尤物视频

news 2022

Horban Award 2022

August 02, 2022
Print

The Department of Philosophy at 尤物视频 would like to congratulate Saumi Rahnamay, who has been awarded the  for his paper "Love Unto Grief". The annual departmental award is made to recognize excellence in a philosophical essay written by an undergraduate student. Winning essays demonstrate academic and research excellence at the undergraduate level with particular emphasis placed upon originality and promise of ability in research.

First, congratulations on winning the Horban Award! Can you provide a brief overview of the argument at the heart of your paper "Love Unto Grief"?

Thank you! The argument in Love Unto Grief is actually pretty simple, and intuitive in my opinion. The main thesis of the paper is a refined account of grief. I basically argue that what moves us to grieve is losing love. In other words, I claim that grief is a sufficient condition for love, albeit past love. I get there by first adopting an account of grief by a philosopher named Michael Cholbi, but I argue that his account isn鈥檛 specific enough about the object or target of grief and show how this can lead to absurd conclusions with a couple counterexamples. I go on to suggest that the object of grief is lost loving relationships, which beside benefitting from feeling natural and intuitive, also avoids the absurd conclusions Cholbi鈥檚 account led us to.

However, trying to explain grief by pointing to love is a lot like trying to explain how a car works by opening its hood and pointing to its engine: our explanation itself begs for an explanation; 鈥淥kay, but how does an engine work?鈥 So, I end up also giving a philosophical account of love in the latter half of the paper. I fall in line with the account offered by another philosopher named Benjamin Bagley. I鈥檒l spare you the gory epistemic and metaphysical details, but basically, love is a special type of relationship which plays an active role in constituting and determining who we see ourselves as in forming our identity.

My unique contribution to these discussions was to simply join these two areas of inquiry into one continuous process of love unto grief. If love constitutes parts of our identity, we can see why losing someone we love is exceptionally difficult: we lose an inspiration in determining our identity, and at the same time we lose those parts of our identity our love constituted. What鈥檚 so particularly sucky about grief is precisely this double whammy. And this doesn鈥檛 just apply to the death of loved ones, rather we grieve any cessation of loving relationships; breakup, divorce, lay-off, debilitating illness鈥

You were also recently admitted to the Honours Program (congratulations again!). What are you hoping to work on in your time with the program?

(Thanks again!)

I have a lot of ideas for possible research topics, too many actually. This summer I鈥檝e been working with professor Begby on the Epistemology of Self-Confidence, which has been a personal topic of interest for some time. Basically, given that we fail frequently, sometimes spectacularly, I鈥檓 curious how we nonetheless handle failure in such a way that makes self-confidence permissible, or even possible. I mean, is it justified to believe in yourself if your track record is littered with failure? As most endeavors are in philosophy, it鈥檚 a complicated question. Professor Begby has a very keen eye in matters of inquiry like these, so his help has been especially helpful in trying to pin this idea down.

As for what I research next, I can鈥檛 say for sure, but it will certainly be something hella interesting.

What first drew you to Philosophy? Was there something in particular that 'clicked' that made you feel like 'this is for me'?

It鈥檚 hard to say if there was just one moment that solidified philosophy for me, but if I had to pick one it would be finding out about Descartes in middle school. Particularly, it was the brevity and punch of 鈥淚 think, therefore I am鈥 that made me lose my proverbial mind as a preteen. I remember explaining Descartes鈥 Solipsism to anyone who would listen and watch as they failed to find the same amazement that I found in it.

I wasn鈥檛 reading philosophy at this point in my life, but I was consuming a lot of philosophy podcasts and YouTube videos. It鈥檚 kind of strange to say but bite-sized, introductory video essays were what catapulted me into philosophy. I tend to learn more by reading nowadays, but I still avidly consume the same type of content. Contrapoints, Gregory B. Sadler, Philosophize This!, Crash Course Philosophy, 鈥淓lucidations鈥 from the University of Chicago鈥 Hell, philosophy Tik-Tok is even a thing. I think philosophy really lends itself well to the 鈥渆dutainment鈥 genre, and I wouldn鈥檛 hesitate to suggest anyone who鈥檚 interested in philosophy to start by exploring online. Just do your due diligence, and make sure the content you鈥檙e consuming is accurate to literature, and not intentionally misrepresentative.

What's something about studying Philosophy that you think would surprise someone who is unfamiliar with it?

That鈥檚 a really interesting question. I can imagine people majoring in other disciplines to be very surprised by how lively philosophy lectures are. From what I鈥檝e experienced here at SFU, philosophy lectures are the chattiest out of any discipline, in a good way! People are always so enthusiastic to come to lecture and discuss the assigned readings, whether they read them or not. I鈥檓 honestly sad to be finished the majority of my Phil credits, because I miss that feeling of being around by people who want to get to the bottom of things. There鈥檚 something intoxicating about that environment. It helps that SFU has a really good philosophy department, with a wide range of offered courses.

Bonus Question: Would you rather argue with 100 rat-sized Platos, or explain The Republic to one Plato-sized rat?

Talk about spoiled for choice! Either way, I don鈥檛 think my interlocutor would be capable of understanding me, on account of Plato not knowing English, and on account of a Plato-sized rat also not knowing English. 100 Plato鈥檚 of any size in one location is honestly just asking for trouble, but at least it鈥檚 not 100 Socrateses (Socrati*?). I think I鈥檒l go with the Plato-sized rat because I don鈥檛 think he鈥檒l clue into the fact that I haven鈥檛 read The Republic (yunno, on account of being a rat and all), so I could probably get away with paraphrasing some lines I remember from The Symposium.