Some face-to-face events are returning. Check carefully for any requirements.

Panel:
Professor Charles Godfray, Director, Oxford Martin Programme on the Future of Food and author of the chapter How can 9-10 Billion People be Fed Sustainably and Equitably by 2050?
Professor Ian Goldin, Director, Oxford Martin School, Editor of Is the Planet Full? and author of the chapter Governance Matters Most
Professor Sarah Harper, Director, Oxford Institute of Population Ageing, Oxford Martin School and author of the chapter Demographic and Environmental Transitions
Professor Yadvinder Malhi, Director, Oxford Centre for Tropical Forests, Oxford Martin School and author of the chapter The Metabolism of a Human-Dominated Planet
Dr Toby Ord, James Martin Fellow, Oxford Martin Programme on the Impacts of Future Technology and author of the chapter Overpopulation or Underpopulation?
The panel will discuss whether our planet can continue to support a growing population estimated to reach 10 billion people by the middle of the century.
The panel discussion will be followed by a book signing and drinks reception.
This panel discussion will be live webcast on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VFIqDQP1Vjc
About the Book:
What are the impacts of population growth? Can our planet support the demands of the ten billion people anticipated to be the world’s population by the middle of this century?
While it is common to hear about the problems of overpopulation, might there be unexplored benefits of increasing numbers of people in the world? How can we both consider and harness the potential benefits brought by a healthier, wealthier and larger population? May more people mean more scientists to discover how our world works, more inventors and thinkers to help solve the world’s problems, more skilled people to put these ideas into practice?
In this book, leading academics with a wide range of expertise in demography, philosophy, biology, climate science, economics and environmental sustainability explore the contexts, costs and benefits of a burgeoning population on our economic, social and environmental systems.

Public Seminar: Thinking About the Brain
With speakers: Professor Chris Kennard; Professor Glyn Humphreys; Professor David Lomas; Dr Joshua Hordern; Dr Ayoush Lazikani; Dr Matthew Broome; Dr Chrystalina Antoniades
Thursday 20 November, 5.30-8.30pm
Ashmolean Education Centre
The evening will offer an opportunity to explore current research into the brain and the mind from a wide range of perspectives, from medieval literature to contemporary art and neuroscience.
Thinking About the Brain is a public seminar, forming part of the developing collaboration between the Ashmolean Museum’s University Engagement Programme and Oxford’s Nuffield Department of Clinical Neurosciences. It is being co-organised by Dr Jim Harris, Andrew W Mellon Foundation Teaching Curator at the Ashmolean, and Dr Chrystalina Antoniades, Lecturer in Medicine at Brasenose College and Senior Research Fellow in the Nuffield Department of Clinical Neurosciences.
Open to all and free of charge. To ensure a place, please follow this link to e-mail Dr Jim Harris (at jim.harris @ ashmus.ox.ac.uk), or telephone 01865 288 287.
A public meeting with a short introductory talk followed by questions and discussion.
Animal rights: a human perspective
Thursday 20 November, 7:30pm to 9:00pm
The Mitre, corner of High St and Turl St (upstairs function room)
All welcome
Organised by Oxford Communist Corresponding Society.

Join us for a critical review of the extent to which businesses promote HR in practice. Talk of corporate responsibility, pro-bono schemes and language of sustainability and accountability continues to increase but in reality are businesses doing enough to promote and protect Human Rights? There will be the chance to talk more informally with the speakers after the event over drinks and nibbles.
Panel Speakers: Rae Lindsay (Clifford Chance), Peter Frankental (Amnesty International)
Chair: Dr Lawrence Hill-Cawthorne, University of Reading
The Anglo-Scottish Border: a Photographic Tour
With Tim Porter, lecturer
Medieval Scotland Afternoon Tea Lecture Series
Tuesday 25 November, 2–4pm
At the Ashmolean Museum (Lecture Theatre)
With the 2014 referendum for Scottish independence, the historic relationship between Scotland and England has recently been a prevalent topic of political discussion. This year also marks the 700th anniversary of the battle of Bannockburn, a significant Scottish victory in the First War of Scottish Independence. These lectures explore three key aspects of the Anglo-Scottish relationship during the Middle Ages.
Tickets are £9/£8 concessions (includes tea & cake), and booking is recommended as places are limited.
Visit: http://www.ashmolean.org/events/Lectures/?id=132
Introduction to Anthropology. Sunday 30th November. 10 – 5pm
The Knowledge Project is exciting and innovative workshops this November. For one day, you will be introduced to a subject by an Oxford postgraduate with bags of specialist knowledge in that area. The courses are designed to be open to all, with plenty of opportunities to ask questions and push the subject matter to its limit. Classes are taught in small groups of a maximum of ten, and are based around lively and sociable discussion. Importantly, all our proceeds go to children’s charity Jacari – that means ALL of the money you pay goes directly to helping children struggling with English as a second language.
Daniel has spent over 2 years in Amazonia studying the Amerindian peoples who reside there. He specialises in traditional medicine, shamanism, violent assault sorcery and has plenty of stories to tell. This course focuses on the principles of anthropology, grounded in real cultural examples of religion, gender, literacy and more.
This course runs from 10am – 5pm on Sunday 16th November.
For more details, and to sign up go to knowledgeproject.co.uk, or email alison@knowledgeproject.co.uk
The Colloquium is a seminar series at Kellogg College, Oxford.
Sophie Haines is a Research Member of Common Room and James Martin Fellow at the Institute for Science, Innovation, and Society (InSIS). Her research interests address the interface of environment, science and society, including infrastructure development, natural resource politics, and the role of anticipation and uncertainty in decision-making in the UK and Belize. She is currently collaborating with colleagues in the Physics department, as part of an Oxford Martin School project about the usability of weather/climate forecasts for resource stewardship.
Why Poetry Matters
Part of the Why Philosophy Matters Series
With Professor Max de Gaynesford, University of Reading
Wednesday 3 December, 6‒7.30pm, Education Centre
Join esteemed scholars to talk about the hot topics in contemporary culture and philosophical thought. In partnership with Oxford Brookes University and sponsored by the Royal Institute of Philosophy.
Free, no booking required, seats allocated on a first-come first-served basis. Entry via St Giles’ Street, drinks from 5.45pm.
Medieval Scottish Gothic: Glory and Excess
With Tim Porter, lecturer
(ticket includes tea & cake!)
Friday 5 December, 2–4pm
Ashmolean Museum Lecture Theatre
With the 2014 referendum for Scottish independence, the historic relationship between Scotland and England has recently been a prevalent topic of political discussion. This year also marks the 700th anniversary of the battle of Bannockburn, a significant Scottish victory in the First War of Scottish Independence. These lectures explore three key aspects of the Anglo-Scottish relationship during the Middle Ages.
Tickets are £9/£8 concessions (includes tea & cake), and booking is recommended as places are limited.
Part of a Medieval Scotland Afternoon Tea Lecture Series.
http://www.ashmolean.org/events/Lectures/?id=132

This is a monthly free meeting. This week we have two main talks, one on creating 360degree tours of buildings using Google business, (basically using street view you can walk in and tour round certain buildings) and another creating a title sequence with After Effects & Photoshop. Guest speakers: Guy Henstock and Sathya Vijayendran

Defensive weaponry doesn’t have to be made of metal. Throughout history and in different parts of the world, man has been inspired by protective models found in nature. This illustrated talk by project curator Helen Adams looks at some examples of ethnographic shields and armour in the Pitt Rivers collections – from leather lamellar armour used by samurai warriors and the crocodile cult of eastern Africa, to a fish-scale war jacket from Borneo and the iconic porcupine fish helmet from the Pacific. As accessories and garments combining functionality with fashion, such items demonstrate the skill of the armourer not just as a technician, but as a craftsman and artist.
Would you like to learn more about how beliefs and customs shape your own life and the lives of others? And be made aware of the strangeness of your own culture by delving into the cultures of others?
The Knowledge Project presents a series of eight evening classes taught by postgraduate Carlo Ferri, who has just returned from conducting fieldwork in China.
The Knowledge Project is a unique social enterprise that engages postgraduates to teach evening classes, with all proceeds going to children’s charity Jacari. We believe firmly in community education, and as such make our classes engaging, social and open to all.
To find out more and browse our other subjects, visit: www.knowledgeproject.co.uk

Brought to you by Blackwell’s Bookshop and the Ashmolean Museum, ‘Inspired by Blake’ is a two-week William Blake Festival celebrating the magnificent and visionary painter, poet, thinker and icon.
Blake’s visions have long been a topic of debate by scholars, artists and poets; and now, in this age of neuroscientific advancement, they are being considered by psychologists too. AXNS invites four panelists, including Buddhist poet Maitreyabandhu, Professor Christopher Rowland, and Professor Glyn Humphreys, Head of Department for Experimental Psychology at the University of Oxford to consider the questions: How useful is it to look at Blake’s visions through Psychology? Does it detract from his artistic intent? And were Blake’s visions purely visual?
For information about the festival, including a full events listing, please visit the Inspired by Blake website. #inspiredbyblake
Three academics, at different stages of research will be speaking on the subject on ‘Shocks’, from the perspective of seismology, neuroscience and anthropology. The President’s Seminars provide an opportunity to network with members of Wolfson College, and to hear how other researchers plan, conduct and complete their research projects. We meet each term on Mondays of 3rd Week at 5.30pm to hear very brief presentations by a graduate student, a research fellow and a senior fellow at Wolfson, and continue with lively discussion over wine, followed by dinner in hall.

Ever more people are interested in the social impact that organisations are creating beyond their contributions to the economy (gross value added, employment, etc.). Despite an existent tradition of cost-benefit analyses and other types of evaluations, a genuine interest in assessing ‘social effects’ rigorously is only about to manifest itself. Yet, available methods for assessing social impact often leave social aspects like the strengthening of social cohesion, the enhancement of participation or the reduction of conflict relatively unaddressed.
The talk will outline how we can grasp such perceptibly unfathomable social effects, both conceptually and empirically.
Gorgi Krlev is a DPhil student at Kellogg College and a research associate at the Centre for Social Investment (CSI) at the University of Heidelberg.
Twenty minute introductory talk, one hour discussion. All welcome.

Zena McGreevy, Senior Assistant Curator, talks about the stages involved in selecting and researching the objects for the Nigerian Mask and Masquerade display. There is never enough room to include everything. What influences the choices of what to include? What doesn’t make it and why? This illustrated talk gives an insight into what goes on behind the scenes during the development of a new display, as well as shedding light on some of the complex uses and meanings of these stunning Nigerian masks.
Prof Wielenberg will make the case for a character trait that (i) is a virtue and (ii) is appropriately characterized as a secular version of humility. The connection with Lewis would be that the account draws on some of Lewis’s ideas about the nature of Christian humility.
by Oxford C. S. Lewis Society
In this lecture I argue that self-control problems typical arise from conflicts between smaller sooner and larger later rewards. I suggest that we often fail successfully to navigate these problems because of our commitment to a conception of ourselves as rational agents who answer questions about ourselves by looking to the world. Despite the attractions of this conception, I argue that it undermines efforts at self-control and thereby our capacity to pursue the ends we value. I suggest we think of self-control as a problem of self-management, whereby we manipulate ourselves.
Global Politics, Economy and Society Seminar with
Dr Seán Molloy (University of Kent) on
“Kant and the Political Theology of Perpetual Peace”
Venue: John Henry Brookes Building, room JHB206
Date: Monday 2 March 2015
Time: 4.15pm
All welcome!
‘The World(s) According to Quantum Mechanics by Professor David Wallace, Professor of Philosophy of Physics, University of Oxford
In this lecture I outline some of the main perspectives on self-control and its loss stemming from recent work in psychology. I focus in particular on the puzzle arising from the role of glucose in successful self-control. Glucose ingestion seems to boost self-control but there is good evidence that it doesn’t do this by providing fuel for the relevant mechanisms. I suggest that glucose functions as a cue of resource availability rather than fuel.
In the wake of the Charlie Hebdo murders and the ensuing debate on freedom of religion vs freedom of expression, Honorary Fellow of Wolfson College Professor Sir Richard Sorabji CBE will deliver this timely lecture on the history and philosophical principles underlying the concept of free speech.
There is evidence that self-control is a character trait. This evidence seems inconsistent with the management approach I advocate, since that approach urges that we look to external props for self-control, not to states of the agent. In this lecture I argue, that contrary to appearances, we should hesitate to think that people high in what is known as trait self-control have any such character trait. In fact, properly understood the evidence concerning trait self-control supports the management.

OUAS Speaker Event:
The Oxford University Archaeological Society invites you to our final speaker event of the term! Dr Elizabeth Key-Fowden will be joining us from the University of Cambridge. She is currently writing a book on the Parthenon Mosque, the use of the Parthenon as a centre for religious workshop by the Islamic Culture in the Ottoman period. Please join us for what will be a very interesting evening!
Free for OUAS Members, for non-members the cost is £2.