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Conference Announcement

Theme: Kant and Racial Discrimination
Type: Online Workshop
Institution: Institute of Philosophy, Ruhr-University Bochum
Location: Online
Date: 24.–25.2.2022

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Kant's discriminatory statements and implications in some of his
works, such as on physical geography, anthropology, and especially in
his continuous theory of race, might shock those who are rather
acquainted with or inspired by his prominent egalitarian universalism
in moral and, in part, legal philosophy. Kant's defense of racial
hierarchy, his condoning of race-based chattel slavery (at least
until the middle of the 1790s), as well as his account of various
forms of racial, ethnic, sex- or gender-based and economic
discrimination harshly contrast with his conceptions of equality,
autonomy, and dignity of all human beings. In the last years, a
growing number of philosophers and historians have focused on these
contrasts and their systematic significance for egalitarian moral and
political theories. Within the framework of this workshop, we will
analyze some of these contrasts as well as how Kantians might deal
with them.

The workshop is open to all (up to thirty participants besides the 
speakers and discussants).
Attendees are kindly asked to pre-register by 31 January 2022.

Registration (and further enquiries):
[email protected]


Program
(Central European Time)

Thursday, February 24, 2022

14:00
Log in and welcome

14:15-15:00
Stella Sandford (Kingston University London):
'Kant and the Natural Taxonomy of "Race"'

15:00-15:45
Christel Fricke (University of Oslo):
'Kant on Human Races and White Supremacy'

16:00-16:45
Ewa Wyrebska-Dermanovic (University of Bayreuth):
'Kant on Race and Colonialism. How Many Thoughts Kant Had and how it
Matters in the Current Assessment of His Work?'

16:45-17:30
André Grahle (LMU Munich):
'Kant and Racial Disgust'

17:45-18:30
Martin Sticker (University of Bristol):
'Kant's Ethics and (Cultural) Pluralism'


Friday, February 25, 2022

14:00
Log in

14:15-15:00
Michael Zeuske (Center for Dependency and Slavery Studies, Bonn):
'Kant/Humboldt - Cosmopolitan Scientists and Philosophers and the
Problem of Racism/Anti-Racism'

15:00-15:45
Elvira Basevich (University of Massachusetts):
'The Promise and Limit of a Kantian Republican Theory of Justice'

16:00-16:45
Helga Varden (University of Illinois):
'A Kantian Account of Intersectionality'

16:45-17:30
Jordan Pascoe (Manhattan College):
'Kant's Intersectional Argument'

17:45-18:30
Reza Mosayebi (Ruhr-University Bochum):
'Kant, Kantians and Some Themes of Intersectionality'


Discussants:
Lucy Allais (Johns Hopkins University)
Robert Bernasconi (Pennsylvania State University)
Jasmine K. Gani (University of St Andrews)
Corinna Mieth (Ruhr-University Bochum)
Peter Niesen (University of Hamburg)
Marcus Willaschek (Goethe University Frankfurt/M)

Organizer:
Reza Mosayebi


Contact:

Reza Mosayebi
Institute of Philosophy
Ruhr-University Bochum, Germany
Universitätsstraße 150
44780 Bochum
Germany
Phone: +49 234 3227239
Email: [email protected]




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