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Call for Applications

Theme: Understanding the Meaning of Being Human across Cultures and
Civilizations
Type: 2017 RVP International Annual Seminar
Institution: Council for Research in Values and Philosophy (RVP)
Location: Washington, D.C. (USA)
Date: 21.8.–22.9.2017
Deadline: 31.3.2017

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Thematic Description

New and threatening challenges are urging us to re-think and
re-evaluate many fundamental issues which had been taken for granted
for centuries. As we face these challenges, some important issues
emerge: How can the philosophically inclined disciplines and
especially reason-guided questioning illuminate our
self-understanding? What is the meaning of being-human? How do we
relearn to be authentically human in circumstances such as ours?
These are perennial issues. However living as we do in these complex
and pluralistic times, one of the major issues to be tackled concerns
the way in which humanity faces its own future. This is a challenge
as well as an opportunity; hence the theme of the RVP 2017 annual
seminar.

As George F. McLean (1929-2016) used to point out, “globalization is
the contemporary mode of being,” a determination of what it means to
live a human life. Modern transportation breaks the barriers of
nations and continents; the media create and share human experiences
across the globe; indeed, a global horizon arises with many
possibilities, along with serious questions:
1. How to understand freedom and responsibility?
2. How to live personal identities in connection with belonging to
one’s own cultural community?
3. How to relate to the whole of humanity without suppressing the
distinctive reality of peoples, cultures, and religions in this
global age?

In these circumstances we are called to overcome self-enclosure and
so be open to the ‘Other’, as Emmanuel Levinas famously stresses, or
to the multiple others, as Vincent Shen wisely articulates. We must
live in relationships towards the presence of other human beings and
their distinct approaches to the challenges faced in their lives. As
McLean often said, we need to be attentive to the uniqueness of
cultural identity of each people and each civilization, and to their
proper way of cultivating the meaning of being a person. Indeed, we
need to relearn how to express and articulate the ultimate concern
for life and how to commit ourselves to the realization of its plural
dimensions, both temporal and eternal. Hence, it is necessary to go
beyond merely economic and political concerns when dealing with the
nature of human beings, and to relearn how to uncover and experience
anew of the role of religion in the process of reconfiguration of
human and cultural identities in these challenging global times.

Seminar Plans

The 2017 RVP international seminar will be composed of three parts:

1. During the first three weeks, the seminar will proceed with a
complex hermeneutics of the Western notion of the person and its
cognates in the different cultures and civilizations of the world,
and with the exploration of the thought of George F. McLean on
related thematic issues.

2. Subsequently, in the fourth week, the seminar will focus on the
work of David Walsh, The Modern Philosophic Revolution: The
Luminosity of Existence and The Politics of the Person as the
Politics of Being. It will explore some notions of the person to be
applied to the understanding of the human being as an existent, open
structurally to others and concomitantly to the Ultimate Other.

3. Finally, in the last week, each seminar participant will be
required to present an elaborate version of his/her paper as drafted
and prepared before arriving in Washington and then enriched, revised
and completed during the seminar.

Once the seminar is over, the participants will be required to submit
a final version of their work to be considered for publication once
peer-reviewed.

Application for Participation

Applications for participation in the RVP 2017 seminar should be sent
by email by March 31, 2017 to cua-...@cua.edu. Participants cover
their own travel costs; the RVP provides simple room and board during
the seminar. The seminar will be conducted in English and held at the
RVP Seminar Room: Gibbons Hall B-12, 620 Michigan Avenue, North East,
Washington, D.C., 20064. Email: cua-...@cua.edu; Telephone:
202/319-6089.

In order to be considered, please enclose:

(1) CV describing the applicant's education, professional positions
and activities;

(2) List of the applicant's publications;

(3) Letter stating the applicant's interest and involvement in this
seminar theme and its relation to his/her past and future work in
philosophy and/or related studies; and

(4) Abstract (250-500 words) of the paper the applicant intends to
present during the seminar.

Website of the RVP Seminar:
http://www.crvp.org/seminars/2017/2017-seminar.html




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