サマースクール(7月27〜31日、ドイツ):異文化の観点からの技術哲学

3月 15, 2020

“Philosophies of Technology in Intercultural Perspective” A summer school beyond disciplinary boundaries with Yuk Hui

 

Call for Applications
The University of Tübingen in collaboration with the Society for Intercultural Philosophy (GIP: http://www.int-gip.de/home/) is organizing an international summer school on Philosophies of Technologies at the University of Tübingen, Germany. The summer school is open to doctoral students in philosophy, sociology, social anthropology, history, art history, literature, but also technical studies and other related subjects. Applications are welcome from all over the world.

 

Date: July 27th-31st, 2020

Venue: Forum Scientiarum, University of Tübingen, Germany

Application Deadline: April 15th, 2020

Organization: Dr. Niels Weidtmann and Fernando Wirtz, University of Tübingen, Germany

Topic
“Philosophies of Technology in Intercultural Perspective”

 

In Western philosophy, technology is understood in such a way that humans make use of the laws of nature for creating cultural artefacts, i.e. that humans copy the functionality of nature. In this way, humans have gained a set of instruments that enables them to decouple their cultural development from biological evolution. At the same time, this has led to an instrumental understanding of nature that has recently come under increasing criticism.

 

There has been a trend within different disciplines like anthropology, ethnology and archeology that acknowledges this point and seeks to rehabilitate non-Western cosmologies. Authors worth mentioning here are Bernard Stiegler, Philippe Descola, Bruno Latour, Donna Haraway and Eduardo Batalha Viveiros de Castro.  One author who particularly works in this direction is Yuk Hui. In his book The Question Concerning Technology in China (2017), he proposes to break with the functional Western concept of technology using the idea of ‘cosmotechnics’, which he preliminary outlines as “the unification between the cosmic order and the moral order through technical activities” (2017, 19). Is it possible to think of a notion of technology able to overcome the discontinuities between nature and culture? Departing from the aforementioned definition, Hui points out that in Chinese philosophy (at least until the 19th century), the notion of a ‘technical object’ (qi, 器) is always subordinate to the cosmological and moral order of Dao (道). In this way Chinese thought understands nature as being primarily moral. By carefully reconstructing Chinese sources and its different schools Hui is able to deliver an alternative genealogy of technology and, in doing so, an alternative concept for it.

 

Far from arguing in favour of cultural particularism, this strategy rather encourages further research about the discursive practices through which problems regarding technology become manifest. In this sense, as Hui writes, “cosmotechnics proposes that we reapproach the question of modernity by reinventing the self and technology at the same time, giving priority to the moral and the ethical” (2017, 290). This should not mean that there are no cosmotechnics in the West at all. On the contrary, what this concept implies is that the Western understanding of technologyshould be seized as one of multiple cosmotechnics and that we should rehabilitate the moral dimension of ontology. Therefore, Hui’s goal does not consist in returning to ancient and more authentic forms of mediation, but to destigmatize the role of cultural pluralism within philosophical debates. His focus on technology seems to provide fruitful ground for an intercultural dialogue.

 

Organisation

The purpose of this summer school adheres to the above and promotes a dialogue among PhD candidates interested in the task of thinking philosophies of technology beyond the Western tradition, transgressing and problematizing at the same time the categories of nature and culture themselves. In doing so, this summer school will explore new theoretical and practical approaches to address challenges posed by the Anthropocene.

 

Morning sessions will be given by Professor Dr. Yuk Hui. Participants must present a 15-minute paper during afternoon sessions that critically discusses one of the themes and/or questions of the summer school. Engagement with current research questions and issues are particularly welcome as well as connections with current PhD projects.

 

There will be additional keynotes at the evening.

Application
This summer school is open to doctoral students from all disciplines (applications of master students will be considered in exceptional cases).

Applicants should supply the following documents:

-Application form (available here: https://uni-tuebingen.de/de/148503)

-CV (2 pages max)

-300-word expression of interest

-Paper title and 300-word abstract

 

Applications should be sent until April 15th the latest to info(at)fsci.uni-tuebingen.de or to our postal address:

FORUM SCIENTIARUM

Doblerstr. 33

D-72074 Tübingen

Germany

A letter of admission will reach successful applicants by the end of April.

There is a registration fee of 50 EUR for non-members of GIP which has to be paid upon admission.

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