__________________________________________________

Call for Papers

Theme: Wittgenstein and Interreligious Communication
Type: International Conference
Institution: Woolf Institute Cambridge
   Westminster College Cambridge
Location: Cambridge (United Kingdom)
Date: 24.–25.6.2015
Deadline: 27.3.2015

__________________________________________________


Since the 1980s, Ludwig Wittgenstein’s thought has been engaged with
in various ways in order to elucidate (the possibilities of)
interreligious communication. In Christian theology, particularly
influential approaches that have claimed Wittgenstein as inspiration
are Post-Liberal (George Lindbeck), Grammatical Thomist (David
Burrell), and Liberal Comparative (Keith Ward, Klaus von Stosch).
Several Jewish, Muslim, Buddhist and Hindu thinkers, too, have
engaged with Wittgenstein while working on various kinds of
discursive encounters between members of different religions. In
philosophy, some scholars have, for example, taken the concept
religion as a ‘family-resemblance concept’ (Philosophical
Investigations, §§ 66-67) in working out the relationships between
conceptual and belief-systems of different religions (John Hick,
Victoria Harrison).

The conference Wittgenstein and Interreligious Communication,
organized by The Woolf Institute, will provide a platform for
conversation on recent and current approaches from these and other
theological and philosophical perspectives towards interreligious
communication that engage with Wittgenstein’s thought. These include
approaches which take Wittgenstein’s philosophy as a methodological
framework; or as a resource for fruitful ideas within a
‘non-Wittgensteinian’ framework; or, as an approach to be critiqued.
There may also be ways of engaging Wittgenstein in this area of study
which haven’t been analysed or even thought of before, especially
considering the fact that we are currently witnessing a new wave of
exciting publications of Wittgenstein’s previously unpublished
notes, and those taken down by others during his lectures.

At the conference Wittgenstein and Interreligious Communication we
want to provide space for a limited number of early career and
established scholars, theologians and philosophers, with a special
interest in Wittgenstein and interreligious encounters, to get to
know each other, discuss their work, and learn from one another. The
conference is conceived as relatively small in scale, with 3-5 longer
lectures by invited experts, between 12 and 15 short papers, selected
by a panel of convenors, as well as a poetry reading by
Wittgensteinian poet and researcher Mike Rose-Steel.

Contributors

Klaus von Stosch (University of Paderborn)
Mikel Burley (University of Leeds)
Daniel Weiss (University of Cambridge)
Sajjad Rizvi (University of Exeter)
Paul Cortois (KU Leuven)

Convenors: Gorazd Andrejč, Daniel Weiss

Submissions

In addition to the lectures, 20 minute papers are invited on topics
within the following areas:

1. Fresh developments in, or critical examination of, Muslim,
Christian, Jewish, or other tradition-directed approaches towards
interreligious communication, understanding or (dis)agreement, that
engage with Wittgenstein’s thought

2. Fresh developments in, or critical examination of, comparative
theological perspectives, as well as alternative or unorthodox
approaches to interreligious communication which relate to the
Abrahamic traditions and engage with Wittgenstein

3. Examinations of Wittgenstein’s relevance for, or influence on,
practices of interfaith communication, such as Scriptural Reasoning
and comparative-theologically structured higher education (concrete
case-studies welcome)

4. Fresh philosophical, exegetical or interpretive work on
Wittgenstein’s thought, or theological engagement with recent
interpretations of Wittgenstein, relevant for the topic of
interreligious communication.

To apply, please send the title and the abstract of your paper (400
words) to Gorazd Andrejč at [email protected] by 27 March 2015.
Number of places for papers is limited. Senior and junior academics,
postdocs, and PhD students in the advanced stages of their PhD
research are invited to apply. Papers will be chosen by a panel of
convenors within the first two weeks of April on the basis of their
academic quality, originality and the extent to which the topic of
the paper fits within the conference theme. Applications that arrive
after the deadline will not be considered.

Conference website:
https://wittcomm.wordpress.com




__________________________________________________


InterPhil List Administration:
http://interphil.polylog.org

Intercultural Philosophy Calendar:
http://cal.polylog.org

__________________________________________________

 

Reply via email to