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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260528T174814Z
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20130416T004500
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20130416T004500
SUMMARY:Place/s of Thinking On the Claim to Inter-“Cultural” Philosophy
UID:20260610T074038Z-iCalPlugin-Grails@philevents-web-6b96c54f56-bljdq
TZID:Europe/London
LOCATION:Vienna\, Austria
DESCRIPTION:<p>Thinking happens at/in a place. Obviously\, there always needs to be a <br> site or a point of view where thinking occurs&mdash\;a place at which a <br> thought manifests\, arrives\, changes itself and proceeds along in new <br> ways. At first\, this statement sounds trivial and obvious. Of course\, <br> thinking in any manner presumes a place\, just as every statement\, <br> every action\, every sensation\, and so forth does. It appears then <br> that it would be nearly impossible for thinking to take place without <br> actually taking place\; thinking would simply have no impression or <br> expression. Certainly\, &ldquo\;place&rdquo\; can refer to a manifold of things &mdash\; <br> the body (lived and physical)\, political class\, social status\, <br> (socialized) gender\, language\, cultural networks\, lifeworlds\, and <br> last but not least (geographical) landscapes as well as (historical) <br> time periods. All of these are\, within each constellation\, not only <br> the places that condition thought\, rather each appears to allow only <br> a determined\, bordered\, and restricted type of thinking according to <br> each sense of place. And yet\, deeply penetrating experiences of <br> thinking in both the past and present always again raise the claim of <br> being universal and in this sense of being inter- and/or <br> trans-cultural\, which always means between bodies and beyond the <br> body\, between and beyond the strata and settings of geography\, time\, <br> language\, gender\, skin color\, and so on.</p>\n<p>The breadth of this problem prompts a question\, namely\, what are the <br> theoretical approaches that can help us explore and understand the <br> complexities of where thinking takes place? How can we comprehend <br> this unfathomable concept of &ldquo\;a place&rdquo\;\, and why does it seem that <br> thinking presupposes it &mdash\; or rather\, if anything\, does place shape <br> thinking? Can one speak at all of a &ldquo\;pure&rdquo\; place\, unaffected by <br> thinking\, without running into problems? Or\, on the contrary\, does <br> thinking have to be bound to a certain place? Might &ldquo\;universal&rdquo\; <br> thinking be possible\, in a way that thinks between and beyond places <br> and that occurs always from elsewhere? Does a plurality of places <br> change or resituate the apparent tension between thinking and place?</p>\n<p>All parties interested in one or more of the topics described here <br> are welcome to actively participate in the conference and to send us <br> an abstract (max. 500 words\, English or German). With this call for papers we are open <br> to having researchers from other disciplines join us\, and we especially encourage post-graduate and post-doctoral scholars to apply. The <br> deadline for abstracts is 15 April 2013 (see contact details below). <br> We will notify participants of decisions regarding the acceptance of <br> abstracts no later than 15 May 2013. For those receiving a positive <br> response\, we will ask you to send us finalized version of your work in English or German<br> by 15 August (suitable for a 20 minute presentation). We can arrange <br> travel and lodging allowances for invitees (according to need)\, and <br> there is also the possibility of publication.</p>\n<p>Organization: <br> Murat Ates\, Mag. and James Garrison\, M.A.</p>\n<p>Institutional Support: <br> Prof. Dr. Georg Stenger\, Prof. Dr. Franz Martin Wimmer</p>\n<p>The conference is a collaboration between the University of Vienna&rsquo\;s <br> Department of Philosophy and the Institute for Arts and Sciences (IWK)</p>\n<p>Contact address (for sending abstracts): <br> ates@mur.at or james.garrison@univie.ac.at</p>\n<p>Contact:</p>\n<p>Murat Ates and James Garrison <br> University of Vienna <br> Department of Philosophy (NIG\, D0302) <br> Universit&auml\;tsstr. 7 <br> A-1010 Vienna <br> Austria <br> Email: ates@mur.at or james.garrison@univie.ac.at <br> Web: <a  href="http://www.google.com/url?sa=D&amp\;q=http://philosophie.univie.ac.at/interkultphil/&amp\;usg=AFQjCNGfsrvNwWGPV5Eokx2adf1aFfnIDg"  target="_blank">http://philosophie.univie.ac.at/interkultphil/</a></p>
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