segunda-feira, 3 de janeiro de 2022

ANNUAL CONFERENCES OF THE SGIR: SOCIETY FOR GERMAN IDEALISM AND ROMANTICISM 2022


ATUALIZANDO "ANNUAL CONFERENCES OF THE SGIR":


Link (SGIR): https://www.thesgir.org/home.html


Site do evento:

https://www.thesgir.org/2022-sgir-conference-and-sessions.html


1. Aesthetics and Idealism in the Age of Goethe

 Södertörn University / Stockholm / 8-10 June 2022


Keynote Speakers

– Allen Speight (Boston University)

– Violetta Waibel (University of Vienna)

– David Wellbery (University of Chicago)


Speakers

– Hannah Eldridge (University of Wisconsin)

– Luke Fischer (University of Sydney)

– Keren Gorodeisky (Auburn University)

– Johannes Haag (University of Potsdam)

– Arata Hamawaki (Auburn University)

– Elizabeth Millán (DePaul University)

– Dalia Nassar (University of Sydney)

– Anne Pollok (Johannes Gutenberg University-Mainz)

– Clinton Tolley (University of California, San Diego)

– Johannes Wankhammer (Princeton University)

– Moran Godess-Riccitelli (University of Potsdam)

– Raciel Cuevas (Temple University)

– Luke King-Salter (University of Edinburgh) 

– Arthur Krieger (Temple University)

– Eli Lichtenstein (University of Michigan)

– Rebecca Haubrich (Dalhousie University)


Conference Co-organizers and Hosts

– Karl Axelsson (Södertörn University)

– Camilla Flodin (Uppsala University)

– Gerad Gentry (Lewis University/Humboldt University)

– Mattias Pirholt (Södertörn University)

 

(2) Theoretical Philosophy of Kant and Hegel

Humboldt University of Berlin / Berlin / 16-17 June 2022


Keynote Speakers

– Béatrice Longuenesse (New York University)

– Robert Pippin (University of Chicago)


Speakers & Chairs

– Mark Alznauer (Northwestern University)

– Brady Bowman (Penn State University)

– Dina Emundts (Free University of Berlin)

– Katharina Kraus (University of Notre Dame)

– James Kreines (Claremont McKenna Coll)

– Dean Moyar (Johns Hopkins University)

– Karen Ng (Vanderbilt University)

– Julia Peters (University of Tübingen)

– Philipp Schwab (University of Freiburg)

– Sally Sedgwick (Boston University)

– Clinton Tolley (University of California, San Diego)

– Janum Sethi (University of Michigan, Ann Arbor)

– Gualtiero Lorini (Catholic University of the Sacred Heart)

– Angela Breitenbach (University of Cambridge) 

– Jim Conant (University of Bonn)

– Eckart Förster (Humboldt University of Berlin)

– Johannes Haag (University of Potsdam)

– Karin Nisenbaum (Syracuse University)


Conference Organizer

– Gerad Gentry (Lewis University/Humboldt University)


Host

– Tobias Rosefeldt (Humboldt University of Berlin)


Sponsor

– Alexander von Humboldt-Stiftung

 

Some of the following SGIR sessions at the APA can be attended online. Please visit the APA divisional website for more information.

 

SGIR Sessions at the APA

 

Eastern APA (Baltimore & online):

(1) Friday, January 7, Afternoon, 12:00–1:50 p.m.

G11C. Society for German Idealism and Romanticism

Topic: Kant on the Human Condition: Practical and Theoretical Considerations

Speakers:

Rosalind Chaplin (New York University) “Is Kant’s Supreme Principle of Pure Reason the Principle of Sufficient Reason?”

Lucy Allais (Johns Hopkins University) “Freedom and Autonomy in Kant”

Chair: Karin Nisenbaum (Syracuse University)

 

(2) Tuesday, January 18, Midday, 11:00 a.m.–12:50 p.m.

G24A. Society for German Idealism and Romanticism (formerly G15A) Topic: Women Philosophers in the Long Nineteenth Century: The German Tradition

Speakers: Samantha Matherne (Harvard University)

Kristin Gjesdal (Temple University) Lydia Moland (Colby College)

Chair: Karin Nisenbaum (Syracuse University)

 

Central APA (Chicago):

(3) Friday, February 25, Evening, 7:00–10:00 p.m. (cont.)

G4Q. Society for German Idealism and Romanticism Topic: On the Value of Human Beings

Speakers: Kyla Ebels-Duggan (Northwestern University) “Buck-Passing and the Value of a Person” 

Nandi Theunissen (University of Pittsburgh) “Explaining the Value of Human Beings”

Chair: Anthony Laden (University of Illinois Chicago)

 

(4) Saturday, February 26, Late Afternoon, 2:00–5:00 p.m. (cont.)

G5M. Society for German Idealism and Romanticism

Topic: Author Meets Critics: Katalin Makkai, Kant’s Critique of Taste: The Feeling of Life

Author: Katalin Makkai (Bard College)

Critics: Espen Hammer (Temple University) 

Richard Eldridge (University of Tennessee) 

Chair: Eliza Little (University of Chicago)

 

Pacific APA (Vancouver):

(1) Title: Session of the Society for German Idealism and Romanticism

Speakers: Marina F. Bykova (North Carolina State University), “Hegel’s Emergentist Account of Nature and Its Development”

Morganna Lambeth (Purdue University), “Heidegger’s Interpretation of the Transcendental Deduction”

Commentator: Jeffery Kinlaw (McMurry University)

Ana Vieyra Ramirez (Emory University

Chair: J.M. Fritzman (Lewis & Clark College)

 

SGIR Review

 

We are pleased to have Jake McNulty and Andrew Werner as the new Editorial Directors of the SGIR Review. Lara Ostaric is the Philosophy Area Editor, Daniel Carranza is the Germanic Studies Area Editor, Eliza Little is the Symposium Review Editor, and Jessica Williams is the Book Review Editor. For a complete list of the editorial team see the SGIR Review website. We are particularly grateful to Lydia Moland and Andreja Novakovic for their past work in these positions! 

Please find below the editorial directors’ call for papers for the Fall 2022 issue:

 

SGIR Review Special Issue Call for Papers

 

Philosophical Methods in German Idealism and Romanticism

The Journal of the Society for German Idealism and Romanticism (SGIR Review) is pleased to announce a call for papers for an upcoming special issue on the topic of philosophical methods in German Idealism and Romanticism.

Kant’s philosophical revolution was a revolution in philosophical method: rejecting both the “physiological” method of empiricists and the geometrical method of rationalists, he instead advocated that philosophy should consist in a certain kind of critical reflection on what we bring with us to experience. This, of course, raises a great many questions: Kant taught that philosophy done right should be critical – but what does that mean, and what qualifies as a true critique? Must philosophy at least in part consist in exposing the illusions of reason? What, if anything, is wrong with a philosophy that begins from first (i.e., self-evident or indubitable) principles? Could we rest content with an understanding of the necessary presuppositions of cognition, or should we instead seek to eschew presuppositions? Is it even possible for us to grasp the presuppositions we bring with us to philosophy – or might philosophy, in grasping those presuppositions, mutilate them? And what do these questions imply about post-Kantian skepticism, in its Cartesian and Humean guises?

Kant’s philosophical revolution resulted not so much in an agreement on his method, as in a heightened awareness of the importance of philosophical method; the result was a range of different experiments with methods amongst Kant’s immediate successors. Should philosophy rely on some kind of intellectual intuition? Is one’s method dependent upon one’s character in some fashion? Is a properly systematic philosophy, one that pretends to absolute necessity in its progression, the only way to truly satisfy self-consciousness? Must philosophy be all or nothing, or does insightful philosophy rather consist in fragments?

The SGIR-Review is inviting papers that address any of these questions on philosophical method in Kant and his Idealist and Romantic successors, as well as papers on any other aspect of philosophical method in these figures – including those that relate reflections on method by one or more of these thinkers to issues in contemporary philosophy.

Papers should be between 5,000-12,000 words (inclusive of footnotes and bibliography. Anonymized papers should be submitted to Lara Ostaric (lostaric@temple.edu) by March 15 to be considered for publication.

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Our 2023 annual conference will take place at Boston University. If you are interested in hosting a future conference or have an idea for an APA session or would like to be considered as a Guest Editor for an SGIR special issue, please reach out to us at sgircommittee@gmail.com 

 

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