BEGIN:VCALENDAR PRODID:-//Grails iCalendar plugin//NONSGML Grails iCalendar plugin//EN VERSION:2.0 CALSCALE:GREGORIAN METHOD:PUBLISH BEGIN:VEVENT DTSTAMP:20240328T213130Z DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Rome:20190619T050000 DTEND;TZID=Europe/Rome:20190621T130000 SUMMARY:Contemporary Relevance of Hegelian Naturalism UID:20240328T213130Z-iCalPlugin-Grails@philevents-web-6f97df9687-7c6q9 TZID:Europe/Rome LOCATION:via D'Azeglio\, 85\, Italy DESCRIPTION:
Contemporary Relevance of Hegelian Naturalism: Philosophical and Interdisciplinary Outcomes.
\nInternational Conference\, University of Parma (IT)\, June 19th-21st 2019
\n\nVenue: University of Parma\, Via M. D&rsquo\;Azeglio 85
\nRoom B
\nDepartment of Humanities and Social Sciences (DUSIC)
\n\n\nConference Topic:
\n\nThe conference will address interdisciplinary issues connected to a naturalistic reading of Hegelian thought\, with special reference to the social sciences\, neurosciences\, biology and philosophy of biology. Hegel&rsquo\;s philosophy is in fact devoted to a revision of the transcendental philosophy by highlighting that thinking and cognition originate from the natural requisites of the subject. In this sense\, his philosophy entails a novel naturalism accounting for the concrete interdependence between nature and thinking\, life and mind\, and enhancing our understanding of the human nature and its social outcomes. This version of naturalism not only has relevance for the contemporary philosophical debate on this category of thinking\, it can also be elaborated through an interdisciplinary approach. \;
\nWhat is Hegelian naturalism about\, and why is it philosophically relevant? Can Hegel&rsquo\;s philosophy improve our understanding on topics related to different disciplines? Is a dialogue between Hegelian thinking and the previous mentioned disciplines methodologically possible?
\nIn order to answer those questions\, the conference will gather Hegelian scholars and researchers from different disciplines.
\n\nThe participation to the conference is free.
\n\nSchedule:
\n\n\nWednesday 19th
\n9:00 - 9:10 \; Welcome
\n9:10 - 10:10 Emmanuel Renault (Paris Nanterre) Nature and Process in Hegel
\n10:10 - 10:50 Daniel Herbert (Sheffield) Hegel\, Naturalism and Transcendental Philosophy
\n\n10:50 - 11:20 Coffee Break
\n\n11:20 - 12:20 Luca Illetterati (Padova) The Ambiguity of Nature in Hegel's Thought
\n12:20 - 13:00 Anton Kabeshkin (Baltimore/ Potsdam) Scientific and Manifest Images and Hegel's Philosophy of Nature
\n\n13:00 - 15:00 Lunch
\n\n15:00 - 16:00 Italo Testa (Parma) Mindedness and Embodied Cognition
\n16:00 - 16:40 Cyprian Gawlik\, (Poznan) The Problem of Natural Language in Hegel's Philosophy of Spirit
\n\n16:40 -17:10 Break
\n\n17:10 - 18:10 Mario De Caro (Roma III) Action: from Hegel to Davidson (and Beyond)
\n16:00 - 16:40 Fré\;dé\;ric Monferrand/Jean Baptiste Vuillerod (Paris Nanterre) Nature in History. The Environmental Stake of Hegel's Philosophy of History
\n\n\n\nThursday 20th
\n9:10 - 10:10 Guido Seddone (Parma/Georgetown) The Life-Shaped Mind
\n10:10 - 10.50 Edgar Maraguat (Valencia) Biological Functions in Hegel&rsquo\;s Logic
\n\n10:50 - 11:20 Coffee Break
\n\n11:20 - 12:20 Sebastian Rö\;dl (Leipzig) The Universality of the Animal
\n12:20 - 13:00 Filip Niklas (Warwick) Animal Differentiation as Assimilation: Exploring Hegel&rsquo\;s Speculative Idea of Digestion with Biology and Anatomy
\n\n13:00 -15:00 Lunch
\n\n15:00 - 16:00 Christopher Yeomans (Purdue) Animal Embodiment as a Condition of Spatial and Temporal Perspective \;
\n18:10 - 18:50 Andrea Gambarotto (Louvain) Teleological Realism\, Normative Naturalism and the Life-Mind Continuity Thesis: Theoretical Roadmaps from Hegel&rsquo\;s Philosophy of Biology&rsquo\;
\n\n16:40 - 17:10 Break
\n\n17:10 - 18:10 Alison Stone (Lancaster) Hegel\, Philosophy of Nature\, and Naturalism
\n\n\nFriday 21st
\n9:10 - 10:00 Heikki Ikä\;heimo (Sydney\, UNSW) Hegel and Liberal Naturalism
\n10:10 - 10:50 Ana Maria Guzmá\;n Olmos (Bonn) Hegel&rsquo\;s Negative Excess and The Automation of Thought
\n\n10:50 - 11:20 Coffee Break
\n\n11:20 - 12:20 Arvi Sä\;rkelä\; (Luzerne) Negative Organicism: Adorno\, Emerson and the Idea of a Disclosing Critique of Society
\n12:20 - 13:00 Federica Gregoratto (St. Gallen) Passion and the Nature of Freedom: from Hegel to Adorno
\n\n13:00 - 14:40 Lunch
\n\n14:40 - 15:40 Luca Corti (Padova) Hegel&rsquo\;s Anthropology and Naturalism
\n15:40 - 16:20 Ana Munte (Tü\;bingen) Hegel&rsquo\;s Philosophy of Spirit - An Attempt to Avoid the Trap of Naturalism
\n\n16:20 - 16:50 Break
\n\n16:50 - 17:30 Donatien Costa (Milan/Paris Nanterre) Land and Recognition in Hegel's Jena Writings
\n\n\nScientific Organization
\n\nGuido Seddone (University of Parma)
\nItalo Testa (University of Parma)
\n\n- This project has received funding from the European Union&rsquo\;s Horizon 2020 research and innovation
\nprogramme under the Marie Sklodowska-Curie grant agreement No 704127 - \;
\n\n\n\n ORGANIZER;CN=Guido Seddone;CN=Italo Testa: METHOD:PUBLISH END:VEVENT END:VCALENDAR