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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260426T002417Z
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20140214T040000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20140214T040000
SUMMARY:Panel on Constitutive Arguments and Kantian Constructivism
UID:20260428T011931Z-iCalPlugin-Grails@philevents-web-6b96c54f56-bljdq
TZID:America/Toronto
LOCATION:Glasgow\, United Kingdom
DESCRIPTION:<p>Panel on:<br> Constitutive Arguments and Kantian Constructivism<br> <br> Panel Chairs: Sorin Baiasu (Keele University/University of Vienna) and<br> Christoph Hanisch (University of Vienna)<br> <br> Section: Kant and Kantian Constructivism in Moral and Political Philosophy<br> (organized by the ECPR Kantian Standing Group)<br> <br> Section Chairs: Sorin Baiasu (Keele University/University of Vienna) and<br> Alice Pinheiro Walla (Trinity College Dublin)<br> <br> Recent work on the nature of normative requirements (both practical and<br> theoretical) has exhibited a significant turn toward constitutive<br> arguments. Among others\, Christine Korsgaard\, J. David Velleman\, and<br> Connie Rosati\, have identified this argumentative strategy as a promising<br> response to skeptical challenges. These philosophers share the view that<br> certain features (principles\, aims\, etc.) are constitutive of belief and<br> action. Since engaging in the activities of believing and acting seems<br> inescapable\, one can generate the normative (some claim\, even moral)<br> bindingness of the aforementioned features for all agents.<br> <br> This variety of a broadly Kantian constructivism has been criticized by<br> moral realists\, most recently and most prominently by David Enoch. Our<br> suggestion is to discuss the current state of this debate (especially the<br> exchange between Velleman and Enoch)\, firstly\, by examining to extent to<br> which constitutivism is correctly categorized as a form of constructivism<br> and\, secondly\, whether or not it is a form of Kantian constructivism. With<br> regard to the latter\, we especially welcome investigations of the claim\,<br> often made but seldom substantiated\, that Kant&rsquo\;s works provide the<br> resources for contemporary constitutivism.</p>\n<p>Please submit abstracts of no more than 400 words to:<br> <a href="mailto:christoph.hanisch@univie.ac.at">christoph.hanisch@univie.ac.at</a> no later than February 14\, 2014.</p>
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