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Conference Announcement

"Justice and Common Good: The Problem of Moral Decline in
Post-Soviet World"
International Conference
Institute of Philosophy, Donetsk University of Management
Council for Research in Values and Philosophy (RVP)
Donetsk (Ukraine)
4-5 June 2007

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The Challenge

In the past few years there have witnessed a remarkable
interest in moral and human dignity. This field, which was
thought to be all but exhausted two decades ago in European
tradition, has become the focus of great intellectual
ferment in view of the post-Soviet decline in moral
standards. This is reflected in the tendencies towards (1) a
pragmatism oriented to economic benefits; (2) self-interest
without stable moral values and attention to justice as
interrelating law and morality, private and public; (3) the
domination of strategic economic rationality over
value-rational attitudes. This moral crisis is strengthening
due to the rising vector of neo-corporativism resulting in
the degradation of legal and family institutions as well as
the Lebenswelt constituted of culture, persons, society.
This brings about the reduction of public and private sphere
of civil society and of civil, political, and social rights.

Response

In this context the socio-historical implementation of
practical philosophy (Habermas, Ulman, Apel) directs
attention to the intersubjectivity and the social dimension.
The new global concerns suggest that this must be both
universal in scope and rich with the distinctive creative
freedom of each people. (1) On the one hand, universal moral
standards are significant due to their influence on the
European socio-cultural tradition of the formation of the
personality (Burger) with imperatives of citizenship,
communication, religious standards and civil society. (2) On
the other hand, of utmost importance is the orientation as
well to the specific cultural traditions and symbolic codes
of the people of a nation which bear its values,
commitments, social relations and sense of human dignity.

The task there is to combine the universal and local
moralities to create a post-conventional morality based upon
principles. This will be global in both its senses of
extending to all and including the genius of each. Such
morals is needed to encourage democratic practice, the
broadening of the public and private spheres, and respect
for both individual and collective dignity.

There will be the following topics for discussion:

1. Culture as a factor promoting and inhibiting common good.
The interaction of exclusion and inclusion in post-soviet
societies.

2. Contemporary post-soviet democracy in conditions of
declining moral standards.

3. Morality as a factor influencing justice and enlarging
citizen rights (civil, political, social).

4. Moral decline as a factor of exclusion of civil society
groups.

5. Theoretical discussions of liberal, republicanist and
communitarian philosophies on the correlation between
private and public: Impact on today’s post-soviet world.
 

Contact:

Prof. Yaroslav Pasko
Institute of Philosophy
Donetsk University of Management
Ukraine
Email: [email protected]
Web: http://www.crvp.org/conf/2007/Donetsk.htm


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