539 search results for “morality” in the Public website
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Tradition and Innovation in Indian Philosophy
Conference
- CPP Disputationes Quadrangulae 2020
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Contested Borders. Accessibility of Social Services for Refugees
Debate
- Urban Space and the Common Good || Espace Urbain et Bien Commun
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LIPS 2017 Tradition and Innovation in Indian Philosophy
Conference
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LIBC Colloquium: Cultural Evolutionary Psychology
Lecture
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FGGA Research Seminar: The Rise of Populism and The Role of Expert Knowledge: The Case for Epistemic Democracy
Lecture, Research Seminar
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Pricing Suffering: Ethnographic Approaches to Insurance
Lecture
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GLASS Public Lecture | Chin in the Popular Imagination: Images of China in North India at the Turn of the Twentieth Century
Lecture
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Tensions around growing up bidialectal in a standardised world
Lecture
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SAILS Lunch Time Seminar
Lecture
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Migrating to Europe: facts, figures and stories
Debate, Studium Generale
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CPP Colloquium with Tim Meijers 'Creating Children in an Unjust World'
Lecture
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Workshop: Words in Action? Exploring Local Perceptions of Persuasion and Propaganda as Verbal Performances in Africa
Lecture, Workshop
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From Aesop to La Fontaine and beyond: Word, Image and Education / D’Ésope à La Fontaine et au-delà: Texte, Illustration et Éducation
Conference
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Hegel: From the modern state to the end of history
Lecture
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laboured landscapes
Conference
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Worlds of Love in the Wakhan, Afghanistan and Tajikistan
LUCIS lecture & screening | Islam in Central Asia
- Public Ethics Talks
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Shadow Libraries: The Politics of Mass Digitization
Lecture
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Promoting Harmony with Conflicts?
PhD Defence
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"No one has yet determíned what the body can do". The Turn to the Body in Spinoza and Nietzsche
PhD Defence
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No Man's Land: Gender and Sexuality in Erotic Narratives of the Late Ottoman Empire
PhD Defence
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Doing the Right Thing in Science: A History of a Moving Target
Lecture, Keynote
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Unifying Values by Transforming Human Nature– Wang Anshi’s (1021-1086) Philosophy and the New Policies Governance
Lecture
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Politics and Gender
Lecture, China Seminar
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What's in a Name? Sub-elites of Western Han Chang'an
Lecture
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CPP Colloquium with Lea Ypi: On Dominated Dominators
Lecture
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LAMS Lecture by Claire Weeda, Ethnicity in Medieval Europe, 950-1250: Medicine, Power and Religion
Lecture
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Cross-border Claims to Cultural Objects
PhD Defence
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The concept of public interest (gong) in the Chinese philosophy of law and politics
Lecture, seminar
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Ethnic Cleansing in Myanmar: How Could This Happen?
Lecture
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Police Killings in Self-Defense
Lecture
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Book launch: online presentation of 'Magnificence in the Seventeenth Century'
Arts and Culture, Book launch
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Nuclear Ethics: Nuclear Energy and Weapons in an Uncertain World
Lecture, Public Ethics Talk
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Low-income housing in South Africa
Lecture
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Forum Antiquum Spring 2021 lecture: 'Will the real homo economicus please stand up?'
Lecture
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Delivering Meaningful Justice to Indigenous Victims of International Crimes
Conference
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Justification, Performativity, and Islam in the Anthropology of Practical Legal Life
Van Vollenhoven Lecture 2022 / LUCIS Keynote
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Pieter's Corner: Open Science
On 20 September 2019, the opening drinks for the Open Science Community Leiden will be held at the Faculty of Social and Behavioural Sciences. Open science is the approach to science aimed at making scientific research accessible, reproducible, and freely available to people within and outside the academic…
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POSTPONED || Symposium ‘Money, Rationality, Solidarity’
Symposium
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LTA conference: preparing students better for the job market
Can you, as a university lecturer, base your teaching on your research and at the same time prepare your students for the job market? This was the core question at the annual teaching conference organised by the Leiden Teachers’ Academy on 20 November. The two are not mutually exclusive, was the con…
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Mark Rutgers introduces himself
What you see is what you get, is how people who know him describe Mark Rutgers who became Dean of our Faculty on 1 March. For some of us he is a familiar face, and for those who don’t yet know him, he hopes to get to meet them soon. His first three months will be taken up with a lot of reading and even…
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Chemist Marc Koper receives Spinoza Prize for research on electrolysis
Professor Marc Koper researches how you can use electrical energy to make or break chemical bonds. He has just been awarded a Spinoza Prize, the Netherlands’ highest personal science award, for his fundamental research into how this form of electrolysis works.
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How students launched the Leiden LGBT movement 50 years ago
Four students founded the Leiden Student Working Group on Homosexuality on the day of the Dies Natalis in 1968. This was to be the start of the LBGT+ movement in Leiden, which celebrated its 50-year anniversary this year. What has been achieved and what is the status of emancipation today?
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Pieter's Corner: Housing
Students, first-time buyers, parents with stay-at-home children, migrants in need of a house; the problems in the housing market affect many layers within the society. The lack of housing is a growing problem. How does this affect our behaviour and the way we think about 'living' ? What are the consequences…
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Conference Hazelhoff Centre: Public and Private Regulation of Financial Markets
To celebrate the fifth anniversary of the Hazelhoff Centre for Financial Law, the conference ‘Public and Private Regulation of Financial Markets’ was held on the 11th of May 2017 at law firm Stibbe in Amsterdam. The conference attracted an international audience originating from more than five different…
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Scholar at Risk Lety Elvir Lazo: ‘My university intimidated me too’
The proceeds of the Leiden University Science Run on 28 September will go to Scholars at Risk, a section of the UAF that assists refugee scholars. One such scholar is Leiden PhD candidate Lety Elvir Lazo from Honduras.
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CFP MA Masterclass Feminist Theory with Lynne Huffer
CFP: Two-day PhD/ Research MA masterclass Feminist Theory with and around the work of Prof. dr. Lynne Huffer organised by the OZSW in cooperation with NOG
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Student in war time
Jacques Waisvisz (98) is one of our oldest living alumni. As a Jewish student in the Second World War, he was forbidden from completing his studies. How does he look back at that time, and what was life like afterwards? ‘No one thought that the situation here would become so bad.’