Duke+UNC Ancient Philosophy Workshop: Michael Vazquez (UNC)

Friday, April 28, -
Speaker(s): Michael Vazquez (UNC)

Duke+UNC Ancient Philosophy: Michael Vazquez (UNC)

You are invited to come hear Michael Vazquez speak at the Duke+UNC Ancient Philosophy Workshop.
 
Ciceronian Commitment without Conviction

Michael Vazquez (University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill)

Many have turned to ancient philosophical schools and traditions such as Stoicism and Epicureanism for practical guidance on how to live a good life. One often overlooked source of ancient wisdom is Academic skepticism, or the form of skepticism that flourished in Plato’s Academy and that is in crucial respects distinct from the more widely known Pyrrhonian skeptical tradition. My aim is to rectify this disparity by offering a novel interpretation of the way Cicero governed his epistemic life as an Academic skeptic. On my view, Cicero was a “radical” Academic skeptic who practiced universal suspension of judgment. Suspension of judgment did not prevent him from holding rationally warranted views (of a certain sort) or from having diachronically stable commitments, values, and life projects. And yet, I argue, Cicero lacked conviction in at least two ways: (1) he did not hold his views with convictionor beyond a certain threshold of confidence; and (2) he never committed, even in an appropriately skeptical way, to an all-encompassing view of the goal of life (telos)that is, he lacked a central conviction. Thus understood, Cicero’s example shows us that indecision about the human telos is compatible with firm and resolute normative ethical commitments.

Learn more about Michael Vazquez here: https://philosophy.unc.edu/people/michael-vazquez/

Michael Vazquez standing in front of a window that says "Parr Center for Ethics"