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CALSCALE:GREGORIAN
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260704T234647Z
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20220331T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20220401T170000
SUMMARY:Forms and Functions of Islamic Philosophy
UID:20260713T094224Z-iCalPlugin-Grails@fe80:0:0:0:6495:9dff:fec2:7848%3
TZID:America/New_York
LOCATION:Finberg House\, Annandale-on-Hudson\, United States\, 12504
DESCRIPTION:<p>&ldquo\;Forms and Functions of Islamic Philosophy&rdquo\; seeks to highlight how Islamic philosophy (<em>falsafa</em>/<em>ḥikma</em>) was practiced &ldquo\;in conversation&rdquo\;&mdash\;between scholars\, with various audiences\, and with different disciplines\, approaches\, and rhetoric. Islamic philosophy was composed not only in traditional forms of treatises and commentaries\, but also through narratives written in poetry and prose. For example\, Fakhr al-Dīn al-Rāzī penned a panegyric poem written in Persian in praise of logic\, physics\, and metaphysics\, alongside his many philosophical prose treatises. Ibn al-ʿArabī&rsquo\;s philosophical mysticism includes prose that reads as Aristotelian commentary alongside succinct poems highlighting his key philosophical concepts through mystical metaphors. In reference to Ibn Sīnā&rsquo\;s allegorical treatise\, Ibn Tufayl&rsquo\;s famous Ḥayy Ibn Yaqẓān provides an intriguing narrative and philosophical thought experiment. What do story-telling\, poetry\, narrative\, metaphor\, and allegory reveal about the nature and purpose of philosophy? The conference is organized in conjunction with the &ldquo\;Islamic Philosophy in Conversation&rdquo\; working group. While all paper submissions will be given equal consideration\, the conference aligns itself with the goals of the working group\, and therefore encourages submissions from a diverse group of applicants\, including emerging scholars of Islamic philosophy\, as well as those who identify as female\, non-binary\, or as belonging to a historically-marginalized group.</p>\n<p>Conference Structure: The conference will include two traditional panels (15-20 minutes per presenter) as well as longer sessions workshopping the papers of two emerging scholars. Additionally\, we will hold an open discussion of a primary text in translation\, as well as a keynote lecture\, both led by Dr. Lara Harb.</p>\n<p>Logistics: Pending CDC guidelines\, the conference will be held on the campus of Bard College on Thursday\, March 31 and Friday\, April 1\, 2022. All attendees must be fully vaccinated against COVID-19\, as is required of all visitors to Bard College\, and recommended health protocols will be followed for the duration of the conference.</p>
ORGANIZER;CN=Nora Jacobsen Ben Hammed;CN=Elizabeth Sartell;CN=Shatha Almutawa:
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