hegelpd

hegelpd

Classical german philosophy. University of Padova research group

CFP: Hegel Bulletin Special Issue 2020 «Hegel and Aristotle on the metaphysics of mind»

We are pleased to announce the call for papers for the special issue 2020 of Hegel Bulletin devoted to the topic «Hegel and Aristotle on the metaphysics of mind»
Here below you can find the text of the call.

 

***

Hegel Bulletin Special Issue 2020

Hegel and Aristotle on the metaphysics of mind

 

The Hegel Bulletin will publish a special issue devoted to the topic of ‘Hegel and Aristotle on the metaphysics of mind’. We welcome contributions that explore the relationship between Hegel’s and Aristotle’s conception of mind. This includes both historical papers that base their argument on careful textual analysis and reconstructive papers that frame their argument in the context of contemporary debates.
Themes relevant to this special issue are metaphysics, epistemology, philosophy of mind, practical philosophy, history of philosophy. For a detailed description of the issue’s rationale, see below.
Accepted submissions will illuminate specific aspects of both Hegel’s and Aristotle’s philosophies.
Authors are encouraged to contact one of the guest editors in advance of submission if they are unsure of whether their papers are appropriate for the special issue.
Confirmed contributor: Michael Inwood
All papers (7000 words to 8000 words) will be double-blind refereed.
The editors of the special issue are Luca Corti (luca.corti@hotmail.de), Ermylos Plevrakis (ermylos.plevrakis@uni-tuebingen.de) and Sebastian Stein (sebastian80stein@gmail.com).
The deadline for submissions is 31st January 2019.
Please submit your papers by e-mail to: hbsi2019@gmail.com

 

RATIONALE OF THE ISSUE

 

In recent years, readings of Hegel that emphasise the strong relationship of his project with classical and pre-Kantian thinkers have been gaining considerable traction. In particular, amongst the metaphysicians Hegel praises the most, Aristotle takes prime place. This has inspired some interpreters to claim that Hegel is profoundly Aristotelian in outlook.
Inspired by Aristotle’s metaphysics of substance and its form/matter-informed and teleological configurations, Hegel thinks of the world as imbued with concepts that define the immanent purpose of reality (e.g. Stern 2017, Pippin 2016, Redding 2007).
However, this raises various profound questions in the context of the Philosophy of Mind. Despite his praise for Aristotle, Hegel repeatedly argues that ancient philosophy lacked a modern and decidedly Kantian notion of freedom that is capable of expressing how and why the subject as a subject is truly self-determining in its theoretical and practical, i.e. ethical activity. Given the systematic ambitions of both Hegel and Aristotle, the origins of this lack of freedom in Aristotle on one hand and the praise of freedom in Hegel on the other should be traceable to the metaphysical commitments of both thinkers. While Hegel claims in the Science of Logic to be committed to a ‘metaphysics of the concept’ (e.g. Kreines 2015, Houlgate 2006), Aristotle is regularly described as a ‘metaphysician of substance’.
Some guiding questions for the investigation into the relationship between Hegel and Aristotle will thus be: what is the nature of Aristotle’s and Hegel’s metaphysics and how does it affect each thinker’s philosophy of theoretical or practical mind? How do the metaphysics of mind relate to the ontology (metaphysica generalis), cosmology or even the theology (metaphysica specialis) of both thinkers? Further: does Aristotle’s metaphysical enquiry into the nature of substance prevent him from conceptualising free mental activity?
Does Hegel’s commitment to concept-metaphysics enable him to incorporate Aristotelian insights into a general account of free cognition and action, and if so how? How does the reference to Aristotle affects metaphysical and non-metaphysical readings of Hegel? We hope that this special issue will help elucidate the nature of Hegelian and Aristotelian metaphysics and the consequences metaphysical commitments have for the philosophy of mind.
Messages to the list are archived at http://listserv.liv.ac.uk/archives/philos-l.html. Recent posts can also be read in a Facebook group: https://www.facebook.com/PhilosL/. Discussions should be moved to Chora (a list solely for members of Philos-L): enrol on Chora via http://listserv.liv.ac.uk/archives/chora.html. To join Philos-L email the single line “subscribe philos-l yourname” to listserv@liv.ac.uk and read the welcome message carefully. To sign off the list send a blank message to philos-l-unsubscribe-request@liverpool.ac.uk.

 

Contents licensed by CC BY-NC-ND. Your are free to share, copy and redistribute the material in any medium or format, under the following terms:

  • Attribution - You must give appropriate credit, provide a link to the license, and indicate if changes were made. You may do so in any reasonable manner, but not in any way that suggests the licensor endorses you or your use.
  • NonCommercial - You may not use the material for commercial purposes.
  • NoDerivatives - If you remix, transform, or build upon the material, you may not distribute the modified material.

The licensor cannot revoke these freedoms as long as you follow the license terms.

Article's url: https://www.hegelpd.it/hegel/cfp-hegel-bulletin-special-issue-2020-hegel-and-aristotle-on-the-metaphysics-of-mind/