InBrief

SEARCH ALL POSTS

Rationality + Consciousness = Free Will: Legal and Philosophical Reflections

Wed Feb 27 2013

David Hodgson’s final book, Rationality + Consciousness = Free Will (Oxford University Press 2012), published in the year of his death, focuses on two of his most significant philosophical interests, consciousness and free will, but it also considers the significance of these topics for the law. On Saturday 4 May 2013, a conference will be held by the Julius Stone Institute of Jurisprudence at the University of Sydney, which sadly must mark his passing, but on a more positive note will critically analyse legal and philosophical themes in the book.

Often the topics of consciousness and free will have been treated in separate literatures. One of the interesting features of this book (and this conference) is the bringing together of these two areas of philosophy. The book, and David Hodgson’s work more generally, benefits from his work as a philosopher, and his career as a legal scholar, legal practitioner and ultimately a judge of appeal of the New South Wales Supreme Court.

Mr Dennis Mahoney QC will open the conference with some remarks about David Hodgson’s career.

The conference will be of interest not just to philosophers and legal scholars, but to solicitors, barristers and judges, as the sections of the book that consider the implications of Hodgson’s view for law will be a significant part of the conference. Other presentations will focus on the themes of consciousness and free will.

For more information and to register, click here.

1 May 2013

Contact InBriefReturn

If you no longer wish to receive In Brief, please notify the Bar Association's Certification Officer

InBrief welcomes advertisements relating to products, events or services, which assist barristers with their practice or support the objects of the Bar Association. Each day, a selection of InBrief articles is emailed to our members. To have an advertisement included a daily email broadcast costs $50 (inc. GST). Announcements must be paid in advance. For more information about the terms and conditions, or to arrange payment, please contact the Bar Association’s publications manager