To Be Announced
Stephan Hartmann (Tilburg University), Jeffrey Ketland (Munich Center for Mathematical Philosophy), Charlotte Werndl (London School of Economics), Michael Baumgartner (University of Osnabrück), Andreas Hüttemann (University of Cologne), Gerhard Schurz (University of Düsseldorf), Adam Green (University of Innsbruck), Patrick Todd (University of Innsbruck)

part of: Salzburg Conference for Young Analytic Philosophy (SOPhiA 2012)
September 13, 2012, 10:00am - 10:30am
Department of Philosophy (Humanities), University of Salzburg

Wallistrakt
Franziskanergasse 1
Salzburg 5020
Austria

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Details

Press statement for the Salzburg Conference for Young Analytic Philosophy - SOPhiA 2012

Timeframe and general information. From September 13th-15th 2012 the second Salzburg Conference for Young Analytic Philosophy (SOPhiA 2012) will be held at the University of Salzburg's Department of Philosophy (Humanities). It is a public conference and attending it is free of charge. The official languages of the conference are German and English. The presentations will be given by philosophy students (pre-doc). The conference is hosted by members of the University of Salzburg's Department of Philosophy (Humanities). For enquiries the hosts can be contacted via [email protected].

Mission statement. Within the conference, problems of all areas of philosophy should be discussed. A thematical focus is not intended. The conference therefore has no specific theme. The presentations should rather set themselves apart by a methodical limitation to the tradition of Analytic Philosophy by usage of clear language and comprehensible arguments. "Presentations and papers in the tradition of Analytic Philosophy" is, as per definition of the conference hosts, understood as presentations and papers that are methodologically similar to presentations and papers of Bernard Bolzano, Gottlob Frege, Bertrand Russell, Rudolf Carnap, Karl R. Popper and other recognised analytic philosophers, or that show efforts of a similar approach. The conference is meant to be a unified effort of the conference attendees to clearly formulate some of the problems of philosophy and to provide a critical assesment of them. No individual is expected to construct "a whole building of philosophy" all by himself; rather, the conference hosts expect everyone, as Carnap proposes, to bring the undertaking forward "at his specific place within" philosophy.

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