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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260501T213019Z
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20140531T200000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20140531T200000
SUMMARY:The Role of Emotion in Religious Experience: Philosophical and Theological Approaches
UID:20260505T220339Z-iCalPlugin-Grails@philevents-web-6b96c54f56-bljdq
TZID:America/Toronto
LOCATION:Münsterplatz 1\, Konstanz\, Germany\, 78462
DESCRIPTION:<p><strong>Call for Abstracts: 2-day Workshop on &ldquo\;The Role of Emotion in Religious Experience: Philosophical and Theological Approaches&rdquo\;</strong></p>\n<p><strong>University of Konstanz\, July 24-25\, 2014</strong></p>\n<p><strong>Keynote Speakers: Graham Ward (Oxford)\, Diana Fritz Cates (Iowa)</strong></p>\n<p>Religious experience has been the topic of much debate in both philosophy and theology in recent years. What is religious experience\, and what is its relationship to mystical or spiritual experience? Is there some common core to every religious experience\, or do we have a plurality of phenomena that fall under this description? Is an experience religious because it is interpreted as such? Or are there certain core features independent of interpretation that constitute a religious experience? What is the relationship between religious belief and religious experience?</p>\n<p>This workshop intends to investigate these and similar questions\, but with a focus on the role(s) that emotions play in religious experience: Are there paradigmatic religious emotions\, and if so what are they? How do they differ from non-religious emotions? What is the proper object of a religious emotion\, and how does this figure into religious experience? Are there appropriateness conditions for religious emotions? Can a non-believer experience such emotions (and non-irrationally remain a non-believer)?</p>\n<p>The workshop represents the culmination of an international online research group on the same topic\, which has been funded by an <a href="http://philreligion.nd.edu/research-initiatives/analytic-theology/cluster-group-grants/">Analytic Theology Cluster Group Grant</a> from the Center for Philosophy of Religion at the University of Notre Dame and the John Templeton Foundation. Members of the group will present their individual research and discuss avenues for future research.</p>\n<p>The workshop will be held on July 24-25 in the <em>Domschule</em> and the <em>Kapitelsaal</em> of the Konstanz cathedral to mark the 600th anniversary of the beginning of the Council of Constance (1414-1418). Further\, we are reserving July 26 as a special recreational day for those interested in taking a boat ride on Lake Constance and doing some (easy) Bodensee hiking.</p>\n<p><strong>CALL FOR ABSTRACTS: There are still a few paper slots available. We invite scholars (including doctoral students) from various academic and religious backgrounds to submit abstracts (in English) of approx. 500 words on a topic related to the conference theme by <u>31 May\, 2014</u>. Please send the abstract as a .doc or .pdf file to </strong><a href="mailto:emo.religion@gmail.com"><strong>emo.religion@gmail.com</strong></a><strong>. Papers on topics outside Western Christian religious traditions are especially welcome. Limited travel funding is available. Please indicate if you require travel assistance in your email.</strong></p>
ORGANIZER;CN=Roderich Barth;CN=Amber Griffioen;CN=Scott O:
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