Call for Papers

"Conceptualising Philosophy"
Cave Hill Philosophy Symposium 2005
University of the West Indies at Cave Hill
St. Michael (Barbados)
March 7-8, 2005


"The discipline called 'philosophy' encompasses not only
different answers to philosophical questions but total
disagreement on what questions are philosophical."
(Richard Rorty)

Many would agree there is no single definition of
'philosophy'. The hallmark of the field is, rather, a
diversity of conceptions, traditions and concomitant
vocabularies, each assured of its own 'rightness' and
distrustful (and, in some cases, dismissive) of other
perspectives. The history of philosophy may be seen as a
succession of disagreements and 'partis pris' due mainly to
the incommensurable vocabularies of the parties involved.

Even a brief and simplistic survey of the history of
philosophy in the Western world might lend credence to such
a view. It is supported even more when one takes into
consideration traditions in other parts of the world and in
those regions touched by European colonialism. Africa, for
example, seems to reproduce the supposed European division
between Analytic philosophy in its English-speaking
countries and "continental" in Francophone and Lusophone
territories. Here in the Caribbean, where philosophy as a
formal field of study is still, relatively-speaking, an
emerging one, there is little consensus on what constitutes
philosophy per se or, indeed, what might make philosophy
specifically 'Caribbean' in nature.

The aim of the Cave Hill Philosophy Symposium is
non-partisan: to encourage dialogue between various
approaches to philosophy in the hope, even if resolution is
not possible, of at least encouraging different traditions
to engage in conversation with each other. For the inaugural
meeting, devoted to the theme "Conceptualising Philosophy,"
we are looking for papers that seek to address the nature of
philosophy written from a wide range of perspectives:
Analytic, Continental, Pragmatist, African, South Asian,
East Asian, Caribbean, African American, etc. We are also
interested in papers that seek to conceptualise regional
variations of the field: e.g. 'What is Caribbean [or Indian,
or Chinese, etc.] philosophy?'. We would hope, in
particular, to see answers to these questions framed by
appeal to topics in the various sub-disciplines of
philosophy so that panels may be constructed in which
differing perspectives may be pitted against each other, or
be shown to work collaboratively with each other. We are
interested also in theoretical work in disciplines that
share a boundary with philosophy (such as linguistics,
critical theory, cultural studies, or political theory) and
which reveals the way philosophy can contribute to the
discipline itself.

In an effort to ensure well-prepared, quality presentations,
abstracts (300-500 words) are due by October 31, 2004.
Participants whose abstracts are accepted by the vetting
committee will then be asked to submit their completed
papers (5-7 pages, single-spaced) via e-mail as an
attachment in either Word or Wordperfect by the firm
deadline of February 28, 2005. (These papers will then be
posted on-line for other participants to consult prior to
the conference.)

Deadlines:
Abstracts (300-500 words) due: October 31, 2004
Completed papers due: February 28, 2005

Limits: Presentations must not exceed 20 minutes (5-7 pages,
single spaced)


Contacts:
either e-mail:

Dr. Frederick Ochieng'-Odhiambo [email protected]
Dr. Richard Clarke [email protected]
Mr. Ed Brandon [email protected]

or write via regular mail to:

The Organising Committee,
"Conceptualising Philosophy,"
CAVE HILL PHILOSOPHY SYMPOSIUM,
The Faculty of Humanities and Education,
University of the West Indies,
Cave Hill Campus,
Barbados,
West Indies.

Further information will soon be available at:
http://www.cavehill.uwi.edu/fhe/SpecialEvents/philosophy-symposium2005.htm



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