Pragmatist Graduate Conference
Paris • 18-19 January, 2018
From interactions to institutions:
pragmatism and collective experience
Keynote speakers:
Rosa Maria Calcaterra (University of Roma-III)
Hans Joas (Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin / University of Chicago)
Submission due: 10 September, 2017
The 1st Pragmatist Graduate Conference will be held in Paris on 18-19 January 2018.
The conference’s aim is to give early-career philosophers and social scientists working
on pragmatism an opportunity to meet and discuss their work.
Pragmatism, understood as an intellectual movement in the history of ideas, a
philosophical method, and a specific approach in contemporary social and political
theory, covers a rich variety of ideas and thinkers across different fields of research. For
all its diversity, one can nonetheless identify a number of common ideas shared by
most pragmatists:
1) a commitment to experience and actual practices as both the starting point and
purpose of philosophical, scientific, social or political inquiries. This commitment
entails an inclination towards renovated versions of empiricism and experimental
method, such as fallibilism;
2) a rejection of traditional metaphysics and its dualistic oppositions, such as the
individual and the social, body and mind, thought and world, logic and psychology,
theory and practice. This intellectual stance is associated with a defense of various types
of naturalism;
3) a marked interest, at least for Dewey, Mead and their followers, in social and
political issues. Such an attitude often favors practical involvement at different levels of
collective action, be they local or more at large, through concrete public activities.
This graduate conference, “From interactions to institutions: pragmatism and
collective experience”, will deal with key ideas in both classical and contemporary
pragmatism. The emphasis on collective experience refers to the pragmatists’
committed attention to shared experience, as well as the interactional dimensions of all
our concrete activities. It contrasts with the understanding of experience as merely
subjective or reducible to “sense data”. The study of interactions from a pragmatist
perspective covers a wide range of topics, spanning across metaphysical to social,
ethical and political matters.
Suggested topics include, but are not limited to:
- groups, publics and institutions
- social theory, social ontology, or metaphysics of interactions
- levels or strata of interactions and their relations/combinations
- the organization of collective experience (theory of inquiry, social epistemology,
cooperative action)
- the political implications of interactions and institutions (e.g., for a theory of
democracy)
We therefore expect proposals from all areas of philosophy and the social sciences,
including presentations based on case studies and fieldwork about interactions or
institutions, to the extent they make explicit use of a pragmatist approach. Given the
broad range of possible topics, we welcome papers in all the following fields: social and
political theory, ethics, sociology and social anthropology, social psychology, social
epistemology, metaphysics, history of ideas.
Deadline for submission: 10 September, 2017
Submission guidelines:
- Word limit: 500 words
- Prepare your abstract for blind review (your abstract should be anonymous)
- Include a separate document with your contact information, your current academic
occupation (i.e., your position or study program, or your most recent degree), and the title of
your paper.
- Abstracts can be submitted via e-mail to pragmatistgraduateconference@gmail.com
- Take into account that you are expected to hand in a paper before the conference, so that
your respondent may read it. The deadline will be communicated to accepted presenters.
(Working papers and student papers are eligible.)
- Abstracts must be written in English
- Notification of acceptance: early October, 2017
We look forward to hearing from you,
The organizing committee:
- Camille Casale (Paris I)
- Olivier Gaudin (EHESS)
- Céline Henne (EHESS)
- Camille Pascal (Lyon III)
The scientific committee:
- Nicolas Bernier (Sherbrooke University, Canada)
- Matteo Santarelli (Università del Molise, Italy)
- Just Serrano (Goethe Universität, Germany)
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