Category : hegel

Hegel Symposium @ Loyola: Dr. Ardis Collins’ Hegel’s Phenomenology, Feb. 26

We are very pleased to announce that the Philosophy Department at LUC is hosting a symposium on the new book Hegel’s Phenomenology: A Dialectical Justification of Philosophy’s First Principles by our very own Dr. Ardis Collins.



DATE: 02/26/2014

TIME: 2:00pm to 6:00pm

LOCATION:
Damen Student Center, Room 1100
Lake Shore Campus
Loyola University Chicago

SPEAKERS:

The symposium will consist of three commentaries about Prof. Collins’s book, by:
  • Prof. Kevin Thompson (DePaul University)
  • Prof. Mark Alznauer (Northwestern University)
  • Mr. Corbin Casarez (Loyola University Chicago)

Prof. Collins will respond to the commentaries, with time for questions from the audience.


CFP: Kent State University Graduate Conference

The Department of Philosophy at Kent State University is pleased to announce the 21st Annual Philosophy Graduate Student Conference in Remembrance of May 4th.

Submission Deadline: January 19, 2014
Conference Date: March 15, 2014
Conference Website: http://philosophy.kent.edu/conference/
Submission Guidelines: We invite submissions on any philosophical topic, and from any research tradition in philosophy.  Submissions should be 3500 words or 30 minutes reading time. All submissions should be sent to philconf@kent.edu <mailto:philconf@kent.edu>. 


CFP: Naturalism in German Idealism

The New York German Idealism Workshop

a joint undertaking of the Philosophy departments of

Columbia University and New School for Social Research presents a Conference on

 

Naturalism in German Idealism

October 25-26 2013

Invited speakers:

Robert Brandom (University of Pittsburg), Eckart Förster (Johns Hopkins University),

Terry Pinkard (Georgetown University), Rachel Zuckert (Northwestern University)

 

We invite submission of high quality papers from dissertation phase PhD students to the ‘Naturalism in German Idealism’ Conference.

 

Questions concerning Naturalism hover over much of contemporary philosophy.  To what degree does responsible epistemic and ethical enquiry presuppose Naturalism?  On what basis might we commit to a world lacking supernatural entities or features?  To what extent is our world discoverable through systematic empirical enquiry?  How do we understand second nature as falling within a Naturalist picture?  Naturalism has become a hallmark of a reasonable and rational philosophical view, and yet articulating a clear and substantive notion of Naturalism remains both a difficult and highly controversial affair.

 

Equally contested is the relation between German Idealism and such contemporary commitments to Naturalism.  Thinkers ranging from Kant, Fichte and Hegel, to romanticists such as Schelling, Hölderlin, Schlegel, were concerned to articulate our place in the world, developing and critiquing accounts of the individual, scientific enquiry and the nature of systematic philosophy.  But what is far from clear is whether these philosophers articulated their views in a way consistent with contemporary commitments to Naturalism.  Or rather: do their own projects expand and deepen contemporary thinking about these issues?  Do we dilute what is radical and challenging in these views, when we take them to be committed to a naturalistic project?  Do they help us understand Naturalism in a way that takes us beyond scientism?  Or help us negotiate the relationship between the space of laws and the space of reasons, between the commitments of science and normative engagement in the world?

 

We welcome submissions that explore such questions, or more generally deal with the relationship between German Idealism, broadly construed, and Naturalism.  Papers may concern the commitments of a specific figure in the tradition, or treat the topic more generally.  We also welcome papers that consider the work of more contemporary philosophers, such as Pierce, Dewey, McDowell, Brandom, insofar as they concern themselves with these broader themes.

 

Submissions should be suitable for blind refereeing and consist in:

•   An extended abstract of 500-750 words (in .doc, .docx, or .pdf format).

•   A paper of 3500-4000 words, suitable for a 30 minute talk.

•   A separate cover sheet including name, title of paper, affiliation, email address and contact details.

 

Submissions should be sent to nygiw.naturalism@gmail.com no later than June 15, 2013.  Notification of acceptance will be sent in mid July.  Further details, including a provisional program, will be posted as they become available.  Please check our website for updates: https://www.facebook.com/nygermanidealism.

 

If you have any questions, please contact the workshop organizers at nygiw.naturalism@gmail.com.


CFP: CLIO: Hegel Research Studies

The annual series in the journal CLIO is not limited to any single “orthodox” interpretation of Hegel. It welcome researchers who argue for in some way getting past the Hegel legend and for connecting with the historical Hegel, identifying with his project, and realizing  it further in the twenty-first century. The goal is to free Hegelian research from being merely esoteric by bringing it when appropriate into the contemporary public sphere. It in part seeks to bring Hegel increasingly into mainstream philosophy, and especially analytic philosophy.

Submission deadline for Hegelian Research Studies June 30, 2012.

CLIO has published Arnold Toynbee, Hayden White, H. S. Harris and numerous Hegel scholars over the years—plus first English translation of Hegelian texts. Quality Hegel scholarship serving Hegelian research also welcome. Current Hegel issue is vol. 41, Fall 2012. Contact Clark Butler, butler@ipfw.edu


Conference: “Norms of Freedom in Kant and Hegel,” UChicago, Apr 12-13

Norms of Freedom in Kant and Hegel
April 12-13
Student Center East
Room 302, 3rd Floor Conference Tower
750 S. Halsted Street (just south of Harrison)
University of Illinois at Chicago
Speakers include:
Terry Pinkard, Paul Guyer, Christoph Menke, Thomas Khurana, Dirk Setton, Stephen Engstrom, Rahel Jaeggi