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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260429T145155Z
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20181221T184500
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20181221T184500
SUMMARY:Multicultural Philosophy
UID:20260430T231916Z-iCalPlugin-Grails@philevents-web-6b96c54f56-bljdq
TZID:Europe/London
LOCATION:Manchester Hall\, 36 Bridge Street\, United Kingdom\, M3 3BT
DESCRIPTION:<p>Philosophy\, understood as the attempt to understand our world and our place in it\, is not a uniquely western or European phenomenon\, with longstanding and esteemed philosophical traditions in China\, Japan\, India\, and the Muslim world\, and sophisticated philosophies throughout Africa.</p>\n<p>Yet ideas and figures from these traditions are absent from all but a tiny minority of western philosophy departments. Because of this\, in recent years there have many calls for western Philosophy departments to diversify their curricula and introduce non-western thinkers and ideas into their courses.</p>\n<p>The case for doing so is compelling but a practical problem remains: as most academics in such departments have been trained exclusively in the western philosophical tradition and are specialists in some aspect thereof\, how might those who wish to include non-western ideas and voices in their courses best go about doing so in a non-tokenistic way? Which ideas and/or which thinkers from the many longstanding non-western philosophical traditions should western philosophers seek to include in their courses? And what context do they need to be able to teach these ideas and thinkers effectively?</p>\n<p>The aim of this conference is to consider different answers to these questions.</p>\n<p>Accordingly\, the organizers invite contributions that address these questions head-on and thus have the potential to serve as a valuable resource to those teaching core philosophy courses such as:</p>\n<p>Epistemology</p>\n<p>Ethics</p>\n<p>Metaphysics</p>\n<p>Philosophy of Mind</p>\n<p>Abstracts for contributions that meet the conference aims are welcomed\, that is\, contributions that focus not on why western philosophers should include non-western thought in their courses but how they <em>could</em>.</p>\n<p>Abstracts should be no more than 300 words in length and prepared for blind review. Please include your name\, affiliation and contact details in the body of your email. Abstracts in Microsoft Word or PDF format should be submitted to Lloyd Strickland <a href="mailto:L.Strickland@mmu.ac.uk">L.Strickland@mmu.ac.uk</a> and Crispen Sachikonye <a href="mailto:crispen.sachikonye@postgrad.manchester.ac.uk">crispen.sachikonye@postgrad.manchester.ac.uk</a> &nbsp\;by midnight on <strong>Friday 21 December 2018</strong>.</p>\n<p>Decisions on submissions will be relayed no later than <strong>25 January 2019</strong>.</p>\n<p>Papers selected for presentation at the conference should be of a length suitable for delivery in 40 &ndash\; 45 minutes\, i.e. approx. 4500 &ndash\; 5000 words.</p>\n<p>Following the conference\, the organizers aim to compile and publish a peer-reviewed volume consisting of high-quality contributions developed from the papers delivered at the conference. <strong>Those submitting abstracts should indicate whether they wish their paper to be considered for this volume or not</strong>.</p>\n<p>For more information please visit the conference website: <a href="http://multiculturalphilosophy.org/">http://multiculturalphilosophy.org/</a></p>
ORGANIZER;CN=Crispen Sachikonye;CN=Lloyd Strickland:
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