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CALSCALE:GREGORIAN
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260616T150148Z
DTSTART;TZID=America/Indiana/Indianapolis:20141017T051500
DTEND;TZID=America/Indiana/Indianapolis:20141018T130000
SUMMARY:Hegel\, Analytic Philosophy\, and Formal Logic
UID:20260621T001036Z-iCalPlugin-Grails@philevents-web-bd7db559-gt5qm
TZID:America/Indiana/Indianapolis
LOCATION:2101 E. Coliseum Blvd\, Fort Wayne\, Indiana\, USA\, United States\, 46805
DESCRIPTION:<p>Last CFP exploring the real possibilities and/or limits a &ldquo\;Hegel turn&rdquo\; in&nbsp\;<br>English-speaking philosophy. More specifically\, we shall explore the&nbsp\;<br>possibilities and/or limits of building on 20th century Hegel scholarship\,&nbsp\;<br>which has largely recovered the historical Hegel\, by developing Hegelian&nbsp\;<br>philosophy (which Hegel called the perennial philosophy in its latest form)&nbsp\;<br>beyond the point where he left it\, especially by integrating the conceptual&nbsp\;<br>and linguistic tools of the analytic tradition and post-Aristotelian formal&nbsp\;<br>logic. Paul Redding (University of Sydney) and Clark Butler (Purdue&nbsp\;<br>University\, Indiana-Purdue Fort Wayne Campus) are the organizers of this&nbsp\;<br>conference to take place on the Fort Wayne Campus\, Fort Wayne Indiana 26805&nbsp\;<br>USA\, Friday-Saturday\, October 17-18\, 2014.&nbsp\;<br>&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;Exploration of a possible Hegelian turn will also be pursued by a&nbsp\;<br>related conference focus\, namely\, Hegel's philosophy of nature in the light&nbsp\;<br>of contemporary rather than 19th century natural and social science.&nbsp\;<br>Addition this socus results from co-sponsorship by the Indiana Philosophical&nbsp\;<br>Association (IPA) meeting concurrently at the Indiana-Purdue Fort Wayne&nbsp\;<br>Campus (IPFW). Three simultaneous sessions are planned\, two organized by the&nbsp\;<br>IPA alongside the one organized by the Purdue Philosophy Department on the&nbsp\;<br>Fort Wayne Campus. Currently with this CFP\, the IPA is issuing its own.&nbsp\;<br>Invited speakers include Robert Brandom (Pittsburgh) Ermanno Bencivenga (UC-<br>Irvine)\, Angelica Nuzzo (CUNY Graduate Center)\, and Graham Priest (CUNY&nbsp\;<br>Graduate Center). The deadline for submitting abstracts for blind review is&nbsp\;<br>August 1\, 2014. Notification will be given on September 1. Abstracts should &nbsp\;<br>be sufficiently developed to state the thesis with the projected line of&nbsp\;<br>reasoning. &nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;<br>&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;&nbsp\;Sample questions to be addressed are: &ldquo\;How much merit would Hegel\, if&nbsp\;<br>alive today\, see in contemporary formal logic?&rdquo\; &ldquo\;Can non-standard types of&nbsp\;<br>formal logic help clarify Hegel\, or is the cause of making Hegel clearer&nbsp\;<br>better served by using standard current formal logic&mdash\;e.g.\, Quine plus modal&nbsp\;<br>logic?&rdquo\; &ldquo\;Can the view of many Hegel scholars&mdash\;namely\, that formal logic empty&nbsp\;<br>of content is useless in making Hegel clear--be rethought by applied formal&nbsp\;<br>logic with content provided in use\, or by formal logics other than the one&nbsp\;<br>understood either by Hegel or by standard symbolic logic textbooks?&rdquo\; &ldquo\;Can&nbsp\;<br>Hegel be understood better by developing the contrast between dialectical&nbsp\;<br>logic and formal logic\, or can dialectical logic be assimilated to a formal&nbsp\;<br>logic capable of expressing "reason" developed out of the "understanding"?&nbsp\;<br>Submissions addressing these and related questions are welcome. An issue in&nbsp\;<br>the Hegelian Research Series published in the journal CLIO is expected to be&nbsp\;<br>devoted to the themes of the conference. Send inquiries and submissions to&nbsp\;<br>Clark Butler at butler@ipfw.edu</p>
ORGANIZER;CN=Clark Butler;CN=Paul Redding:
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