CFP: What's wrong (and what's right) with Ordinary Language Philosophy?

Submission deadline: February 1, 2017

Conference date(s):
May 5, 2017 - May 6, 2017

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Conference Venue:

Philosophy Dept., Åbo Akademi University
Turku, Finland

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Call for Abstracts

Max 500 words. (Presentation time 20 min + 15 min discussion.)
Deadline February 1, 2017. (Applicants will be notified of the selection result by March 1.) To be sent to kberts (a) abo.fi.

Theme:  What’s Wrong and What’s Right with Ordinary Language Philosophy?

The  label “ordinary language philosophy” (OLP) was probably coined by its detractors. Common objections against OLP are that philosophers engaging in it gratuitously limit their attention to the most common ways of using words, that they give current or non-specialized usage normative ascendancy over more sophisticated uses, and that they neglect the need for empirical investigation in settling issues of usage.

In defence of OLP it has been suggested that much of the criticisms are due to misunderstandings of methodologies such as those adopted by Wittgenstein, Austin, and others. The ordinary language philosophers are the ones who intend to approach language without preconceptions, by attending to the way words actually occur in interaction – not so much the language of everyday as the everyday of language. Nor are ordinary language philosophers out to chart maps of current or correct usage: their aim is rather to dissolve worries that arise out of misconstruals of our own ways of speaking. They are not in the business of new discoveries but rather of reminding ourselves of how we speak.

The aim of this closing conference of our research project “The Philosophical Import of Ordinary Language Philosophy: Austin, Ryle, Wittgenstein, and their contemporary significance” (2013-17) is to explore the aspirations and procedures of ordinary language philosophy. Are they unified or diverse? Are they intelligible? Are they defensible? How do philosophical outlooks that have an apparent affinity with ordinary language philosophy, such as experimental philosophy or various contemporary forms of contextualism, relate to OLP?

See our research project description at http://www.abo.fi/fakultet/filosofiprojekt

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