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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260411T041434Z
DTSTART;TZID=America/Phoenix:20171214T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/Phoenix:20171216T120000
SUMMARY:German Classical Philosophy and Naturalism
UID:20260413T111413Z-iCalPlugin-Grails@philevents-web-f5d4878dd-dnjxp
TZID:America/Phoenix
LOCATION:37th and O Street\, NW Washington D.C.\, United States\, 20057
DESCRIPTION:<p>Conference topic:</p>\n<p>Very recent inquires on Hegel&rsquo\;s philosophy highlight the role of nature in the Hegelian understanding of human mind\, spirit\, social interaction\, recognition\, second nature and normativity. It may be assumed that Hegel is a naturalist as he follows the path and the project of the Aristotelian naturalism by dealing with the continuity between life and cognition\, nature and spirit in several parts of his works. Hegel&rsquo\;s naturalism represents a good theoretical perspective for the investigation of the arduous concept of spirit by relating it to the notion of nature and explaining it as emerging from natural prerequisites. Moreover\, by means of this approach we could understand how Hegel explores the continuity of life and mind\, which is an issue with relevant interdisciplinary consequences already addressed by the philosophy of biology\, neurophysiology\, evolutionary psychology and social theory. However\, the topic of nature has also been very important and central within the entire philosophical tradition known as German classical philosophy to which Hegel&rsquo\;s thinking belongs. His reflection on naturalism has been developed within this tradition and by the philosophical debates at that time. Therefore\, the conference will address both the theme of naturalism in the German classical philosophy from Kant to Hegel and the relevant interdisciplinary and theoretical aspects it attains in the Hegelian philosophy.</p>\n<p>Schedule:</p>\n<p>Thursday 14th\, Afternoon</p>\n<p>2 - 2:15 Introduction</p>\n<p>2:15 - 3:30 Frederick Neuhouser (Columbia University): Spirit\, Nature\, and Life in Rousseau and</p>\n<p>Hegel</p>\n<p>3:50 - 4:40 Stefan Bird-Pollan (University of Kentucky): Kant&rsquo\;s Concept of a Final End as the Final</p>\n<p>Step toward a Non-Reductive Naturalism</p>\n<p>4:50 - 5:40 James Callahan (Emory University): From Matter to Caterpillar: Vitalism as a Solution</p>\n<p>for Kant and a Problem for Schelling</p>\n<p>5:50 - 6:40 Thomas Khurana (University of Essex): Living by Recognition. Hegel on the Second</p>\n<p>Personal Character of the Human Life Form</p>\n<p>Friday 15th\; Morning</p>\n<p>9:15 - 10:30 Italo Testa (University of Parma): Habitual Action and the Natural Conditions of</p>\n<p>Agency</p>\n<p>11.00 - 12:15 Shaun Gallagher (University of Memphis): Naturalizing Recognition: Fichte\, Hegel</p>\n<p>and Enactivist Interventions in Critical Theory</p>\n<p>12:25 - 1:15 Gerad Gentry (University of South Carolina and Yale University): Two Critiques of</p>\n<p>German Idealism: Reframing the Point of Transition from Kant to Idealism</p>\n<p>Lunch Break</p>\n<p>1:15 - 2:45</p>\n<p>Afternoon</p>\n<p>2:45 - 4:00 Ant&oacute\;n Barba-Kay (Catholic University of America\, Washington D.C.): The Recurrence</p>\n<p>of Alienation in the Nature of Idealism</p>\n<p>4:20 - 5.10 Gene Flenaday (University of Warwick): Normativity in Nature: Hegel&rsquo\;s Argument</p>\n<p>against the Indifference of Causal and Normative Explanation.</p>\n<p>5.20 - 6.10 Richard Eldridge (Swarthmore College): Becoming Who One is: Self-Consciousness\,</p>\n<p>Stance\, and Literary Art in Hegel\, Lukacs and Adorno</p>\n<p>Saturday 15th\; Morning</p>\n<p>9:15 - 10:30 Karen Ng (Vanderbilt University): Life as Ground: Hegel&rsquo\;s Critique of Judgment</p>\n<p>10:45 - 12:00 Guido Seddone (Georgetown University and University of Parma): The Truth of Life:</p>\n<p>Hegel on Mind-Life Continuity</p>\n<p>12:10 - 1:00 Andrew Werner (Yale University): The Organic and the Logical</p>\n<p>1:00 Closure of the Conference</p>\n<p>- This project has received funding from the European Union&rsquo\;s Horizon 2020 &nbsp\;research and innovation</p>\n<p>programme under the Marie Sklodowska-Curie grant agreement No 704127 -</p>
ORGANIZER;CN=Terry Pinkard;CN=Guido Seddone;CN=Italo Testa:
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