BEGIN:VCALENDAR
PRODID:-//Grails iCalendar plugin//NONSGML Grails iCalendar plugin//EN
VERSION:2.0
CALSCALE:GREGORIAN
METHOD:PUBLISH
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260407T183049Z
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Paris:20260408T130000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Paris:20260408T130000
SUMMARY:Atheism and the Meaning of Life
UID:20260408T212848Z-iCalPlugin-Grails@philevents-web-f5d4878dd-r5qzs
TZID:Europe/Paris
LOCATION:29 avenue R. Schuman Maison de la Recherche Centre Gilles Gaston Granger Maison de la Recherche Centre Gilles Gaston Granger\, Aix-en-Provence\, France\, 13100
DESCRIPTION:<p>Atheism and the&nbsp\;Meaning of Life</p>\n<p>As Hans Blumenberg has shown\, a major characteristic of the<br>Occidental thought tradition is the rootedness of its fundamental<br>structures of meaningfulness in transcendence. Since the expansion of<br>Christianity\, this rootedness is guaranteed by a transcendent God.<br>This radical dependence upon structures of transcendence as the<br>ultimate resources of meaning becomes most eloquently obvious at the<br>wake of Modernity when Christian faith is progressively fragilized\, and<br>the medieval ordo starts to erode. The erosion of this ordo-<br>metaphysics gives way to a growing awareness of human autonomy\,<br>leading to the recognition of human agency. This shift carries<br>significant consequences: Friedrich Nietzsche&rsquo\;s famous aphorism<br>declaring the death of God illustrates with great acuity the challenge<br>linked to this revolution of paradigm: Following Jean-Fran&ccedil\;ois Matt&eacute\;i\,<br>Man is left in a &ldquo\;crise du sens&rdquo\;\, the French notion &ldquo\;sens&rdquo\; hinting at<br>both meaningfulness and orientation. The entire metaphysical<br>structure of the Platonic-Christian tradition crashes and (Western)<br>Mankind is in an urgent need to find new resources for the generation<br>of meaning. However\, the repeated crises in the history of Modernity\,<br>and in particular the spread of nihilism in the late 19th century and the<br>nihilistic ideologies of the 20th century\, show insistently that it is far<br>from obvious to take up this challenge. Whereas Nietzsche suggested<br>that we become creators of new values\, S&oslash\;ren Kierkegaard tried to<br>handle the loss of metaphysical reassurance by claiming God as a<br>subjective truth\, and Martin Heidegger attempted to find the lost<br>entirety of Dasein\, and thus a genuine meaning in life\, through a<br>merely immanent conception of authentic possibilities emerging from<br>the anticipation of one&rsquo\;s own death. Yet\, it is maybe &ndash\; and<br>paradoxically &ndash\; in Albert Camus&rsquo\; Myth of Sisyphus that the<br>indebtedness of Modernity to the metaphysical tradition becomes the<br>most striking reminder of the devaluated resources of meaning: the<br>revolt he presents as the attitude to adopt facing the absurd is<br>understandable only against the backdrop of what has been lost\,<br>culminating in the claim that life is lived all the better if it does not<br>have meaning.<br>Unlike the continental tradition\, analytical philosophy has long<br>neglected questions about the meaning of life. This started to change<br>at the turn of the millennium\, and a new discourse has emerged\,<br>reexamining these &ldquo\;classic&rdquo\; philosophical questions in the context of a<br>pluralistic and post-secular world. This conference seeks to explore<br>responses to the challenges posed by the &ldquo\;post-metaphysical&rdquo\; context<br>for the contemporary world and to engage with new perspectives on<br>meaning. By explicitly addressing &ldquo\;atheism\,&rdquo\; we aim to sever the<br>assumptions underlying the theistic framing of meaning: What is the<br>meaning of meaning beyond theism? How can meaning be understood<br>within a naturalistic worldview? Are classical theistic discourses on<br>meaning influenced by cultural bias? The conference is interested\, among<br>others\, the following topics:<br>- The relation of meaning of life and atheism\, naturalism\, and/or<br>secularism<br>- The meaning of life within philosophy of religion (especially<br>non-theistic accounts)<br>- The meaning of meaning<br>- Atheism\, Absurdity and Nihilism<br>- Atheism and Anti-natalism\,<br>- Non-western theories on meaning(-lessness)<br>- The topicality of specific authors for dealing with the<br>issue of meaning in late modernity (e.g. Kierkegaard\,<br>Nietzsche\, Camus\, Sartre)</p>\n<p>We invite you to submit a proposa at:&nbsp\;</p>\n<p>https://form.jotform.com/251553212647050&nbsp\;</p>\n<p>Deadline for submissions: November 30th 2025<br>Decisions regarding the acceptance of proposals will be communicated before January 6th</p>\n<p>Conference Fees: 80 &euro\;<br>The conference fees include coffee breaks and meals (dinner on April 8th and 9th\, lunch on April<br>9th)<br>There is no funding for travel and accommodation&nbsp\;<br>Participation is free for PhD students</p>\n\n
ORGANIZER;CN="Sebastian. Hüsch";CN=Klaus Viertbauer:
METHOD:PUBLISH
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR
