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Pulling From Pragmatism: Interdisciplinary Approaches. The Fourteenth Annual Graduate Student Philosophy Conference

Category: 
Academic Meeting
Title: 
Pulling From Pragmatism: Interdisciplinary Approaches. The Fourteenth Annual Graduate Student Philosophy Conference
Description: 

Philosophy stands in a relation of historical importance to many other disciplines. The driving questions, historical figures, and even contemporary literature of numerous fields of study often overlap with philosophy. Philosophers of biology, literature, feminism, mathematics, moral psychology, and critical race theory all study and have produced significant scholarship for those working primarily in these disciplines. Often enough, the interdisciplinary work of philosophers and non-philosophers alike are motivated by an interest or even full-fledged commitment to the tenets of pragmatism. Among the approaches to philosophical inquiry, pragmatism has proven its import for the humanities, social sciences, and the natural sciences. Inquiry itself is central to the philosophical project of pragmatism, and questions about the distinct methods of inquiry proper to other disciplines are shared by pragmatists. Pragmatism’s relevance to other disciplines is strengthened by its interests in the relationship between theory and practice, fallibilism, anti-foundationalism, historical contingency, revisability, pluralism, and the demand for practical import.

Consequently, we ask what it is about pragmatism and its conception of inquiry that make it amenable to interdisciplinary research? How have the social sciences, the humanities, and the natural sciences appropriated pragmatic themes? What has been the response of pragmatists to the appropriation of their own tradition? This year’s NSSR Graduate Student Philosophy Conference aims to foster an in-depth conversation about the relationship pragmatism has to other modes of inquiry. We believe that placing different voices of pragmatism in dialogue with those of other disciplines will continue to deepen and develop pragmatism as a resource within the larger intellectual conversation. This will then serve to strengthen the tradition of pragmatism within philosophy itself.

Keynote Addresses:

  • “Dialectical Pragmatism and Public Reason” Jeffrey Stout (Princeton University)
  • “Beyond Thomas Piketty’s Pragmatism: Why Transformative Economic Theory Needs Philosophical Pragmatism” Judith Green (Fordham University)

We welcome and encourage papers from all disciplines, as well as from interdisciplinary perspectives. Some topics for submissions are suggested but not limited to:

  • Religious studies and pragmatism
  • Non-foundational epistemology
  • Realism and pragmatism
  • Negotiating between objectivism and relativism
  • Scientific methodology
  • Naturalism and pragmatism
  • Scientific pluralism
  • Logical empiricism and pragmatism
  • Process philosophy and pragmatism
  • Evolutionary theory and pragmatism
  • Embodiment and pragmatism
  • Psychology and pragmatism
  • Deflationary approaches to philosophy and science
  • The political ramifications of pragmatic thought
  • Democracy and pragmatism
  • Pragmatism’s relationship to revolutionary politics
  • Value pluralism
  • Hermeneutics and pragmatism
  • Philosophy of literature and pragmatism
  • Literature’s import for ethics
  • Social scientific methodology
  • The relationship of agency and structure
  • Relevant historical and contemporary figures

We invite the submission of papers no longer than 4,500 words prepared for a 20-25 minute presentation. Papers should be submitted as .pdf files and formatted for blind review. As a separate document, please include a cover letter with your name, paper title, institution, and contact information.

Submissions should be sent to: 2015nssrphilosophyconference [at] gmail.com

Place: 
The New School for Social Research
Posted: 
Oct 06, 2014, 20:54 by Mats Bergman
Last revised: 
Oct 06, 2014, 20:56 by Mats Bergman