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CALSCALE:GREGORIAN
METHOD:PUBLISH
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T192906Z
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Bucharest:20220114T180000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Bucharest:20220114T200000
SUMMARY:Distributing Meanings across Contexts: When Hermeneutical Injustice Meets Linguistic Contextualism
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TZID:Europe/Bucharest
LOCATION:Cluj-Napoca\, Romania
DESCRIPTION:<p>The ALEF research group (Cluj-Napoca\, Romania) announces an online talk by Alex Davies (University of Tartu) entitled&nbsp\;"Distributing Meanings across Contexts: When Hermeneutical Injustice Meets Linguistic Contextualism".&nbsp\;The talk is part of the group's regular seminar and takes place on Friday\, JANUARY 14\, 18.00 EET (Eastern European Time). Please write to&nbsp\;alef.group.cluj@gmail.com&nbsp\;or check our Facebook page (https://www.facebook.com/ALEF-100692348488914) if you want to participate. For more information about ALEF\, as well as the schedule for the seminar in the 2021-2022 winter semester\, please visit&nbsp\;https://sites.google.com/view/alefgroupcluj.</p>\n<p><br>Here is the abstract of the talk:</p>\n<p>Hermeneutical injustice arises when there's a flaw in the semantic economy within a given community: the meanings that would make it possible to readily communicate and think about the social experiences of a particular sub-group of that community are not widely distributed within that community\, undermining such ready communication and thought. Typically\, the meanings in question are implicitly identified with linguistic meanings: the meanings of words and phrases. However\, when philosophers of language and linguists talk about linguistic meanings they distinguish between two kinds: "standing" meaning (that which is constant to an expression across different contexts of use)\, and\, content (the contribution the expression makes to a proposition expressed by a sentence containing the expression). They distinguish between these because when the expression in question is context-sensitive\, the two kinds of meaning are clearly not the same. To date\, discussions of hermeneutical injustice have tended not to distinguish standing meaning from content--assuming that where you have distributed the former you have distributed the latter too. This paper argues that such discussions abstract out of consideration an important dimension to hermeneutical injustice: the need to design contexts so that expressions with given standing meanings bear a content that makes it possible to readily communicate and think about relevant important social experiences. To borrow a metaphor from Bruno Latour: a content can travel through a community like a train can travel through a field&mdash\;only if it has the rails to go by. A content-infrastructure is required. To explore this idea\, I draw upon sexual harassment codes in UK universities as an extended case study.</p>
ORGANIZER;CN=Bartunek Nicoletta;CN=Adrian Briciu;CN=Craita Florescu;CN=Adrian Ludusan;CN=Mihai Rusu;CN=Paula Tomi;CN=Dan Zeman:
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