*Call for Abstracts*

We invite submissions of abstracts from graduate students willing to make a
presentation (in either English or French) at the



*2020 Spring School on*



*Wholes and Their Parts. Mereology and Its History*



*April 30th – May 3rd 2020 – USi Lugano*

*Deadline for submission: Sunday, February 24th, 2020, at 11:59 pm CET.*



*Keynote Speakers*:



   - Peter Simons (Trinity College Dublin & Salzburg University);
   - Achille Varzi (Columbia University);
   - Annamaria Schiaparelli (Université de Genève);
   - Claudio Calosi (Université de Genève)
   - & Others to Be Announced



The School will comprise:



- Lectures on mereology (A) and its history (B), offered by some of the
world leaders in the field.

- Talks given by the keynote speakers and the graduate students whose
abstract will be selected.



A. Mereology - the study of parthood relations - has known important
technical developments since the beginning of the 20th century, when
Husserl and especially Leśniewski (who gave it its name) approached it with
formal tools. The subsequent flourishing of both classical mereology and
non-classical systems has allowed philosophers to elaborate new approaches
to issues in general metaphysics, but also in the foundations of
mathematics, in the philosophy of physics and biology, in the philosophy of
mind and language, in social ontology, and elsewhere. New areas of
investigation have also arisen within mereology itself, as shown by recent
research in meta-mereology. Our Spring School will be the occasion for
graduate students to be introduced to some of the latest discussions about
and applications of mereology in different areas of philosophy.



B. Broadly understood as the (not necessarily formal or axiomatic) theory
of parthood, mereology is as old as philosophy itself. Presocratic
philosophers were mainly interested in the fundamental mereological
structure of physical reality. Plato’s dialogues often speak of Forms or
Kinds either as wholes having parts or as component parts of objects.
Aristotle’s discussions of definitions which “give the parts” or elements
of the definiendum in the *Topics*, of material causes in the *Physics* and
the *Metaphysics*, and of biological wholes in the *Parts of Animals*
witness to his widespread interest in mereological issues. The Middle Ages
follow Aristotle via Boethius’ works and commentaries. Original views are
laid out, among others, by William of Sherwood, Abelard, the
Pseudo-Joscelin, Aquinas, Buridan, Ockham, Albert of Saxony, Peter of
Spain, Radulphus Brito, and, in the modern age, Suárez. Interesting
approaches and applications can subsequently be found in Jungius, Leibniz,
Hume, and Kant. Bernard Bolzano’s pioneering work in mereology, then,
prepares the ground for Husserl’s and Lesniewski’s later, more refined
developments.



*We are open to any philosophical question clearly related to the main
topic, both from a systematic and a historical perspective. Submissions by
PhD students of the CUSO area (Geneva, Neuchâtel, Fribourg, Lausanne) are
particularly encouraged.*



*All abstracts should be of a *maximum of 500 words (not including the
bibliography)*.

*Presentations will last *30 minutes* and will be followed by discussion.

*Only *PDF files* will be accepted.

*Submissions must be *prepared for blind-review*.

*Please include a *separate* PDF file as a cover page with your name, the
title of your submission, your current academic affiliation and your e-mail
address.

*Please send your submissions to the following address:
mereology2...@gmail.com

*Every effort will be made to cover travel costs at least in part, if not
fully, also for non-CUSO graduate students.*



*Deadline for submission: Monday, February 24th, 2020, at 11:59 pm CET*.

Notification of acceptance should be expected by Mid-March.



*Registration for non-speaker participants: *Registration is free of
charge, but mandatory. Please email us if you want to register.

*Graduate students from the CUSO area (Fribourg, Geneva, Lausanne,
Neuchâtel) are eligible for total refunding of train fares provided they
register for the event on the CUSO website.*



*Organization: *Claudio Calosi, Damiano Costa, Paolo Crivelli, Paolo Natali.

This event is generously supported by the Conférence Universitaire de
Suisse Occidentale (CUSO), by the Istituto di Studi Filosofici (ISFI) di
Lugano, and by the SNSF-Project *The Metaphysics of Quantum Objects*. It is
hosted by Università della Svizzera italiana (Lugano).

Further info can be found here:

https://philevents.org/event/show/80482


*Contact: *For any query, do not hesitate to send us an e-mail at
mereology2...@gmail.com

--
https://www.vidal-rosset.net/mailing_list_educasupphilo.html
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        

Répondre à