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Call for Papers

Theme: Life beyond the Anthropocene
Subtitle: The Human and Ecological Attunement
Type: International Conference
Institution: Centre for Philosophy and Culture, King's University
College, Western University
Location: London, ON (Canada)
Date: 17.–19.3.2023
Deadline: 15.1.2023

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The depth, scale, and urgency of our contemporary ecological
precipice cannot be denied. In less than a century humanity has more
radically transformed and exploited the Earth than all previous
generations combined and thus far the 21st century has only
intensified this exploitation. The manifestations are well-known:
dependence on fossil fuels andplastics; industrial scale
deforestation;rapid extraction and depletion of natural resources
including freshwater, proliferation of toxic waste products, etc. To
these geophysical symptoms and mechanisms can be added increasing and
rampant socioeconomic inequity and widespread spiritual malaise and
alienation. As ecosystems collapse and species go extinct, the
continued survival and well-being of human and nonhuman life forms on
Earth cannot be taken for granted. Indeed, the exponential rate of
consumption, exploitation, and destruction leads to the real
possibility of global resource wars coupled with increasing
mechanisms of state security to maintain severe inequality. However,
despite glimmers and whispers of dawning alternatives, there is
little indication of widespread collective action. At this critical
moment, we appear paralyzed by a crisis in human self- understanding
and an inability to imagine the human outside the framework of Homo
economicus.

Many mainstream proposed responses to the ecological crisis are
largely rooted in a Neo-Liberal framework of monetization and
profit-making. Green energy and sustainable models of resource
management, along with geoengineering schemes of carbon capture and
economic strategies of carbon trading and offsets, are touted as new
frontiers for financial investment, with returns pitched in both
moral and economic terms. Such tactics fail to address the
fundamental problem of human understanding. The changes needed cannot
be brought about by continuing to think within an economic model of
subjectivity largely responsible for the escalation of the
Anthropocene in the last century. Instead, confronting these complex
challenges requires rethinking and renewing fundamental understanding
of what it means to be human.

Such elemental scrutiny has long been the province of religion and
philosophy. And yet, both religion and philosophy have just as often
functioned as forces of division and modes of justification for
hierarchy and domination. Nevertheless, and despite necessary
critiques of the overreach and harms of false universalizing, we
believe the time is right for renewed projects seeking to articulate
transcendental or universal conditions of the human, even as such
projects must never lose touch with the concrete singularity,
difference, and value of each particular life. Can we learn to
understand such unique singularity not as a mode of separation, but
rather as an expression of the interconnectedness of life that the
philosopher Glenn Albrecht calls “sumbios” (living together)? As the
present crisis makes starkly clear, despite differences in
vulnerability and culpability, all humanity, and indeed all life,
share a fundamental dependency on the Earth and its climates.

Moreover, if it is increasingly clear that paradigmatic
transformations are necessary for more authentically symbiotic
relation with each other and all life forms, this does not mean
beginning from a blank slate or jettisoning the inheritance of the
world’s religious and philosophical traditions. Nor must it be
approached through the false and damaging dichotomy that posits
sciences and faiths as mutually exclusive opponents. Rather, what is
needed is a dual project of revisioning and rediscovering what
remains relevant from the past for the novel present and future.
Could the possibility of a planetary scale transformation inspire
deepened reflection, renewal, and cultivation of what is valuable in
our diverse heritages and traditions? Instead of positioning
differing traditions as competitors for the sole mantle of authority,
could we work with their different lenses in the process of
creatively synthesizing or collaborating towards a new culture and
human understanding?

With such questions in mind, the Centre for Philosophy and Culture
(formerly the Centre for Advanced Research in European Philosophy)
will host an international conference from March 17 to 19th, 2023
bringing together scholars, philosophers and visionaries to explore
vital questions of human self-understanding. Can we transform
prevailing conceptions of the human to become a contributing, and not
dominating, participant in the life of the planet? What seeds can be
found in our respective religious and philosophical wisdom
traditions? Can we articulate a transcendental understanding of the
human that is no longer based on essential dominance or separation
from the Earth and its myriad life forms?

In addition to these keynotes, specific panels will be devoted to
ecology and Indigenous philosophies, ecology and Buddhist and East
Asian philosophy, and ecology and Abrahamic philosophy. We invite
abstracts (300 words maximum) from all interested parties. While
there are many possibilities from which to explore these questions,
we ask that the abstracts express a clear connection to the question
of rethinking the human in this context. As such, sample themes might
include:

- What are the conditions for “ecological conversion” (citing Pope
  Francis)?
- What is the relationship between conceptual and affective
  modalities in theorizing transformation?
- Can religion be rethought so that it might serve as a uniting
  rather than a dividing force?
- How can we transform the Neo-Liberal economic frameworks of
  monetization?
- How do inherited cultural narratives influence collective
  engagement with ecological crisis in the present?
- How do we understand the relationship between the global or
  planetary and the local or communal?
- How do we balance the need for large scale planetary action with
  the specific local differences of varying ecologies and histories?
- What role does the temporal structure of the imagination play in
  creating conditions of possibility for an alternative future?
- How does rethinking the human relate to processes of decolonization
  and indigenization?
- How can we interrupt invisible assumptions of ‘common sense’ to
  alter lived experience towards more robust awareness of
  interconnectedness?
- How might lived relationships to time be altered so as to deepen
  appreciation of the way that the present is linked to both past and
  future?

The final due date for proposals is January 15, 2023.
All submissions will be equally reviewed. Please email abstract
proposals for anonymous review to:
ca...@kings.uwo.ca

The conference will include keynote addresses from Daniel Wildcat
(Haskell Indian Nations University), Jason Wirth (Seattle
University), Marjolein Oele (University of San Francisco University),
and John Maraldo (University of North Florida).

Conference website:
https://www.c-scp.org/2022/06/07/cfp-life-beyond-the-anthropocene






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