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DTSTAMP:20260408T230446Z
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20190430T190000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20190430T190000
SUMMARY:Living in Uncertainty: Kierkegaard and Possibility
UID:20260409T205012Z-iCalPlugin-Grails@philevents-web-f5d4878dd-r5qzs
TZID:Europe/London
LOCATION:Senate House\, Malet Street\, London\, United Kingdom\, WC1E 7HU
DESCRIPTION:<p><strong>CFP deadline&nbsp\;</strong>300-word abstracts: 30 April 2019<br><strong>Conference:</strong>&nbsp\;13 &amp\; 14 September 2019</p>\n<p>Invited Speakers:</p>\n<p><strong>Iben Damgaard</strong> (Copenhagen)</p>\n<p><strong>Joakim Garff</strong> (Copenhagen)</p>\n<p><strong>John Lippitt</strong> (Hertfordshire &amp\; Deakin)&nbsp\;</p>\n<p><strong>Rick Anthony Furtak</strong> (Colorado)</p>\n<p><br><strong>&lsquo\;Ethically understood\, if anything is able to stir up a person\, it is possibility...&rsquo\; </strong>(Concluding Unscientific Postscript)</p>\n<p><strong>&lsquo\;When someone faints\, people shout for water\, eau-de-cologne\, Hoffman&rsquo\;s drops. But for someone who is on the point of despair it is: get me possibility\, get me possibility\, the only thing that can save me is possibility.&rsquo\; </strong>(Sickness Unto Death)</p>\n<p>The term &lsquo\;possibility&rsquo\; (Mulighed) and its variants occur with curious frequency across Kierkegaard&rsquo\;s writings. Key to Kierkegaard&rsquo\;s ontology of the self\, possibility is linked to imagination\, anxiety\, temporality\, transition\, the moment\, and a number of other core ideas in his works.&nbsp\; The term is also central to Kierkegaard&rsquo\;s critique of Hegelian actuality\, in which the underlying questions seem to be: What does freedom have to do with history? How is change possible? What does it mean to begin?<br><br>This conference is intended to address these and other questions that fall out of Kierkegaard&rsquo\;s treatment of possibility. Basic approaches to the problem in his works include:</p>\n<p><strong>1) an ontology of possibility that involves the structure of existence/self</strong><br><strong>2) a rhetorical strategy that seeks to awaken a sense of possibility</strong><br><strong>3) a lived experience of possibility that involves ethical decisions of how to orient oneself</strong><br><strong>4) God as absolute possibility</strong><br>&nbsp\;<br>The conference is an opportunity to see Kierkegaard as contributing to a phenomenology of possibility or a discussion of possibility as part of the structure of being in the world. Ontologically\, possibility can be conceived as a simple absence\, what is not. Or it may be conceived as potentiality\, which has an ambiguous existence as a future being\, a not yet. The relationship of possibility to time is something that Kierkegaard draws out&mdash\;particularly in his discussions of Hegel&rsquo\;s Logic. Possibility as such is timeless\, since in possibility everything already is&mdash\;for imagination (Anxiety) and abstraction (Concluding Unscientific Postscript). Yet phenomenologically\, an orientation toward the possible or the potential means a being toward the future. It is precisely this temporal orientation that gives existence its open character.&nbsp\;<br><br>While much has been written about Kierkegaard&rsquo\;s writing style(s)\, an analysis of his rhetorical techniques from the angle of crafting a sense of the possible opens up a fresh perspective and yields productive links between Kierkegaard and a broader tradition of fragments\, essays\, and other open-ended or disjunctive textual forms. One such example is the form of the &lsquo\;imaginative construction&rsquo\;\, as outlined by Climacus in the Postscript\, which has the aim of presenting the good &lsquo\;in the form of a possibility&rsquo\;. Another way of reading possibility as a poetic strategy was proposed by the late David Kangas\, who spoke of the need to attend to the aporias in Kierkegaard&rsquo\;s texts. it is precisely through these moments of rupture (which often take the form of irony or paradox) that Kierkegaard opens up a sense for what may remain unsaid in the said\, what may remain un(re)presented in the present.<br><br>At the level of the ethical\, Kierkegaard offers a rich account of how anxiety and despair\, as lived experiences of possibility\, open us to a new horizon while showing us the contingency and fragility of the systems and identities we presently inhabit. In a time of political uncertainty as well as a seemingly intractable global capitalism\, Kierkegaard&rsquo\;s work on radical possibility seems more relevant than ever. He suggests how meaningful and hopeful action rely on a sense of possibility beyond what is given in the present. It is only in uncertainty that a meaningful life becomes possible.&nbsp\;<br><br>Finally\, what does it mean that in Kierkegaard God is so strongly associated with radical possibility\, to the point where\, in Sickness\, &lsquo\;God is the fact that everything is possible\, or that everything is possible is God&rsquo\;? Is this radical possibility an objective feature of Being (the ontology of rupture advanced by Badiou and Meillassoux) or is it something we can only understand in the context of a relationship to a transcendent God? What do Kierkegaard&rsquo\;s descriptions of faith as an opening to this radical possibility mean for living in finitude? How does Kierkegaard explore possibility and faith in the Upbuilding Discourses and other signed works?<br><br>We welcome papers exploring these or other approaches&mdash\;whether in Kierkegaard&rsquo\;s writings alone or in comparative studies. Topics may include\, but are not limited to:<br><br><strong>the phenomenology of possibility&nbsp\; &nbsp\;</strong><br><strong>possibility and ontology</strong><br><strong>possibility and concrete others&nbsp\;</strong><br><strong>subjectivity and possibility</strong><br><strong>possibility and horizon</strong><br><strong>living in uncertainty</strong><br><strong>imagination&nbsp\;</strong><br><strong>contingency</strong><br><strong>hope</strong><br><strong>faith</strong><br><strong>anxiety</strong><br><strong>probability/calculation vs possibility</strong><br><strong>radical change or conversion</strong><br><strong>Possibility and irony&nbsp\;</strong><br><br>We welcome submissions from researchers at all levels. Please submit abstracts of 300 words for papers of 30 mins by&nbsp\;<strong>30 April 2019</strong>&nbsp\;to Erin Plunkett&nbsp\;<strong>e.plunkett2@herts.ac.uk</strong>&nbsp\;with subject&nbsp\;<strong>&lsquo\;Kierkegaard conference abstract&rsquo\;</strong>. We will aim to process all submissions by mid-May. &nbsp\;</p>
ORGANIZER;CN=Erin S. Plunkett:
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