Self-positing is the very activity in which the I is constituted as an I by virtue of reflexively self-reverting into itself so to immediately become intuitively aware of its own reflexive activity involved in the self-ascription of representations in judgment.
Tuesday, May 4, 2010
Define Self-Positing!
Sunday, May 2, 2010
NY German Idealism Workshop
Date: Friday, May 7th
Location: The New School for Social Research, 6 East 16th St., Wolff
Conference Room (906/913)
Time: 4:30–6:30
I will actually be at the New School, but won't make the meeting because I will be defending my dissertation at the same time.
Wednesday, April 28, 2010
Midwestern Study Group of the North American Kant Society (CFP)
October 23-24, 2010
London, Ontario, Canada
Keynote Speaker: Angelica Nuzzo (Brooklyn College, CUNY)
The deadline for submissions is July 1, 2010. Papers should not exceed 25 double-spaced pages. All submissions should be prepared for blind review and should be accompanied by an abstract of no more than 300 words. Papers read at any other NAKS meeting may not be submitted.
Monday, March 22, 2010
The Relevance of Romanticism (Conference)
Wednesday, March 17, 2010
NY German Idealism Workshop
The NY German Idealism Workshop is meeting on Friday, March 26th: "A Dialogue on Fichte and Recognition" with Jay Bernstein (The New School for Social Research) and Fred Neuhouser (Barnard College). Both are featured in the recent publication, The Philosophy of Recognition: Historical and Contemporary Perspectives, ed. Hans-Christoph Schmidt am Busch and Christopher Zurn (Lexington, 2010). Prof. Bernstein will give a short presentation of his paper, "Recognition and Embodiment: Fichte's Materialism" (see attached) to which Prof. Neuhouser will respond.
Date: Friday, March 26th
Time: 4:30–6:30
Location: Philosophy Hall, Room 716, Columbia University
For a copy of Jay Bernstein's paper email Karen Ng:
(karen.ng92@gmail.com).
Saturday, January 30, 2010
International Summer School in German Philosophy
Professor Markus Gabriel (Bonn University) will organize and teach the seminar, with Professors Paul Franks (University of Toronto) and Espen Hammer (Temple University) giving keynote addresses.
One of the aims of the summer school is to argue that the thinkers of Post-Kantian Idealism defend a new ontology, one which lays out the conditions of possibility for transcendental, higher-order thought. Despite Kant’s negative verdict on ontology, these conditions appear
precisely ontological as soon as the existence of the alleged transcendental subject is confirmed. Since the world cannot be reduced to a strictly ”external world” in the Cartesian sense, the
conditions of possibility for referring to determinate objects in the world come to be conceived as themselves determinate objects in the world. With this re-evaluation of the status of ontology in mind, we will read key texts by Kant, Fichte, Schelling, and Hegel, with specific attention to the relation between epistemology and ontology. Through this ”ontologized” reading, we will attend to certain essential claims of each thinker: Hegel’s thinking not only substance as subject, but the subject as substance, the later Fichte’s re-introducing the notion of being into his Wissenschaftslehre, and finally, Schelling’s ontology of ”ground”, ”existence” and the ”will” in his Freiheitsschrift and Weltalter.
The Summer School will be organized seminar-style, emphasizing group discussion and close readings of key texts of German Idealism (Kant, Fichte, Schelling and Hegel).
The Summer School will run June 14-25, 2010, and all discussions will be in English. Please send your application in English (CV and short letter of intent) to idealism2010@uni-bonn.de by March 10. There are some stipends (€ 800-1000) available, which cover travel expenses and part of the accommodation. To apply for a stipend, please send your CV and a short letter of intent that explains your need for financial support. Please note that there is no registration fee for the summer school.
Other information--including a description of the syllabus, and information about stipends--can be found on the website: http://www.idealism.uni-bonn.
Tuesday, December 15, 2009
Georgia State and Post-Kantian Philosophy
Friday, December 4, 2009
NY German Idealism Workshop
Date: Friday, December 11th
Location: The New School for Social Research, 6 East 16th St. Room 906
Time: 4:00-6:00pm
please email karen.ng92@gmail.com for a copy of the paper.
Wednesday, November 25, 2009
Is Obama a Kantian?
Maybe this is the influence of Rahm Emanuel, who happened to admire Hegel and "the nineteenth-century German thinkers" during his student days.
(Thanks to David Wood for the tip)
Tuesday, November 17, 2009
NY German Idealism Workshop, Nov. 20th
“Kant’s Spontaneous Thinker and (More) Spontaneous Agent.” Robert Howell (SUNY Albany) will respond.
Date: Friday, November 20th
Location: Columbia University, Philosophy Hall, Room 716
Time: 4:30-6:30pm
Light refreshments will be served.
To receive a copy of Kitcher's paper in advance, email Matt Congdon at matt.congdon@gmail.com
Thursday, October 8, 2009
Hegel and Herder
For the many readers in the NY area, Katie Terezakis, a graduate of the New School and now at Rochester Institute of Technology, will give a talk October 15, 2009 at Columbia University: "Meaning and Authority in the Thought of J.G. Herder".
Thursday, October 1, 2009
German Idealism Workshop
Allegra de Laurentiis (Stonybrook) will be giving a paper entitled, "Garve, Kant and Hegel on the Right and the Useful in International Politics." Martin Stone (Cardozo and The New School) will respond.
Date: Friday, October 16th
Location: The New School, 80 Fifth Ave., Rm. 529
Time: 4-6pm
Light refreshments will be served.
Sunday, September 27, 2009
New SEP Articles
Kant's Transcendental Arguments
Kant's Views on Space and Time
Peter Frederick Strawson
Thursday, September 17, 2009
Thursday, September 3, 2009
Thursday, August 27, 2009
The Relevance of Romanticism (CFP)
The Relevance of Romanticism
A conference sponsored by the Greater Philadelphia Philosophy Consortium (GPPC)
April 16-17, 2010
Villanova University
KEYNOTE SPEAKERS:
Manfred Frank, Universität Tübingen
With the recent increase of interest in philosophical romanticism, it seems appropriate to ask the question, why romanticism now. What were the philosophical questions and concerns of Romanticism, and why do they seem particularly apt for contemporary philosophical and non-philosophical discussions? What is the value of Romanticism as a philosophical movement, both within the history of philosophy, and for philosophy today? Is Romanticism a fundamentally distinct movement, which offers something to the history of philosophy or to contemporary philosophical discussions, which other movements (Idealism, for example) do not? Can we speak of “philosophical Romanticism” at all? What is philosophical about Romanticism?
The conference is dedicated to raising and attempting to answer some of these questions, in light of the work of the two keynote speakers, Manfred Frank and Frederick Beiser. We are seeking papers which address the theme of philosophical Romanticism and its relevance, from a historical or a contemporary perspective. Interdisciplinary approaches to the relationship between philosophical Romanticism and other disciplines (art, science, literature, theology) are also welcome. Papers should exhibit some familiarity with the works of Manfred Frank and/or Frederick Beiser, and, to some degree, engage with their contributions to the field.
In addition to the keynote addresses, Manfred Frank and Frederick Beiser will participate in a roundtable discussion with the conference participants.
dalia.nassar@villanova.edu.
Sunday, July 26, 2009
Analytic Kantianism
The new issue of Philosophical Topics is dedicated to Kant and it includes essays by excellent philosophers.
Philosophical Topics, Volume 34, Numbers 1 & 2
Analytic Kantianism
Issue Editor: James Conant
Contributors: Robert Brandom, Eli Friedlander, Michael Friedman, Hannah Ginsborg, Arata Hamawaki, Andrea Kern, Michael Kremer, Thomas Land, Thomas Lockhart, Béatrice Longuenesse, John McDowell, A.W. Moore, Sebastian Rödl, and Clinton Tolley.
Tuesday, July 7, 2009
Notes from Hamann Conference
Wednesday, June 17, 2009
Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Subscription
Also, check out the new Novalis entry by Kristin Gjedal.