21 May, 9:30 am – Session I – Neurosciences and Free Will
Transcrição
21 May, 9:30 am – Session I – Neurosciences and Free Will
21 May, 9:30 am – Session I – Neurosciences and Free Will Free will and Determinism – The Psychosurgery Saga João Lobo Antunes – University of Lisbon (UL) Language of Conscience is Crucial to Criminal Responsibility? Maria Fernanda Palma − UL, Institute of Criminal Law and Criminal Law Sciences (IDPCC), Research Centre for Criminal Law and Criminal Sciences (CIDPCC) Contemporary Challenges in Knowledge Cartographies Olga Pombo − UL, Centre for Philosophy of Sciences of the University of Lisbon (CFCUL) Free Will and The Metaphysics of Modality: The Phenomenological Approach Nuno Nabais – UL, CFCUL Report: Ricardo Tavares da Silva – IDPCC/CIDPCC 21 May, 3 pm – Session II – Neurocriminal Law Social Brain, Cultural Diversity and Criminal Responsibility Augusto Silva Dias – UL/IDPCC/CIDPCC Freedom, Culpability and Neurosciences Diego-Manuel Luzón Peña − University of Alcalá, Fundación Internacional de Ciencias Penales Determinism, Neurosciences and Criminal Responsibility Miguel Díaz y García Conlledo – University of León The Relationship Between Neurosciences and Criminal Law From the Humanist Compatibilism Point of View Eduardo Demetrio Crespo – University of Castilla-La Mancha Report: João Matos Viana - UL/IDPCC/CIDPCC 22 May, 9:30 am − Session III – Mental Sates in Psychology, Criminal Responsibility and Non-Criminal Solutions The Development of Mentalizing Theory Tiago de Sousa Mendes – Clinical Psychologist, IDPCC/CIDPCC, Post Doctoral Internship at the Developmental Psychopathology Lab of the University of Houston/Luso-American Foundation Anti-Social Personality Disorder, The Failure of Mentalizing and The Structure of Mental Disorder Peter Fonagy – Head of Department, Research Department of Clinical, Educational and Health Psychology and the Freud Memorial Professor of Psychoanalysis, University College, London. Visiting Clinical Professor, Harvard University; Clinical Professor of Psychiatry, Yale University, School of Medicine Promoting Mentalizing and Rekindling Trust: The Path to Restoring Agency and Responsibility in Adolescents Efrain Bleiberg – Professor and Vice-Chair, Menninger Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences; Director, Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, Baylor College of Medicine; Chief of Psychiatry, Texas Children’s Hospital and Training and Supervising Psychoanalyst, Houston Center for Psychoanalytic Studies Report: Inês Ferreira Leite e António Brito Neves – UL/IDPCC/CIDPCC 22 May, 3 pm − Session IV – The Language and The Logic of Responsibility Ascription Legal Knowledge Representation and the Possibility of a Legal Inference Engine Paulo de Sousa Mendes – UL/IDPCC/CIDPCC Computational Basis of Responsibility Ascription Andreas Matthias − Senior Teaching Fellow, Philosophy Department, Lingnan University Artificial intelligence, Robotics and Emotions Luis Custódio − Institute for Systems and Robotics, Instituto Superior Técnico, University of Lisbon Report: Teresa Quintela de Brito – UL/IDPCC/CIDPCC VENUE: Auditorium at Law School of Lisbon ADMISSIONS: 80€ (general public) / 40€ (UL students)