The Redemption of Feeling: The Religious Existentialists
Traditional philosophizing has generally depended upon logic or reason as its primary or sole access to truth. Subjective experiences such as feelings or emotions have typically been viewed as secondary, at best, accompanying reason, or, at worse, clouding or misleading reason. This conference attempts to revisit how the movement of existentialism—and more specifically, the religious existentialists—have contributed to a rethinking of the role of subjective experience for the philosophical enterprise in contrast to the rationalist and idealist traditions. This rethinking of our subjective experience is what we are characterizing as the redemption of feeling. As such, this includes anything and everything that can be thought of as outside of a rationalistic approach such as feelings, emotions, moods, intuitions, etc.
The redemption of feeling, then, can be thought of as a rethinking of subjective experience as a whole, and its role in our philosophical enterprise, which may include a re-evaluation of the non-rational approaches to reality introduced above (emotions, moods, intuition, etc.) Expanding our understanding of philosophical thought to include these subjective experiences opens the door for the possibility of a mode of philosophizing that does not reject human experience as philosophically significant, thus reframing the significance of feelings in general for philosophical inquiry. We are interested in papers that creatively explore the importance of feeling within philosophy, but in particular, how the religious existentialists have contributed to such a re-valuation of feeling.
Preference will be given to papers generally related to the following topics:
· Kierkegaard’s, Marcel’s, Levinas’ (or any other religious existentialist) contribution to our understanding of feeling
· What role can feeling/emotions have in relation to our faith or relation to God? (note: by feelings we do not mean just the emotions)
· What cognitive importance do feelings have for any particular existentialist?
· What role do feelings have in moral/ethical questions or behaviors?
· What might be the role of feelings/emotions, if any, with respect to our knowledge of God?
· A discussion on the range of human experience, or feelings
· How do any two religious existentialist relate to one another on this issue?
· A discussion on lesser known religious existentialists, such as Ebner, Berdyaev, etc. will also be given preference
We are especially interested in papers on the following thinkers:
Soren Kierkegaard, Gabriel Marcel, Karl Jaspers, Emmanuel Levinas, Franz Rosenzweig, Martin Buber, Ferdinand Ebner, Nikolai Berdyaev, Miguel de Unamuno, Lev Shestov, and Simone Weil
Conference website: http://www.redemptionoffeeling.wordpress.com
The CUNY Graduate Center MAP (Minorities and Philosophy) Chapter inaugurates our new Works-in-Progress series, MAPshop, with:
Embodying Resistance to Racial Oppression
Céline Leboeuf (PhD Candidate, Harvard)
Friday, February 26th, 2016, 4-6pm
CUNY Graduate Center, room 5409
MAPshop sessions will be read-ahead: we will either share the paper via email or a Dropbox link at least a week in advance of the event. If you have any questions about the event, email cunygcmap@gmail.com.
May 23, Karen Jones (U. Melbourne), “Radical Consciousness and Epistemic Privilege.” 6:30-8:00pm, CUNY Graduate Center 5414.
CUNY-Milan Annual Interdisciplinary Workshop in Philosophy, a joint initiative of both institutions’ philosophy departments, is aimed at promoting advanced studies in core analytic topics. This year’s workshop, first in a series of annual events, will focus on belief. Albeit this workshop’s main objective is to advance research in Philosophy of Mind and Logic, the organizers are committed to maintain the interdisciplinary character of the workshop.
This year’s inaugural conference will focus on belief. It is the aim of the organizers to provide an interdisciplinary perspective on the topic of belief. Some of the topics to be discussed include:
Mental states/attitudes and beliefs; the connection between imagination and belief; group beliefs; logic of belief; belief and logical omniscience; beliefs about blame and forgiveness; the difference between conscious and unconscious beliefs; confabulations of belief; the experience of belief; what it is like to believe; norms of beliefs; knowledge and belief; metaphysics of belief; religious beliefs; political beliefs; manipulation of belief; content of belief; belief and bias; belief and language; belief as constituting sexual, racial and gender based identity; delusional beliefs; continental perspectives on belief; historical perspectives on belief.
Keynote speakers:
Organisers:
The Feminist Epistemology and Philosophy of Race Reading Group‘s first Fall semester meeting will be:
Tuesday September 4th from 11:15 am to 12:45pm in room 5489 at The Graduate Center, CUNY.
The Graduate Center is located at 365 Fifth Ave, New York, NY 10016.
We will read:
Emmalon Davis’ “On Epistemic Appropriation.”
The CUNY Graduate Center Advanced Research Collaborative (ARC) and the Philosophy Program present a talk and book panel on:
RACIAL JUSTICE
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 3 (Rooms 9204-5)
4:15-5:00 PHILOSOPHY COLLOQUIUM LECTURE:
“Racial Justice”: Charles W. Mills, Philosophy, CUNY Graduate Center
5:00-5:05 Break
5:05-5:45 BOOK PANEL on Charles W. Mills’s 2017 book, Black Rights/White Wrongs: The Critique of Racial Liberalism
Frank M. Kirkland (CUNY Hunter College & the Grad Center)
John Pittman (CUNY John Jay College)
5:45-6:30 Q & A
6:30-7:30 BOOK PARTY—Philosophy common room, 7113 (food and drink)