NANS 2018 | STANFORD
In October 2018, Executive Director R. Lanier Anderson hosted the second NANS second conference at the Stanford Humanities Center at Stanford University in Palo Alto, California. Jessica Berry and John Richardson gave the keynote addresses, and the conference featured a wide array of fascinating speakers. Thank you to all our speakers and attendees!
MEETING SCHEDULE
Stanford Humanities Center
424 Santa Teresa St, Stanford, CA 94305
Friday, October 5
9:00-9:30 Breakfast
9:30–11:00 Tom Hanauer (UC Riverside), “Strangers to Ourselves: Self-Knowledge in Nietzsche's Genealogy”
Commentator: Richard Elliott (Birkbeck)
11:15–12:45 Kaitlyn Creasy (Butler University), “Thinking Differently, Feeling Differently:
Nietzsche on Nihilism, Affect, and Agency”
Commentator: Justin Remhof (Old Dominion)
12:45–2:15 Lunch
2:15–3:45 Ian Dunkle (Boston University), “Redemption, Power, and Value:
Nietzsche on the Shape of a Life”
Commentator: Rachel Cristy (Princeton)
4:00–5:30 Keynote Address: Jessica Berry (Georgia State), "Nietzsche's Attack on Belief:
Doxastic Skepticism and the Right Reading of Nietzsche's Antichrist"
5:30–7:00 Wine and Cheese Reception
Saturday, October 6
9:00-9:30 Breakfast
9:30–11:00 Joel van Fossen (Boston University), “Nietzsche and Shame”
Commentator: Gudrun von Tevenar (Birkbeck)
11:15–12:45 Avery Snelson (UC Riverside), “Nietzsche on the Origin of Obligation and Conscience”
Commentator: Matt Dill (Boston University)
12:45–2:15 Lunch
2:15–3:45 Scott Jenkins (Kansas), “Nietzsche's Transformation of the
Problem of Pessimism in Human, All Too Human”
Commentator: Matthew Meyer (Scranton)
4:00–5:30 Keynote Address: John Richardson (NYU), “Nietzsche’s New Gods”
Sunday, October 7
9:00-9:30 Breakfast
9:30–11:00 Daisy Laforce (UC Riverside), "Three Modes of History in On the Genealogy of Morality"
Commentator: Gabriel Zamosc-Regueres (Univ. of Colorado Denver)
11:15–1:15 Panel Discussion: Nietzsche on Science
Maudemarie Clark (UC Riverside)
Tsarina Doyle (Galway)
9:00-9:30 Breakfast
9:30–11:00 Tom Hanauer (UC Riverside), “Strangers to Ourselves: Self-Knowledge in Nietzsche's Genealogy”
Commentator: Richard Elliott (Birkbeck)
11:15–12:45 Kaitlyn Creasy (Butler University), “Thinking Differently, Feeling Differently:
Nietzsche on Nihilism, Affect, and Agency”
Commentator: Justin Remhof (Old Dominion)
12:45–2:15 Lunch
2:15–3:45 Ian Dunkle (Boston University), “Redemption, Power, and Value:
Nietzsche on the Shape of a Life”
Commentator: Rachel Cristy (Princeton)
4:00–5:30 Keynote Address: Jessica Berry (Georgia State), "Nietzsche's Attack on Belief:
Doxastic Skepticism and the Right Reading of Nietzsche's Antichrist"
5:30–7:00 Wine and Cheese Reception
Saturday, October 6
9:00-9:30 Breakfast
9:30–11:00 Joel van Fossen (Boston University), “Nietzsche and Shame”
Commentator: Gudrun von Tevenar (Birkbeck)
11:15–12:45 Avery Snelson (UC Riverside), “Nietzsche on the Origin of Obligation and Conscience”
Commentator: Matt Dill (Boston University)
12:45–2:15 Lunch
2:15–3:45 Scott Jenkins (Kansas), “Nietzsche's Transformation of the
Problem of Pessimism in Human, All Too Human”
Commentator: Matthew Meyer (Scranton)
4:00–5:30 Keynote Address: John Richardson (NYU), “Nietzsche’s New Gods”
Sunday, October 7
9:00-9:30 Breakfast
9:30–11:00 Daisy Laforce (UC Riverside), "Three Modes of History in On the Genealogy of Morality"
Commentator: Gabriel Zamosc-Regueres (Univ. of Colorado Denver)
11:15–1:15 Panel Discussion: Nietzsche on Science
Maudemarie Clark (UC Riverside)
Tsarina Doyle (Galway)