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Conference Announcement

Theme: Freedom from Others or Freedom with Others?
Subtitle: Alienation, Independence and Liberation in Contemporary
Indian Philosophy
Type: Workshop on Contemporary Indian Philosophy
Institution: University of Tübingen
Location: Online
Date: 11./13.12.2021

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‘Freedom’ in modern and contemporary Indian philosophy in English can
have two different meanings. One is metaphysical and universal. It
describes a state of being to be reached, often called
‘(transcendental) liberation’ or ‘mokṣa’. The other is political and
inter-personal or social. It implies a freedom of action, an
inter-personal process that often requires negotiation within
society, or political struggles. During the freedom movement in
India, it was discussed as ‘svarāj’ (self-rule, independence),
famously known from Mahatma Gandhi. Yet the borders between a
metaphysical, or spiritual/religious sense of freedom, and a
political or social one, are difficult to trace in contemporary
Indian philosophy.

Mahatma Gandhi’s or Aurobindo’s political struggles are at the same
time spiritual, with particular reinterpretations of Advaita. In
academic philosophy, the ‘svarāj in Ideas’ of Krishna Chandra
Bhattacharyya, addressed to his students, pled for extending the
political struggle to an intellectual one against “cultural
subjection”. Independence is correlated to freedom in thinking. In
his Studies in Philosophy, ‘freedom’ is described as one Absolute,
detailed in a gradual detachment from all objectivities, toward the
absolute subjectivity. Even though in the twentieth century freedom
is located within the boundary of knowledge, and even though there
are not specific ritualistic Hindu references, ‘freedom’ also has a
universal, transcendental, spiritual connotation, as the highest
state to be reached in an inner realization of the Absolute.

In a way, Krishna Chandra Bhattacharyya expresses a persisting
plurality and subtle intermingling of the quest for ‘freedom’ in
contemporary Indian philosophy: Is freedom a political svarāj, in
which case it ought to be reached with others in the socio-political
realm, or is freedom the way to reach inwardly an absolute state of
liberation from the world of alienation that others cause? Even if it
is socio-politically, is independence also not a struggle against
alienation, namely a quest for independence from Others (colonial
rulers), and in which case is this independence also a liberation
from a world? Is realizing one’s own inward liberation a way to
recognize the unity of all, or an exclusion of all those we leave
behind?

In modern and contemporary India, responses vary: they question the
socio-political formation of the idea of freedom in relation with
colonization, the inclusivity of Brahmanical metaphysics and the
secularization of mokṣa, and in relation with existentialism, the
relation to alienation and inter-subjectivity, namely the role of
Others in the realization of freedom. Highlighting the diversity and
continuity of the concepts of freedom in Indian philosophies, and the
newness that the political context and the contacts with non-Indian
philosophies brought to the concept, this workshop questions the
relation between freedom(s) and Others, svarāj and mokṣa, and the
intricacies between metaphysics and politics.


Program:

Saturday, 11.12.2021

Central European Time: 14:00 - 17:30
India Standard Time: 18:30 - 22:00
Israel Standard Time: 15:00 - 18:30
Eastern Standard Time: 08:00 - 11:30

14:00 - 14:20
Elise Coquereau-Saouma, Universität Tübingen (Germany):
Introduction: Freedom 'from' or freedom 'with' Others?

14:20 - 15:00
Mrinal Kaul, Indian Institute of Technology, Mumbai (India):
Thinking Soteriologically Through Nation - The Case of Amṛtavāgbhava
(1903-1982 CE)

15:00 - 15:40
Pawel Odyniec, Karlstad University (Sweden):
The Future of the Past: K. C. Bhattacharyya and the Retrieval of
Classical Indian Philosophy

15:50 - 16:30
Dmitry Shevchenko, Ashoka University (India), The Hebrew University
(Israel):
The Indefinite as Freedom in K.C. Bhattacharyya's Philosophy

16:30 - 17:30
Nalini Bhushan & Jay Garfield, Smith College (USA):
The Freedom in Subject as Freedom: How KC Bhattacharyya’s
Understanding of Vedānta Informs His Magnum Opus


Monday, 13.12.2021

Central European Time: 14:00 - 17:30
India Standard Time: 18:30 - 22:00
Israel Standard Time: 15:00 - 18:30
Eastern Standard Time: 08:00 - 11:30

14:00 - 14:40
A. Raghuramaraju, Indian Institute of Technology, Tirupati (India):
How the present of modernity-colonialism forced enslaved Indians to
scout for resources for freedom in the Past: Balagangadhar Tilak and
Bhagavad Gita

14:40 - 15:20
Muzaffar Ali, Savitribai Phule Pune University (India):
Svaraj, Swadeshi, and Samvada: Understanding Freedom in Contemporary
Indian Philosophy

15:30 - 16:10
James Madaio, Czech Academy of Sciences (Czech Republic):
On Ramchandra Gandhi

16:10 - 16:50
Daniel Raveh, Tel-Aviv University (Israel):
From Others? With Others? Why not Both? Daya Krishna on Freedom

16:50
General Discussion & Questions


Organization and Registration:
Elise Coquereau-Saouma (University of Tübingen)
Email: [email protected]


Website of the workshop:
http://int-gip.de/gip-workshops/workshop-on-contemporary-indian-philosophy/




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