The University of Hamburg is advertising a three-year postdoc in the history of philosophy. Given the department’s strength in medieval philosophy, they are likely to welcome applicants in that area. The application deadline is June 14. Details here.
The Founders’ Prize, sponsored by the SMRP, is now open to papers from junior scholars. The deadline is August 15, 2026. Details here.
The SIEPM is soliciting nominations for its lifetime achievement award. Nomination letters should be submitted by August 24, 2026. Details here.
KU Leuven is hosting a conference at the end of August on Matter and Material Causation. This is the second in a series of four conferences on the four Aristotelian causes, sponsored by the Society for the European History of Ideas (SEHI). I regret to say that the cfp deadline was May 30, but perhaps they would accept a slightly late submission. (Leuven, August 28-30, 2026)
Civitas Augustiniana (Porto) is planning a special issue on the subject Consciousness and Intentionality – The Mark of Augustine in the Philosophy of Mind, edited by Eduarda Machado (Porto) and Rituparna Roy (Kolkata). They are interested not just in Augustine but in the Augustinian influence throughout later philosophy. The submission deadline for papers is July 31, 2026.
Symposium Thomisticum IX runs this October in Santiago Chile, on the theme of Creation and Divine Government (October 22-24, 2026).
Quite a few journals at DeGruyter Brill are now part of an open-access program, through which all new papers published in these journals are entirely open access. For historians of philosophy, Archiv für Geschichte der Philosophie is the only relevant journal that I noticed as included. For the interesting details of how this project works, see here.
I was sorry to learn recently that David Burr died last December at the age of 91. He was a longtime professor at Virginia Tech, and was known particularly for his work on Franciscan poverty, especially Peter John Olivi. A Festschrift in his honor came out with Brill in 2023, and there is a nice discussion of Professor Burr, as well as that volume, in a recent review at TMR.
A little while back I stumbled on a Facebook page on Medieval Logic, which claims to have 5.6K members! It is, moreover, reasonably active. In particular, it seems that if you post suitably relevant questions there, there’s a good chance you’ll get expert answers. As someone who essentially never uses Facebook, I found this pretty astonishing, and it made me wonder whether there are other groups of this nature on social media that would be of interest to readers of this blog. I’d love to know about them.