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Later German Philosophy

~ A SOURCE ON GERMAN SPEAKING PHILOSOPHY 1860–1951

Later German Philosophy

Author Archives: Dr Christine Lopes - Later German Philosophy Project

Inaugural conference

25 Wednesday Jul 2012

Posted by Dr Christine Lopes - Later German Philosophy Project in FYI

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Inaugural conference

The aim of the conference is to examine the philosophical systems developed
by German philosophers in the 1860-1951 period, and discuss their relevance
to contemporary analytical and continental philosophy. The focus is on
thinkers such as Max Scheler, Franz Brentano, Adolf Trendelenburg, Martin
Heidegger, Wilhelm Dilthey, Friedrich Nietzsche, Ernst Cassirer and Hannah
Arendt. Their systems emerged out of dissatisfaction with Kant’s
transcendental idealism, and with German idealism, and offered a wealth of
original ideas in metaphysics, epistemology, philosophy of mind and
language, moral and political philosophy, anthropology, and philosophy of
culture and history.

While the conference is analytical in motivation and objective, it has also
an unique historical focus. We aim to establish with this conference a new
forum for philosophical studies to be known as Later German Philosophy
and which looks into the contemporary relevance of philosophical works produced during the 1860-1951 period, i.e.
a period marked by the deaths of two philosophers whose methods of inquiry
and argumentation marked respectively the end and the beginning of
significant philosophical traditions: Schopenhauer (1860) and Wittgenstein
(1951). The philosophers whose ideas and arguments the conference speakers
will consider are all Later German philosophers in this sense.

Research questions
* What alternative philosophical systems were developed in response to Kant
and the German idealists?
* How did the rise of the natural and historical sciences affect philosophy?
* How did the analytic-continental divide emerge? Can it be overcome? Does
the 1860-1951 period offer us new approaches to this questions?
* In which areas and what respect can contemporary philosophy benefit from
the ideas of the 1860-1951 thinkers?

Conference fee is £12 for non-students and £4.50 for students. Buffet lunch,coffee and cookies are included.

This conference is a non-profit event. To register, please email us first to ensure that spaces are still available, and, if so, please send a cheque for £12 or £4.50 to the following address:

Clare Valentine
SECL Finance and HR Coordinator
Cornwallis NW
University of Kent
Canterbury, Kent
CT2 7NF

Please send all queries to latergermanphilosophy@inbox.com or
e.kanterian@kent.ac.uk

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Inaugural conference

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Posted by Dr Christine Lopes - Later German Philosophy Project in FYI

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https://i0.wp.com/f.cl.ly/items/1T441l2e41060y0G3f37/kant_w.jpg

The aim of the conference is to examine the philosophical systems developed
by German philosophers in the 1860-1951 period, and discuss their relevance
to contemporary analytical and continental philosophy. The focus is on
thinkers such as Max Scheler, Franz Brentano, Adolf Trendelenburg, Martin
Heidegger, Wilhelm Dilthey, Friedrich Nietzsche, Ernst Cassirer and Hannah
Arendt. Their systems emerged out of dissatisfaction with Kant’s
transcendental idealism, and with German idealism, and offered a wealth of
original ideas in metaphysics, epistemology, philosophy of mind and
language, moral and political philosophy, anthropology, and philosophy of
culture and history.

While the conference is analytical in motivation and objective, it has also
an unique historical focus. We aim to establish with this conference a new
forum for philosophical studies to be known as Later German Philosophy
and which looks into the contemporary relevance of philosophical works produced during the 1860-1951 period, i.e.
a period marked by the deaths of two philosophers whose methods of inquiry
and argumentation marked respectively the end and the beginning of
significant philosophical traditions: Schopenhauer (1860) and Wittgenstein
(1951). The philosophers whose ideas and arguments the conference speakers
will consider are all Later German philosophers in this sense.

Research questions
* What alternative philosophical systems were developed in response to Kant
and the German idealists?
* How did the rise of the natural and historical sciences affect philosophy?
* How did the analytic-continental divide emerge? Can it be overcome? Does
the 1860-1951 period offer us new approaches to this questions?
* In which areas and what respect can contemporary philosophy benefit from
the ideas of the 1860-1951 thinkers?

Conference fee is £12 for non-students and £4.50 for students. Buffet lunch,coffee and cookies are included.

This conference is a non-profit event. To register, please email us first to ensure that spaces are still available, and, if so, please send a cheque for £12 or £4.50 to the following address:

Clare Valentine
SECL Finance and HR Coordinator
Cornwallis NW
University of Kent
Canterbury, Kent
CT2 7NF

Please send all queries to latergermanphilosophy@inbox.com or
e.kanterian@kent.ac.uk

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23 Saturday Jan 2010

Posted by Dr Christine Lopes - Later German Philosophy Project in CONTRIBUTORS

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The list of contributors is being updated.  Thank you for your patience.

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23 Saturday Jan 2010

Posted by Dr Christine Lopes - Later German Philosophy Project in Scand'via-based

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Assistant Professor Marcia Cavalcante Schuback (Södertörns University College, Stockholm, Philosophy).

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23 Saturday Jan 2010

Posted by Dr Christine Lopes - Later German Philosophy Project in Oceania-based

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Professor Julian Young (University of Auckland, Philosophy; Research Fellow, University of Tasmania).

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23 Saturday Jan 2010

Posted by Dr Christine Lopes - Later German Philosophy Project in Americas-based

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Assistant Professor Eric S. Nelson (UMass Lowell), Dr Eduardo Brandão (São Paulo, USP, Philosophy), Professor David G. Stern (University of Iowa, Philosophy), Dr Bernardo Oliveira Barros Coelho (Espírito Santo, UFES, Philosophy), Dr Paula Mousinho Martins (Campos, UENF, Philosophy), Professor José Thomaz Brum (Rio de Janeiro, PUC, Philosophy and History), Professor Monica Grin (Rio de Janeiro, NIEJ- Centre for Jewish Studies, IFCS, UFRJ, History).

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23 Saturday Jan 2010

Posted by Dr Christine Lopes - Later German Philosophy Project in UK-based

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Professor Ray Monk (University of Southampton, Philosophy), Professor Christopher Janaway (University of Southampton, Philosophy), Dr Devorah Baum (University of Southampton, The Parkes Institute for the study of Jewish / non-Jewish relations, and English department), Dr Christine Lopes (University of Southampton, Philosophy), Professor David Owen (University of Southampton, Politics), Dr Andrea Reiter (University of Southampton, The Parkes Institute, and Germanic Studies), Dr Christian Onof (Birkbeck, and Imperial College, London, Philosophy), Professor Christian Wiese (University of Sussex, Jewish Studies), Dr Cissie Fu (Oxford University, Politics), Dr Stephen Morton (University of Southampton, The Parkes Institute, English), Dr Gudrun von Tevenar (Honorary Fellow, Birkbeck, London, Philosophy), Dr Sorin Baiasu (Keele University, Philosophy), Dr Alix Cohen (Cambridge, and University of Leeds, Philosophy).

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23 Saturday Jan 2010

Posted by Dr Christine Lopes - Later German Philosophy Project in Europe-based

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Dr Alex Gelfert (University of Syngapure, Philosophy; Editor of The Berlin Review of Books).

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23 Saturday Jan 2010

Posted by Dr Christine Lopes - Later German Philosophy Project in Asia-based

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To be updated.

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23 Saturday Jan 2010

Posted by Dr Christine Lopes - Later German Philosophy Project in Israel-based

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To be updated.

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← Older posts

Founder

Dr. Christine Lopes
Affiliation tbc
PhD, MA, BA (Philosophy)

Co-Founder

Professor Ken Gemes
Department of Philosophy
Birkbeck
University of London

Co-Founder

Dr. Edward Kanterian
Reader in Philosophy
School of European Culture and Languages
University of Kent

Societies Gesellschaften Archive Libraries

  • Austrian Ludwig Wittgenstein Society
  • Österreichische Karl-Jaspers-Gesellschaft
  • BAJS – British Association for Jewish Studies
  • Brentano-Gesellschaft
  • Compact Memory – Das Wissenschaftsportal für Jüdische Studien
  • David Baumgardt Collection 1907-1971
  • Deutsche National Bibliotek
  • Edith Landmann
  • Edith Stein Inventory
  • Ernst Bloch Gesellschaft
  • Ernst Bloch Zentrum
  • Ernst Cassirer Society
  • Franz Brentano
  • Frege reference
  • Gerda Walther
  • Hedwig Conrad-Martius
  • Helmuth Plessner Gesellschaft
  • Herbert Marcuse Official Homepage
  • Hermann Cohen Gesellschaft
  • Husserl Circle
  • Internationale Ludwig Wittgenstein Gesellschaft
  • Internationale Walter Benjamin Gesellschaft
  • Jonas Cohn in Archiv für Systematische Philosophie
  • Kant-Gesellschaft
  • Leo Baeck Institute – New York / Berlin
  • Margarete Susman
  • Martin Buber Homepage
  • N.A. Kant Society
  • NIEJ – Núcleo Interdisciplinar de Estudos Judaicos (UFRJ, Brazil)
  • Nietzsche source
  • Posen Foundation
  • Rudolf Carnap
  • Sociedade Kant Brasileira (Brazilian Kant Society)
  • The Hannah Arendt Papers at the Library of Congress
  • The Herbert Marcuse Internet Archive
  • The Jewish Encyclopedia
  • The Parkes Institute for the Study of Jewish/non-Jewish relations
  • The Wiener Library
  • U.K. Kant Society
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