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Call for Papers

Theme: Creating a Philosophy for the Future
Type: International Conference
Institution: Philosophy and Religious Studies Programme, University
of Macau
Location: Macau (China)
Date: 16.–18.11.2017
Deadline: 31.8.2017

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From Victoria Harrison <victoria.harri...@glasgow.ac.uk>


Philosophy has emerged in many cultures, wearing many guises.
Although certain ideas spread widely in pre-modernity, it is only
relatively recently that it has begun to make sense to talk about a
global philosophical culture in which thinkers can draw on the
resources of a range of philosophical traditions, Asian and Western,
to address the problems that concern them. This situation, which owes
a huge debt to 19th and 20th-century scholarship in the history of
philosophy, sheds new light on our understanding of progress in
philosophy, the expansion of philosophical knowledge, and philosophy
as an agent of cultural change. It also raises questions about the
degree to which we can bring together insights and conceptual tools
from diverse and independent philosophical traditions to form
genuinely novel philosophical approaches that add up to more than the
sum of their component parts. By showcasing the work of philosophers,
as well as thinkers from cognate disciplines, whose work has roots in
both Asian and Western traditions, this international conference will
explore some of the ways in which boundary-crossing, post-comparative
thought can contribute both to the expansion of philosophical
knowledge and to the emergence of a global philosophical culture. It
also considers how thinkers within such a global philosophical
culture might create new philosophical tools that will be of use in a
future that, given the current pace of environmental and social
change, is likely to be radically different from the past. The broad
goal of the conference is to make a significant contribution to the
creation of a philosophy for the future.

Submissions are invited for papers on any aspect of the conference
theme. Speakers will be selected through a review of abstracts. The
language of the conference is English. Speakers coming from abroad
will be provided with accommodation (covering 4 nights) during the
conference, and meals and refreshments will be served for all
speakers. Participants are expected to cover their own travel
expenses.

Please send abstracts either in the body of an email or as a .doc
file (no pdfs) of a maximum of 250 - 300 words to Victoria Harrison
(vharri...@umac.mo) by the end of August 2017.

Notification of acceptance: 15th September 2017.

Keynotes

Mikel Burley, Associate Professor of Religion and Philosophy,
University of Leeds, UK.

Gwen Griffith-Dickson, Visiting Professor of Philosophy, King’s
College London, UK and Director of the Lokahi Foundation.

Richard King, Professor of Philosophy and Director of the Institute
of Philosophy, University of Berne, Switzerland

JeeLoo Liu, Professor of Philosophy, CSU Fullerton, USA.

Geir Sigurosson, Professor of Chinese Studies and Philosophy,
University of Iceland.

Robin Wang, Professor of Philosophy, Loyola Marymount University, USA
and Research Fellow at CASBS, Stanford University, USA.


Contact:

Professor Victoria Harrison
Philosophy and Religious Studies Programme
University of Macau
Room 4101a, Humanities and Social Sciences Building (E21)
Avenida da Universidade, Taipa
Macau
China
Email: vharri...@umac.mo




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