Hi all,

Tomorrow (Monday 3rd), Phil Torres (visiting researcher at CSER) will be
giving a talk on 'When Did We Realize That We Could Die Out? A Look at
the Origin and Evolution of the Idea of Human Extinction' - at 3.30pm,
Seminar Room 2 (HPS Department).

Might be of interest to some!

Abstract:

A number of scholars in the emerging field of existential risk studies
have wondered why so little academic work has to date focused on human
extinction. One answer is that the idea of human extinction is a fairly
recent addition to our shared library of concepts.

In this presentation, which borrows from a forthcoming book titled A
Brief History of Human Extinction, Phil will outline a theory of why the
idea took shape when it did and explore its development from the
pre-Socratics to the present. He will also offer some cautionary remarks
about the future of this idea in a world increasingly cluttered with
unprecedented risks to our survival.

About the speaker:

Phil Torres is a Visiting Researcher at the Centre for the Study of
Existential Risk. He's published widely on existential risk issues,
focusing on topics such as the ethics of human extinction, existence of
"omnicidal agents," and dangers associated with colonizing space. His
most recent book is called Morality, Foresight, and Human Flourishing:
An Introduction to Existential Risks. It includes a foreword by Lord
Martin Rees and endorsements from Peter Singer, Rachel Bronson, Ray
Kurzweil, and George Church.

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