CFP: Freedom and Autonomy
Submission deadline: March 13, 2020
Conference date(s):
June 23, 2020 - June 24, 2020
Conference Venue:
Department of Philosophy, Birkbeck College, University of London
London,
United Kingdom
Topic areas
Details
Keynote: Marina Oshana (UC Davis)
Autonomy and freedom are core moral and political values, and debates concerning their nature and application continue to have wide-ranging implications for normative philosophy.
This conference, the fourth in an annual series, aims to bring together a wide range of researchers working on autonomy and freedom as topics in moral, social and political philosophy. We invite submissions on any of the following themes:
- The nature, value and measurement of freedom;
- The relationship between moral, personal and political autonomy;
- Coercion, force and voluntariness;
- Freedom and capabilities;
- Threats to freedom and autonomy (e.g. coercion, paternalism, deception, manipulation, nudges, etc.);
- The limits of freedom and autonomy (e.g. in contexts of punishment, education, health, etc.);
- Freedom and autonomy in the social contract tradition;
- The role of the emotions in accounts of freedom and autonomy;
- The role of freedom and autonomy in the justification of rights;
- The epistemic conditions of autonomy;
- Critiques of specific accounts of freedom (e.g. positive, negative, republican) and autonomy (e.g. procedural, substantive, relational, hierarchical, perfectionist);
- Connections between freedom and autonomy and other related concepts, such as equality, identity, responsibility, toleration, well-being, volition, agency, selfhood, independence, self-determination, and so on.
How To Apply
If you are interested in presenting a paper at this conference, please submit an abstract of no more than 500 words to [email protected] by 13th March 2020. Abstracts must be prepared for anonymous review (though please include your name and institutional affiliation in your email). (Note: those who submitted to previous conferences are welcome to submit again.)
Selection will be by a two-stage process. In Stage 1, abstracts will be reviewed anonymously, and a shortlist assembled on grounds of quality and fit with the conference theme. In Stage 2, a final selection will be made with the aim of ensuring reasonable diversity with respect to gender, nature and place of home institution, and career stage.
Talks will be around 40 minutes, with a similar amount of time set aside for Q&A. Buildings will be wheelchair accessible, and special dietary needs will be accommodated. If you have questions about any aspect of the conference, please contact the organisers directly: Michael Garnett ([email protected]) or Chris Mills ([email protected]).