FB 6 Mathematik/Informatik/Physik

Institut für Mathematik


Osnabrück University navigation and search


Main content

Top content

Situated Affectivity: From Individuals' Emotions to Collective Harm

8.3224

Dozenten

Beschreibung

Course Description
As human beings, we have both cognitive and affective skills. We store, retrieve and process information provided by our perceptual organs in order to react in (ideally) appropriate ways: We, for instance, interpret a moving spot on the retina with a certain size, shape and color together with a buzzing sound as an approaching insect and step back to avoid it. However, unlike a robot who has been trained to detect and avoid insects, we do not just react in a “detached” matter of “mere computation.” Our behavior is affectively toned: We not just cool-bloodedly react to our “cognitive” evaluation of something as dangerous, pleasant, repelling, friendly etc., but care about what is going on: We fear the insect might bite us, we are distressed by the thought that it might be poisonous, or disgusted by its hairy legs. Over the past decade or two, proponents of what has come to be called a “situated” approach to cognition and affectivity have pointed out that this is, albeit certainly true, only part of the story. Sometimes, our affective responses are indeed just reactions to environmental triggers elicited in us as quite passive observers, as when we are disgusted by the insect or feel cheerful when running across an old friend. Sometimes, however, we play a more active role, acting in rather than merely reacting to our environment: We feel sad or alone, want to brighten our mood and therefore go and see an old friend, i.e., we actively structure the environment in such a way that we can use it as a resource that changes our affective life; we see that our partner feels disappointed, want to brighten their mood and therefore surprise them with a bouquet of their favorite flowers, i.e., we actively structure the environment in such a way that it shapes other’s affective life. This course is about the various ways in which structuring the environment can affect how people feel (and, as a consequence, behave). In particular, it will be concerned with different ways in which people’s affective life is negatively influenced by how others—from individuals to nations—have structured the environment, i.e., different facets of what Jan Slaby (2016) has called “mind invasion.”

Learning Objectives
Throughout the course, students will engage with classical and contemporary debates regarding the nature of emotions and situated affectivity, develop critical thinking skills, gain fundamental knowledge in a key area of theoretical philosophy and apply philosophical insights to cognitive science research.
Prerequisites and Assessments
Students should have successfully completed the Philosophy of Cognitive Science lecture.
Weekly Reading Responses: 40%
Final Paper: 60%

Note: This syllabus is subject to change based on the progress of the course and the needs of the students. Any changes will be communicated promptly.

Weitere Angaben

Ort: 50/E07
Zeiten: Mo. 18:00 - 20:00 (wöchentlich)
Erster Termin: Montag, 28.10.2024 18:00 - 20:00, Ort: 50/E07
Veranstaltungsart: Seminar (Offizielle Lehrveranstaltungen)

Studienbereiche

  • Cognitive Science > Bachelor-Programm
  • Cognitive Science > Master-Programm
  • Human Sciences (e.g. Cognitive Science, Psychology)

Research Areas:

  • Algebraic geometry 14-XX

  • K-theory 19-XX

  • Algebraic topology 55-XX

Publications in MathSciNet

Publications in Zentralblatt

Publications:

  • Cellularity of hermitian K-theory and Witt-theory  (with Markus Spitzweck and Paul Arne Østvær)
  • On the η-inverted sphere. K-Theory-Proceedings of the International Colloquium
  • Gigantic random simplicial complexes Link (with Jens Grygierek, Martina Juhnke-Kubitzke, Matthias Reitzner and Tim Römer)
  • On very effective hermitian K-theory Link (with Alexey Ananyevskiy and Paul Arne Østvær)
  • The first stable homotopy groups of motivic spheres DOI (with Markus Spitzweck and Paul Arne Østvær)
  • Vanishing in stable motivic homotopy sheaves (with Kyle Ormsby and Paul Arne Østvær) Link
  • The multiplicative structure on the graded slices of hermitian K-theory and Witt-theory (with Paul Arne Østvær) Link
  • Slices of hermitian K–theory and Milnor's conjecture on quadratic forms (with Paul Arne Østvær) Link
  • Calculus of functors and model categories, II (with Georg Biedermann) Link
  • The Arone-Goodwillie spectral sequence for Σ∞Ωn and topological realization at odd primes (with Sebastian Buescher, Fabian Hebestreit und Manfred Stelzer) Link
  • Motivic slices and coloured operads (with Javier Gutierrez, Markus Spitzweck and Paul Arne Østvær) Link
  • Motivic strict ring models for K-theory (with Markus Spitzweck and Paul Arne Østvær) PDF
  • Theta characteristics and stable homotopy types of curves DOI
  • A universality theorem for Voevodsky's algebraic cobordism spectrum (with Ivan Panin and Konstantin Pimenov) Link
  • On the relation of Voevodsky's algebraic cobordism to Quillen's K-theory DOI (with Ivan Panin and Konstantin Pimenov)
  • On Voevodsky's algebraic K-theory spectrum BGL (with Ivan Panin and Konstantin Pimenov)
  • Rigidity in motivic homotopy theory DOI (with Paul Arne Østvær)
  • Calculus of functors and model categories DOI (with Georg Biedermann and Boris Chorny)
  • Motivic Homotopy Theory Link (with B.I.Dundas, M.Levine, P.A.Østvær and V.Voevodsky)
  • Motives and modules over motivic cohomology Link (with Paul Arne Østvær)
  • Modules over motivic cohomology DOI (with Paul Arne Østvær)
  • Enriched functors and stable homotopy theory Link (with Bjørn Ian Dundas and Paul Arne Østvær)
  • Motivic functors Link (with Bjørn Ian Dundas and Paul Arne Østvær)

Preprints and Talks:

  • Motives, homotopy theory of varieties, and dessins d'enfants PDF
  • GQT Graduate School PDF

Projekte

  • DFG-Sachbeihilfe "Algebraic bordism spectra: Computations, filtrations, applications"  (DFG-RSF-Antrag mit Alexey Ananyevskiy)
  • DFG-Sachbeihilfe "Applying motivic filtrations" (mit Marc Levine und Markus Spitzweck) im DFG Schwerpunktprogramm 1786
  • DFG-Sachbeihilfe "Operads in algebraic geometry and their realizations" (mit Jens Hornbostel,
    Markus Spitzweck und Manfred Stelzer) im DFG Schwerpunktprogramm 1786
  • DFG Sachbeihilfe ``Operad structures in motivic homotopy theory'' im DFG Schwerpunktprogramm 1786 ``Homotopy theory and algebraic geometry'' (mit Markus Spitzweck)
  • DFG Sachbeihilfe ``Motivic filtrations over Dedekind domains'' im DFG Schwerpunktprogramm 1786 ``Homotopy theory and algebraic geometry'' (mit Marc Levine und Markus Spitzweck)
  • DFG Graduiertenkolleg 1916 ``Combinatorial structures in geometry''
  • DFG Sachbeihilfe ``Goodwillie towers, realizations, and En-structures''
  • Graduiertenkolleg ``Combinatorial structures in algebra and topology'' (mit H. Brenner, W. Bruns, T. Römer und R. Vogt)
  • DFG Sachbeihilfe ``Combinatorial structures in algebra and topology'' (mit H. Brenner, W. Bruns, T. Römer und R. Vogt)

Supervision

PhD

  • Philip Herrmann: Stable equivariant motivic homotopy theory and motivic Borel cohomology, 2012

  • Florian Strunk: On motivic spherical bundles, 2013

Master/Diplom

  1. Markus Severitt: Motivic Homotopy Types of Projective Curves, 2006 PDF

  2. Philip Herrmann: Ein Modell für die motivische Homotopiekategorie, 2009

  3. Florian Strunk: Ein Modell für motivische Kohomologie, 2009

  4. Sebastian Büscher: Anwendung der F2-kohomologischen Goodwillie-Spektralsequenz für iterierte Schleifenraeume, 2010

  5. Fabian Hebestreit: On topological realization at odd primes, 2010

  6. Katharina Lorenz: Darstellung unterschiedlicher mathematischer Rekonstruktionen von Größen, 2012

  7. Jana Brickwedde: Fehlvorstellungen zum Grenzwertbegriff, 2015

  8. Lena-Christin Müller: Penrose-Parkettierungen und ihre Eigenschaften, 2015

  9. Larissa Bauland: Der Satz von Seifert-van Kampen und einige seiner Anwendungen, 2018

  10. Nikolaus Krause: Eine algebraische Einfuehrung in die Milnor-Witt K-Theorie, 2019

Bachelor

  1. Ein Spezialfall des letzten Satzes von Fermat, 2010

  2. Transzendente Zahlen, 2010

  3. Zur Gruppe des Rubik-Wuerfels, 2011

  4. Einige Betrachtungen zum letzten Satz von Fermat, 2012

  5. Die Involution auf algebraischer K-Theorie, 2012

  6. Platonische und Archimedische Körper, 2012

  7. Klassifikation regulärer Polyeder, 2013

  8. Grundbegriffe der Trigonometrie und ihrer Umsetzung in der gymnasialen Sekundarstufe I, 2014

  9. Die Riemann’sche Zetafunktion und der Primzahlsatz, 2014

  10. Konstruktion der klassischen Zahlbereiche, 2014

  11. Eigenschaften und spezielle Werte der Riemann'schen Zetafunktion, 2015

  12. Das quadratische Reziprozitätsgesetz und dessen Bedeutung in der Kryptographie, 2015

  13. Graphen färben, 2015

  14. Klassifikation und Visualisierung von Koniken, 2016

  15. Konstruktion von Polygonen mit einem einzigen Schnitt, 2016

  16. Parkettierungen der Ebene durch kongruente konvexe Fuenfecke, 2019

  17. Die klassischen Hopf-Faserbuendel und einige ihrer Eigenschaften, 2019

  18. Einige Anmerkungen mathematischer und historischer Natur zu Fermats Letztem Satz, 2019