-----Original Message-----
From: Dominic McIver Lopes <[email protected]>
To: news <[email protected]>
Sent: Tue, Apr 9, 2013 9:26 am
Subject: [AE] Fwd: [dancephilosophers] Fwd: Reminder: CFP Workshop on
Embodiment, Conceptual Metaphors and Tacit Knowledge (Bern,
31.5./1.6.2013; Deadline: 15.4.2013)

Begin forwarded message:


From: Andreas Heise &lt;[email protected]&gt;
Date: Tue, Apr 9, 2013 at 3:33 AM
Subject: Reminder: CFP Workshop on Embodiment, Conceptual Metaphors and
Tacit Knowledge (Bern, 31.5./1.6.2013; Deadline: 15.


Call for Participation: bUnderstanding Beyond the Linguistic Dogma b
Conceptual Metaphors, Embodiment and Performance as Non-Propositional
Knowledge?b
Interdisciplinary Workshop for advanced MA students, doctoral and
postdoctoral scholars

Chair: Prof. Dr. Markus Wild (Philosophy), University of Fribourg
Organisers: Andreas Heise (Philosophy), University of Lucerne, and Tanja
Klankert (Cultural and Dance Studies), University of Bern

Dates: 31 May and 1 June 2013
Location: University of Bern, t.b.a.

Application (short statement of interest):
Until 15 April 2013 to tanja.klankertATiash.unibe.ch or
andreas.heiseATunilu.ch

Description:
The notion of understanding is pivotal in the humanities and the social
sciences. But what does it mean to understand something? The logical
grammar
of bunderstandingb seems to suggest that we understand something as
something, i.e. as falling under a certain concept. We understand a
sentence
like bthis is redb if we are able to assign it a place in our conceptual
framework. This amounts to acknowledging certain consequences that
follow
from this sentence being true such as bthis is colouredb, bthis has the
same
colour as bloodb and bthis is not greenb. In other words, it looks like
a
necessary condition of understanding that we can make explicit pertinent
bits of knowledge.

Knowledge, in turn, is usually held to be about propositions. These are
commonly conceived as structured, abstract and truth-apt theoretical
entities which form the content of what we believe and, given they are
true,
know. If asked, e.g., which university is Switzerlandbs oldest, we would
respond (in case we know the answer and are willing to provide it): bThe
University of Basel is Switzerlandbs oldest university.b That the
University
of Basel is Switzerlandbs oldest university is the content of what we
know
and hence the proposition. Now, insofar as propositions are patterned on
sentences as they occur in language, one may call this wide-spread view
of
understanding and knowledge the blinguistic dogmab.

Are there other forms of understanding that follow a different logic?
Michael Polanyi, e.g., held the view that bwe can know more than we can
tellb. What he terms tacit knowing is allegedly at work in somatic
processes
and technical skills as well as in artistic and academic abilities. This
seems to match with current research on embodiment according to which we
convey abstract ideas via gestures and so-called conceptual metaphors
that
reflect basic bodily experiences. While these modes of expression are
essential to cognition and communication, as well as to aesthetic
appreciation, they purportedly resist reduction to linguistic meaning.

In a two-day interdisciplinary workshop, we will explore some of these
forms
of assumed non- or pre-propositional knowledge. Apart from Polanyi, our
focus will be on such programmatic approaches as Lakoff and Johnsonbs
conceptual metaphor theory as well as Shustermanbs somaesthetics.
Thereby,
we will be pursuing the following questions:
- Are there such forms of pre-propositional knowledge and, if so, what
role
do they play in cognition, communication, abstraction or aesthetic
experience?
- What potential do the approaches mentioned above bear, e.g., for
studies
in aesthetics?
- To what extent do these phenomena challenge traditional views in
epistemology and the philosophy of language, i.e. the linguistic dogma?
While the first part of the workshop concerns foundational theoretical
questions, we will turn to specific examples and case studies in the
second
part.

Recommended Literature:
- Johnson, Mark (2007): bMeaning is more than words and deeper than
concepts.b In: Ibid.: The meaning of the body. Chicago: University of
Chicago Press, 1-16.
- Johnson, Mark; Tim Rohrer (2007): bWe are lived creatures: Embodiment,
American Pragmatism and the cognitive organism.b In: Tom Ziemke; Jordan
Zlatev; Roslyn M. Frank (eds.): Body, language and mind. Vol. 1:
Embodiment.
Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter, 17-54.
- Polanyi, Michael (2009 [1966]): bTacit knowing.b In: Ibid.: The tacit
dimension. Chicago: The University of Chicago Press, 1-26.
- Shusterman, Richard (2006): bThinking through the body, educating for
the
humanities: A plea for somaesthetics.b In: Journal of Aesthetic
Education,
40(1), 1-21.

Short biography of Markus Wild:
Markus Wild is Professor for Philosophy at the University of Fribourg,
Switzerland. He specializes in early modern philosophy and contemporary
philosophy of mind. Currently, he is editing a volume on embodied
cognition
for Suhrkamp (with Rebekka Hufendiek and Joerg Fingerhut).

IASH Theory and Method Workshop:
The Institute of Advanced Study in the Social Sciences and the
Humanities
(IASH), University of Bern, facilitates various types of courses for
doctoral and postdoctoral students that are conceptualised and
organised by
members of its Graduate School, alone or in collaboration with other
institutes in Bern or doctoral programmes at other Swiss universities.
(Further information can be found on the IASH website:
www.iash.unibe.ch.)_______________________________________________
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