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Call for Papers

"On Hacking's 'Style of Thinking'"
International Workshop
University of Cape Town
Rondebosch, City of Cape Town (South Africa)
26-28 March 2011

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Keynote Speaker:
Prof. Ian Hacking

This workshop, which coincides with Professor Hacking’s 75th
birthday, aims to explore aspects of his extended body of work.
Although we welcome submissions on any Hacking-related themes, we
hope to concentrate on two areas: the first explores Hacking’s
suggestion that there are distinct Styles of Thinking, whilst the
second reflects on the philosophical implications of Hacking’s own
style of thinking.

Theme 1: Styles of Thinking

A Style of Thinking is in part constituted by specific methods of
reasoning, new kinds of sentences and specific objects of study,
where methods, sentences and objects are all intimately
interrelated.  By a method of reasoning, we mean a distinctive way of
finding things out that is grounded in cognitive human capacities,
has emerged at distinct moments in human history and has evolved in
stable and historically traceable ways. By new kinds of sentences, we
mean new candidates for being true-or-false which come into being
with the new style of thinking. By an object of study, we mean a
distinct class of objects of study introduced by that method of
reasoning. One example of a style of reasoning in this sense is that
of a taxonomic style of thinking: the methods of reasoning involve
the ordering of difference and variation in terms of some form of
hierarchic structure, the new sentences are those involving claims
about such species and genera and their connections and the objects
of study include the species and genera of systematic biology.

The suggestion that there are distinct styles of thinking raises a
number of issues of potential philosophical interest, which can be
grouped into three different categories. 

1. The first category aims at clarifying the terms of the suggestion
itself. Questions include: How should we distinguish one style of
thinking from another? How does the notion of a style differ (if at
all) from similar ideas, such as the Kuhnian disciplinary matrix or
Lakatosian research programme? What is the best way of characterising
the interrelation between method, new sorts of sentences and objects
of study? 

2. The second category focuses on (purportedly) extant styles of
reasoning. Questions include: How many extant styles of thinking can
be identified? What possible interrelations can there be between
these extant styles? Can the notion of styles of thinking be extended
beyond styles of scientific thinking? If so, what examples are there?

3. The third category explores the possible philosophical
ramifications of these claims. Questions include: Does the notion of
a style of reasoning change or undermine the way we think of
traditional ontological disputes in the philosophy of science,
concerning species, unobservables, and other objects which appear to
be products of these styles? Does talk of historically-contingent
styles of thinking inevitably lead to a form of relativism? Are there
forms of thinking that do not fall under a style or that are not
historically contingent?

Theme 2: Hacking’s Style of Thinking

A common thread running through the many varied areas that Hacking
has explored is the explicit focus on the historical conditions
surrounding the emergence and development of a target concept. He is
clear that this attention to historical detail is not an exercise in
history per se, but a way of grappling with philosophical problems by
understanding how they became possible, as a ‘historicised conception
of British 1930s philosophical analysis’. 

Obvious questions abound, including:
1. In terms of methodology, how does this approach differ from
related approaches – such as those falling under the heading of
Genealogies? How central is the role played by actual history, as
opposed to imaginary narratives for example, in such a methodology?
What criteria are there for assessing the success of such narratives,
and do these differ from the criteria used to judge good history? How
does this differ from so-called ‘Whig-histories’, and what precisely
is wrong with the latter?  

2. In terms of philosophical import, how may an understanding of the
history of a concept serve to resolve philosophical disputes and can
such a resolution ever serve to favour one side? Must attention to
historicity reveal the contingency and indeterminateness of
conceptual norms? Is philosophical theorising that fails to pay
attention to history problematic, or is this just one approach to
philosophy amongst many?

Call for Abstracts: 
We invite papers for presentation at the workshop that address these
themes.
- Deadline for abstract submission (500-1000 words): 1st December 2010
- Notification of acceptance by: 15th December 2010
Please note: we intend to publish selected papers from the workshop,
and have made initial contact with journal editors in this regards.
Should you wish to be considered for this, please indicate this in
your application.

To submit an abstract, email it (as a word attachment  or PDF) to:
[email protected]
 
For further details please visit the workshop website: 
http://web.uct.ac.za/depts/philosophy/events_conferencesIanHacking.htm
 

Contact:

Jack Ritchie & Jeremy Wanderer
Philosophy Department
University of Cape Town
Private Bag X3
Rondebosch 7701
South Africa
Email: [email protected]
Web:
http://web.uct.ac.za/depts/philosophy/events_conferencesIanHacking.htm
 
 
 
 
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