David Livingstone Smith’s presentations, papers, interviews.

David Livingstone Smith spoke at a virtual symposium devoted to his recent book, hosted by Lady Keane College in Shillong, India, for World Philosophy Day

David Livingstone Smith was interviewed in The Arts Fuse about his most recent book Making Monsters: The Uncanny Power of Dehumanization. https://artsfuse.org/240389/author-interview-david-livingstone-smith-on-dehumanization-and-making-monsters/

David Livingstone Smith gave presentations on his research to students at the University of California (Santa Barbara) and New York University.

David Livingstone Smith gave a presentation on his recent book Making Monsters: The Uncanny Power of Dehumanization to faculty and students at Widener College.  An excerpt of the book was published in The Psychologist, the official publication of the British Psychological Society.

David Livingstone Smith gave a virtual presentation to Toronto physicians on his most recent work on dehumanization at The Doctors’ Lounge.

Smith’s essay “Unnatural bodies: disability as metaphysical threat” was published in the blog of the American Philosophical Association.

Smith’s essay “How Dehumanization Works” was published on the University of Cardiff’s Open for Debate blog.

Smith’s paper “‘Human’ is an essentially political category” has been published in Experimental Philosophy of Identity and the Self edited by Kevin Tobia (Bloomsbury)

Smith contributed a paper titled “Selection for oppression: where evolutionary biology meets political philosophy,” in the Spanish-language volume Post-Darwinian Philosophy. Current Approaches on the Intersection Between Epistemological Analysis and Philosophical Naturalism. Smith’s paper appears both in the English original and Spanish translation.

A symposium was held on David Livingstone Smith’s book Making Monsters: The Uncanny Power of Dehumanization (Harvard, 2021) at the annual meeting of the Pacific division of the American Philosophical Association.

Smith spoke at a virtual symposium devoted to his recent book, hosted by Lady Keane College in Shillong, India, for World Philosophy Day

Smith gave a presentation titled “Darwin Teaches Philosophy” for the Foujan Institute, Tehran, Iran, in celebration of Darwin’s birthday.

Smith gave a presentation on his research to students at the University of California (Santa Barbara) and New York University.

Smith gave a presentation on his recent book Making Monsters: The Uncanny Power of Dehumanization to faculty and students at Widener College.  An excerpt of the book was published in The Psychologist,the official publication of the British Psychological Society.

Smith gave a virtual presentation to Toronto physicians on his most recent work on dehumanization at The Doctors’ Lounge.

Smith interviewed in The Arts Fuse about his most recent book Making Monsters: The Uncanny Power of Dehumanization.

Smith gave a presentation and discussed his research to graduate students and faculty at the Rutgers/University of Pennsylvania philosophy of race reading group,

Smith interviewed by Firoze Alam on the Bangladesh Book Talk podcast.

Smith participated in a panel discussion on “Decolonizing/Liberating Reasoning, Logic, and Philosophy” as part of Bates College’s Martin Luther King Day events.

Smith discussed his research into dehumanization on the Breaking the Spell podcast.

Smith was a keynote speaker at the Second Annual Philosophy and Psychiatry Conference at the University of North Carolina.

Smith discussed his book Making Monsters: The Uncanny Power of Dehumanization on Alaska Public Radio.

Smith gave a zoom presentation on his research into dehumanization to students at the University of Copenhagen, Denmark.

Presentation on “Monstrous males: gender and the dehumanizing imagination” at the annual meeting on Security and Human Behavior at Cambridge University in the UK. The presentation was based on research undertaken with UNE student Emily Birdsall.

David Livingstone Smith’s paper “‘Human’ is an essentially political category” has been published in Experimental Philosophy of Identity and the Self edited by Kevin Tobia (Bloomsbury)