Please circulate widely - Apologies for cross-posting
Dear Colleagues,
After the success of last year’s section on ‘Politics and Metaphysics in Kant’ at the 4th
ECPR Conference in Pisa, we are planning to put forward again a section proposal on the same theme
for the 5th ECPR Conference in Postdam 10-12 September 2009.
We would like to know whether anyone would like to express at this stage an interest in suggesting
a panel title, chairing a panel or giving a paper. The section proposal has to be submitted by the
15th of April 2008, and the more details we can give on the number and content of potential panels,
the better our chances might be to be awarded a high number of panel slots for the conference. The
previous section outline is copied below to give you some more information about the problems and
questions which this section hopes to address, although at this stage we are also open to further
suggestions.
Please email Kerstin at [log in to unmask] if you think you might be interested to chair a panel,
suggest a panel title or present a paper.
We look forward to hearing from you.
Howard Williams and Kerstin Budde
Section outline 2007 ‘Politics and Metaphysics in Kant’:
The past three decades have witnessed the emergence, at the forefront of political thought, of
several Kantian theories. Both the critical reaction to consequentialism inspired by Rawlsian
constructivism and the universalism of more recent theories informed by Habermasian discourse ethics
trace their main sources of inspiration back to Kant’s writings.
Yet, much of what is Kantian in contemporary theory is formulated with more or less strict caveats
concerning Kant’s metaphysics. These range from radical claims that theories of justice must be
political, not metaphysical, to more cautious calls for replacing Kant’s metaphysics with a more
modest ontology, for instance, one informed by the relatively recent linguistic turn in
philosophy.
Given the current “legitimation crisis” of modern liberal democracies, the purpose of this
section is to explore the relationship between politics and metaphysics in Kant and Kantian
political philosophy, in order to revisit the question concerning the role of metaphysics in
political theory.
We welcome papers on these and related issues, whether their primary focus is on Kant’s
philosophy or on the relevance of Kant’s philosophy for contemporary political philosophy and
theories of justice.
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