle on habituation and voluntary action’
Monique Wonderley (Centre for Human Values, Princeton), ‘Attachment, Addiction, and the Capacity to Value’
Daniel Ewon Choe (Psychology, UC Davis) ‘Mechanisms in the Development of Antisocial Behaviour: Vices or Virtues?’
Ross Thompson (Psychology, UC Davis), ‘Is Attachment Theory a Moral Development Theory?’
4th April
Nancy Potter (Philosophy, Louisville), ‘A Case Study on Personality Disorder, Vice, and Distrust’
Kate Humphreys (Psychology, Stanford), ‘Evidence for the prevention of callous-unemotional traits through fostering attachment relationships’
Jonathan Hill (Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, School of Psychology and Clinical Language Sciences, Reading) ‘Can attachment research be re-attached to development to help understand antisocial children and adults?’
Darcia Narvaez (Psychology, Notre Dame), ‘A Species-Typical Nest Fosters Virtue’
The network Core Group:
Edward Harcourt (Philosophy, Oxford)
Christoph Rapp (Philosophy, LMU Munich)
Jay Belsky (Human Community Development and Design, UC Davis)
Marinus van IJzendoorn (Child and Family Studies, Leiden)
Michael Little (Dartington Social Affairs Unit)
The organisers are grateful to the Arts and Humanities Research Council (UK), the Oxford University John Fell Fund, and to Keble College, Oxford for financial support.