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Call for Papers

Theme: Beyond Nostalgia
Subtitle: Ethics, Politics, and the Critique of Modernity
Type: 2016 Telos Conference
Institution: Telos-Paul Piccone Institute
Location: New York, NY (USA)
Date: 15.–16.1.2016
Deadline: 15.8.2015

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The unique character of the modern world has made thinking through
the relation of the ethical to the political extremely pressing and
yet deeply problematic. Since the 19th century, critics of modernity
have pointed to various forms of skepticism, alienation,
indeterminacy, and abstraction that contribute to a sense of ethical
crisis. They point to a sense of uprootedness from the stability and
meaning-conferring powers of cultures, traditions, and communities.
It may be said without exaggeration that this sense of ethical crisis
has global theoretical and practical significance. Various forms of
alienation — economic, spiritual, political — have arguably led to
extremist versions of the critique of modernity. One everywhere sees
the effects of this alienation in the actions of those who take
ethical life to have been severed from political life, from the
brutal and atavistic program of "global jihad," to the troubling rise
of various forms of crypto-fascism in Europe. At the theoretical
level, political reality has come to be seen as divorced from ethical
life. The political world is seen as either a kind of contingent
result of competing interests or a coercive set of structures that
impinge on rather than help actualize human freedom. Postmodern
critiques of liberalism and secularism tend to be characterized by a
nostalgic yearning for a lost sense of ethical and political unity.
It remains to be seen whether these latter theoretical projects can
persuasively specify the relation of the ethical to the political, or
whether they will succumb to merely atavistic gestures towards a
restoration of a lost world of cultural cohesion.

Often the ethical impulse behind modern political activism either
remains obscure or is not even acknowledged. As Alasdair MacIntyre
noted thirty years ago, ethical and political discourse has become
increasingly shrill as opposed camps take one or another form of
relativism for granted, yet also proceed according to ethical
assumptions about the possibility of social justice. Rather than
pointing the way to a resolution, modern moral theory — utilitarian
and deontological ethics — merely reflects this crisis. A salutary
return to virtue ethics seems to hold some promise, although again,
one must be on guard against the lure of nostalgia.

Perhaps no greater indication of the perceived severance of ethics
from politics is a kind of Machiavellian commonsense shared by both
ruler and ruled that is schizophrenically joined to classical
assumptions about citizenship and sovereignty. The de-politicized
subjects of modern liberal democracies take it for granted that their
consent has been manufactured and their perceptions and judgments
manipulated and determined, but also expect rational and ethical
justifications for public policy and legislation from their leaders.
This set of practical attitudes mirrors a divide in political theory
between those who take it to be an ethical enterprise, and those who
take it to be an empirical enterprise grounded in self-interested
human motivation and power relations.

With the critical problems posed by modernity in mind, is it possible
to generate fresh and cogent perspectives concerning the relation of
ethics to politics? The 2016 Telos-Paul Piccone Institute conference
invites multidisciplinary, topical, and theoretical discussions:

- Multicultural mosaics, civilizational clashes, and cosmopolitan
  ideals
- Ethics and executive action: Human rights vs. the demands of the
  security state (e.g., drone warfare)
- Ethics, race, and racism (e.g., the ethics and racial politics of
  policing; #blacklivesmatter)
- Ethics and politics of global jihad
- The possibility of virtue ethics in political modernity
- Global ethics and politics of global warming
- Ethics of right-wing politics in Europe
- Ethics and politics of capital (wealth inequality and the threat to
  democracy; economic liberalism vs. the demands of citizenship;
  libertarian vs. communitarian conceptions of freedom)
- Ethics and politics of secularism and "postsecularism"
- Moral and political theory in a modern culture of skepticism and
  irony
- Ethics and biopolitics
- Crypto-normativity in Marxist and Postmodern critiques of modernity

Theoretical discussions on fundamental questions are also welcome:
What is the "ethical"? What is the "political"? How should we think
the relation? Is political space a species of ethical space, or are
they systematically distinct? What is the ethical dimension of
political institutions? Who or what is the "political animal"? (What
conceptions of "human nature" are deployed in the notion of the zōon
politikon?) Can explanations for empirical realities be sound if they
ignore alternative motivations rooted in ethical considerations? (For
example: does the assumption that politicians are always driven by
short-term concerns with political survival adequately explain
empirical realities?) Are ethical considerations beside the point in
light of stark insights into realpolitik and political power? What
ought a polity with a democratic self-understanding expect from its
rulers in an age of terrorism and perennial war? Are there arguments
for the widely presumed ethical superiority of democracies, or do
such presumptions reflect a particular set of "values"?

Submissions deadline

If you wish to participate in the conference, please send an abstract
(no more than 250 words) and short c.v. to
[email protected] by August 15, 2015, and place "The 2016
Telos Conference" in the email's subject line.


Contact:

The Telos-Paul Piccone Institute
431 East 12th Street
New York, NY 10009
USA
Email: [email protected]
Web: http://www.telosinstitute.net/conference2016/




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