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What's On

TORCH Oxford Medical Humanities Research Hub presents

What is Consciousness?

Panel Discussion

Book Tickets

Tuesday 26 November

Adventures in Consciousness


Opening Times

5-7pm

Doors open 5pm

Venue

St Luke's Chapel, Radcliffe Observatory Quarter, St Luke's Chapel, Radcliffe Observatory Quarter, 35 Woodstock Road, Oxford, OX2 6GG

Tickets

Free entry, booking required

Accessibility

  • Wheelchair Access
What exactly is consciousness, and how do researchers study it? Come join an informal discussion on consciousness research, from the perspectives of philosophy, literature and psychoanalysis, ethics and artificial intelligence, and the creative arts. Refreshments provided.

Plan your visit

St Luke's Chapel, Radcliffe Observatory Quarter, St Luke's Chapel, Radcliffe Observatory Quarter, 35 Woodstock Road, Oxford, OX2 6GG

Speakers


English Literature, University of Oxford
English Literature, University of Oxford

Biography 

Ankhi Mukherjee is Professor of English and World Literatures at the University of Oxford and a Fellow of Wadham College. Her most recent monograph, Unseen City: The Psychic Lives of the Urban Poor (Cambridge University Press, 2021), has won Columbia University’s Robert S. Liebert Award for “outstanding scholarship in the field of applied psychoanalysis.” Mukherjee’s second monograph, What Is a Classic? Postcolonial Rewriting and Invention of the Canon (Stanford UP, 2014), was awarded the British Academy Rose Mary Crawshay Prize in English Literature. Her other publications include Aesthetic Hysteria: The Great Neurosis in Victorian Melodrama and Contemporary Fiction (Routledge, 2007), and the collections of essays she has edited, namely A Concise Companion to Psychoanalysis, Literature, and Culture (with Laura Marcus, Wiley-Blackwell, 2015) and After Lacan (Cambridge University Press, 2018). She has recently co-edited (with Ato Quayson) a collaborative volume titled Decolonizing the English Literary Curriculum (Cambridge UP, 2023). Mukherjee has published in PMLAMLQContemporary LiteratureParallax, and theCambridge Journal of Postcolonial Literary Inquiry, and sits on the editorial boards of several peer-reviewed journals. She has been a postdoctoral research fellow of the British Academy (2003-2006), a visiting fellow at the Humanities Research Centre at the Australian National University (2015), and the John Hinkley (Visiting) Professor at Johns Hopkins University (2019). She was invited faculty at Cornell University’s School of Criticism and Theory in 2019 and Harvard University’s Institute for World Literature (IWL) in 2023 and 2024. At present, Mukherjee has two books under contract. She is writing A Very Short Introduction to Postcolonial Literature in the widely circulated VSI series (Oxford UP, 2025) and Mavericks and Charlatans: Empire, Modernity, and the Authorization of Dreams (Princeton UP, 2026).

Philosophy, University of Oxford
Philosophy, University of Oxford

Biography 

BA in Philosophy and Cognitive Science from the University of California, San Diego, and my PhD in Philosophy from the University of Chicago. Before moving to Oxford in 2008, I worked for two years as an Assistant Professor in the Department of Philosophy at California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo, located on the central coast of my home state.

Ethics and Moral Psychology, University of Oxford
Ethics and Moral Psychology, University of Oxford

Biography 

Chris is a Research Fellow in Ethics and Moral Psychology of Conscious Awareness in Artificial Intelligence at the Uehiro Centre for Practical Ethics, and a research affiliate of HOPE, the Hub at Oxford for Psychedelic Ethics. He is working on the Uehiro Centre’s research project: Counterfactual Assessment and Valuation for Awareness Architecture  (‘CAVAA’)  https://cavaa.eu/. He has a background in philosophy of mind, cognitive science, and the metaphysics of moral patients (PhD, Princeton University). He is currently working on philosophical-ethical and empirical studies of human judgments about conscious awareness in AI systems, especially as that informs considerations of privacy, value alignment, and ethical AI design

Ethics and Moral Psychology, University of Oxford
Ethics and Moral Psychology, University of Oxford

Biography

I am a Research Assistant for the Counterfactual Assessment and Valuation for Awareness Architecture (CAVAA) project funded by the European Union. I investigate the perceptions and moral judgements of AI and it’s moral applications, alongside the ethical implications of awareness within AI systems.

Prior to this, I was a Chevening scholar at the University of Edinburgh (2021-2022) where I completed a MSc in Psychological Research.


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