11.28.2013

IACR Conference 2014 (Critical Realism Conference)


From the Anatomy of Global Crisis to the Ontology of Human Flourishing

Friday 18th - Monday 21st July 2014
Institute of Education, London

From the anatomy of the global crisis…
Since 2008, what began with an initial collapse of the financial system has catalysed into an economic and political crisis of global dimensions. Lurking in the shadows of the financial crisis and occasionally breaching daylight is the ecological crisis. Global warming and climate change hangs like a sword of Damocles over the future of humanity. This is to say nothing of business as usual: growing inequality and impoverishment, continuing discrimination and exploitation, all of which functions to foster moral, psychological and existential crises. Current orthodoxy suggests that such crises are only temporary deviations from an otherwise well-functioning system. Prevailing pessimism suggests that it is easier to imagine global catastrophe and the destruction of the world rather than a change in the status quo able to avert such an outcome.

...to the ontology of human flourishing
In light of the global poly-crisis two questions are now before us; 'how are we to understand our current situation?' and 'what are we to do?' Albert Einstein is widely accredited as answering this by suggesting "We cannot solve our problems with the same thinking we used when we created them." This new thinking is what critical realism aspires to provide. Certainly, if we are not only to survive but flourish as human beings we require a robust theory and practice able to move us beyond modest business as usual to the possibilities of something more. This conference, the 17th Annual Conference of the International Association for Critical Realism, presented by the the International Centre for Critical Realism, will explore the different issues connected with this crisis.

Day 1: Educating for the future
The ecological crisis
Forms of realism
(Followed by a book launch and drinks reception)

Day 2: The political-economic crisis
Ethics, emancipation and metaReality in action
Dialectic and critical realism
(Followed by conference dinner)

Day 3: Ontology of flourishing
Love, sexuality and feminism in the 21st century
Religion, spirituality and secularism
(Followed by the IACR Annual General Meeting)

Day 4: Where do we go from here? (half day)
Educating for a better future
Concrete utopianism
(Followed by the ICCR Annual General Meeting and a workshop on the philosophy of metaReality)

The conference will be preceded by a two-day pre-conference workshop on critical realism, led by Roy Bhaskar, originator of the philosophy of critical realism (and metaReality), and Alan Norrie president of IACR; and followed on Tuesday 22nd July by a symposium on integrative metatheories.

11.19.2013



 http://maneypublishing.com/index.php/journals/rea/

 Call for Papers: Special Issue of Journal of Critical Realism 14(2) 2015


MetaRealism
 
Edited by Mervyn Hartwig 

When at the turn of the millennium the International Association for Critical Realism staged a conference around the theme, ‘After postmodernism: critical realism?’, the idea was greeted with considerable scepticism. A little over a decade later, in the midst of perilous global multicrisis, realisms – critical and otherwise – are flourishing, and there is growing awareness that if we humans are to find a way out of the current mess we will need to move on to a new, genuinely post-modern or post-capitalist form of life, presupposing a new, de-alienated way of viewing and relating to the natural and social orders and each other.
MetaRealism, like critical realism, which it preservatively sublates, is a philosophy of the transition from capitalist modernity to a eudaimonian future. It is arguably the developmentally necessary ‘completion’ of Roy Bhaskar’s philosophical system, as an ultimate stratum of identity-in-difference and union (non-duality) is seen to underlie and sustain the world of non-identity (duality) that is the focus of original or basic critical realism  (BCR) and dialectical critical realism (DCR), analogously to the interconnectedness of quantum phenomena and their ingredience in emergent levels of being. Our three previous special issues have been devoted to BCR (Causal powers) and DCR (Dialectic), with a third spanning both (Engaging postcolonialism). Interest in metaRealism is burgeoning. The time is ripe for a special issue that explores the potential of this exciting philosophy for the project of human emancipation and advances its critical reception.

Topics for which we are interested in receiving papers include, but are by no means limited to the following (loosely grouped, after the first five, in terms of MELDARA):
        appraisal of the arguments for metaRealism
        metaRealism and the ‘returns’ to spirituality and/or religion
        feminist appraisals of metaRealism
        sexuality, gender and metaRealism
        metaRealism and integral theory
        the concept of a person and the model of the self as comprising the atomistic ego, the embodied personality and the unlimited or transcendental self or ground-state
        metaRealist and animic ontologies
        the metaRealist critique of Tim Ingold’s relational ontology (or vice versa)
        is metaRealism a form of panentheism?
        Bhaskar, Ernst Bloch and metaRealism
        metaRealism and the findings of modern science
        the transcendental foundations of modern social theory (Daniel Chernilo)
        transcendence and the sociology of everyday life, the pervasive spirituality of everyday life
        resolving the antinomy of freedom and slavery (the co-presence of essential freedom and actual enslavement) in modernity
        creativity (in the domains of science, art, love, politics, spirituality, re-enchantment and/or unity)
        science as ‘practical mysticism’; anamnesis and the revelation of truth
        metaRealism as a thorough-going naturalism, stretching our understanding of the natural; the universe as an open, implicitly conscious developing material system
        critique of the discursive intellect and/or other aspects of the philosophical discourse of modernity
        the notion that trust, solidarity and love are the primary human existentials (‘baseline communism’ and the pulse of freedom), more fundamental than reciprocity, exchange and recognition (Bhaskar, David Graeber)
        an ethics of care
        Bhaskar and Badiou on love
        the unity of theory and practice as the coherence of love
        the view that humanity has already entered an era of love (Luc Ferry)
        the primacy of self- or subject-referentiality in social change
        spontaneous right action as an ethical concept
        the human capacities for universal solidarity and axial rationality
        critique of panpsychism
        Marx’s spiritual insights and metaRealism
        the spiritual progressives movement
        the metaRealist critique of religion
        inter-faith, intra-faith and extra-faith dialogue and religious literacy
        is metaRealism maximally inclusive? How can it appeal to people of ‘all faiths and no faith’?
        peace studies and conflict resolution
        deep ecology and metaRealism
        the implicit metaRealism of Walter Benjamin and/or Marcel Proust
        disenchantment/re-enchantment
        metaRealism and the anthropology of wonder

Instructions for authors
Papers should be no more than 8,000 words (not inclusive of references). In all other respects, our Instructions for authors apply. Please consult these at http://maneypublishing.com/index.php/journals/rea/
Articles (as distinct from pieces for our Perspective and Debate sections) will be subject to external peer review. Submissions need not be exclusively concerned with metaRealism or its critique, but should relate their arguments in some significant way to metaRealism. A critique of panpsychism, e.g., need not be exclusively from a metaRealist perspective, but should include consideration of it.

Important dates
Feb. 03, 2014:                         deadline for proposals (300-500 word abstract)
Mar. 10, 2014:             notification of acceptance (scholarly articles subject to peer review)
July 29, 2014:              deadline for first drafts
Oct. 06, 2014:                         reviewers’ reports and editors’ decision provided
Dec. 08, 2014:             deadline for final drafts
Jan. 05, 2015:              final copy due with the publisher
April 2015:                   publication of special issue online and print

Enquiries and submissions
Please send enquiries, abstract proposals (including title, affiliation, contact details, and a brief bio) and first and final drafts by email attachment to Mervyn Hartwig, mh@jaspere7.demon.co.uk. (This email will probably change soon. The new email will be posted on http://maneypublishing.com/ index.php/journals/rea/ and the Critical Realism List, etc.). From early in 2014 it will be possible to upload your submission to JCR’s new Editorial Manager site (currently being built); if you choose that route please mark your paper ‘for special issue on metaRealism’.  
If your paper is accepted but not included in the special issue, it will appear in a subsequent issue.

About JCR
Journal of Critical Realism (JCR) is the journal of the International Association for Critical Realism (IACR), established in 1997 to foster the discussion, propagation and development of critical realist approaches to understanding and changing the world. It provides a forum for scholars wishing to promote realist emancipatory philosophy, social theory and science on an interdisciplinary and international basis, and for those who wish to engage with such an approach.

Call for Papers: Special Issue of Journal of Critical Realism 14(2) 2015 

 

 

Edited by Mervyn Hartwig 
When at the turn of the millennium the International Association for Critical Realism staged a conference around the theme, ‘After postmodernism: critical realism?’, the idea was greeted with considerable scepticism. A little over a decade later, in the midst of perilous global multicrisis, realisms – critical and otherwise – are flourishing, and there is growing awareness that if we humans are to find a way out of the current mess we will need to move on to a new, genuinely post-modern or post-capitalist form of life, presupposing a new, de-alienated way of viewing and relating to the natural and social orders and each other.
MetaRealism, like critical realism, which it preservatively sublates, is a philosophy of the transition from capitalist modernity to a eudaimonian future. It is arguably the developmentally necessary ‘completion’ of Roy Bhaskar’s philosophical system, as an ultimate stratum of identity-in-difference and union (non-duality) is seen to underlie and sustain the world of non-identity (duality) that is the focus of original or basic critical realism  (BCR) and dialectical critical realism (DCR), analogously to the interconnectedness of quantum phenomena and their ingredience in emergent levels of being. Our three previous special issues have been devoted to BCR (Causal powers) and DCR (Dialectic), with a third spanning both (Engaging postcolonialism). Interest in metaRealism is burgeoning. The time is ripe for a special issue that explores the potential of this exciting philosophy for the project of human emancipation and advances its critical reception.
Topics for which we are interested in receiving papers include, but are by no means limited to the following (loosely grouped, after the first five, in terms of MELDARA):
        appraisal of the arguments for metaRealism
        metaRealism and the ‘returns’ to spirituality and/or religion
        feminist appraisals of metaRealism
        sexuality, gender and metaRealism
        metaRealism and integral theory
        the concept of a person and the model of the self as comprising the atomistic ego, the embodied personality and the unlimited or transcendental self or ground-state
        metaRealist and animic ontologies
        the metaRealist critique of Tim Ingold’s relational ontology (or vice versa)
        is metaRealism a form of panentheism?
        Bhaskar, Ernst Bloch and metaRealism
        metaRealism and the findings of modern science
        the transcendental foundations of modern social theory (Daniel Chernilo)
        transcendence and the sociology of everyday life, the pervasive spirituality of everyday life
        resolving the antinomy of freedom and slavery (the co-presence of essential freedom and actual enslavement) in modernity
        creativity (in the domains of science, art, love, politics, spirituality, re-enchantment and/or unity)
        science as ‘practical mysticism’; anamnesis and the revelation of truth
        metaRealism as a thorough-going naturalism, stretching our understanding of the natural; the universe as an open, implicitly conscious developing material system
        critique of the discursive intellect and/or other aspects of the philosophical discourse of modernity
        the notion that trust, solidarity and love are the primary human existentials (‘baseline communism’ and the pulse of freedom), more fundamental than reciprocity, exchange and recognition (Bhaskar, David Graeber)
        an ethics of care
        Bhaskar and Badiou on love
        the unity of theory and practice as the coherence of love
        the view that humanity has already entered an era of love (Luc Ferry)
        the primacy of self- or subject-referentiality in social change
        spontaneous right action as an ethical concept
        the human capacities for universal solidarity and axial rationality
        critique of panpsychism
        Marx’s spiritual insights and metaRealism
        the spiritual progressives movement
        the metaRealist critique of religion
        inter-faith, intra-faith and extra-faith dialogue and religious literacy
        is metaRealism maximally inclusive? How can it appeal to people of ‘all faiths and no faith’?
        peace studies and conflict resolution
        deep ecology and metaRealism
        the implicit metaRealism of Walter Benjamin and/or Marcel Proust
        disenchantment/re-enchantment
        metaRealism and the anthropology of wonder
Instructions for authors
Papers should be no more than 8,000 words (not inclusive of references). In all other respects, our Instructions for authors apply. Please consult these at http://maneypublishing.com/index.php/journals/rea/
Articles (as distinct from pieces for our Perspective and Debate sections) will be subject to external peer review. Submissions need not be exclusively concerned with metaRealism or its critique, but should relate their arguments in some significant way to metaRealism. A critique of panpsychism, e.g., need not be exclusively from a metaRealist perspective, but should include consideration of it.
Important dates
Feb. 03, 2014:                         deadline for proposals (300-500 word abstract)
Mar. 10, 2014:             notification of acceptance (scholarly articles subject to peer review)
July 29, 2014:              deadline for first drafts
Oct. 06, 2014:                         reviewers’ reports and editors’ decision provided
Dec. 08, 2014:             deadline for final drafts
Jan. 05, 2015:              final copy due with the publisher
April 2015:                   publication of special issue online and print
Enquiries and submissions
Please send enquiries, abstract proposals (including title, affiliation, contact details, and a brief bio) and first and final drafts by email attachment to Mervyn Hartwig, mh@jaspere7.demon.co.uk. (This email will probably change soon. The new email will be posted on http://maneypublishing.com/ index.php/journals/rea/ and the Critical Realism List, etc.). From early in 2014 it will be possible to upload your submission to JCR’s new Editorial Manager site (currently being built); if you choose that route please mark your paper ‘for special issue on metaRealism’.  
If your paper is accepted but not included in the special issue, it will appear in a subsequent issue.
About JCR
Journal of Critical Realism (JCR) is the journal of the International Association for Critical Realism (IACR), established in 1997 to foster the discussion, propagation and development of critical realist approaches to understanding and changing the world. It provides a forum for scholars wishing to promote realist emancipatory philosophy, social theory and science on an interdisciplinary and international basis, and for those who wish to engage with such an approach.