CfP/CfA: Racism and the Disciplinary Differentiation of Science and Philosophy
**Invited Speakers:**
* Demetrius Eudell (Wesleyan)
* Justin E.H. Smith (Université Paris Diderot)
* Naomi Zack (University of Oregon)
Co-Organizers: Matthew J. Brown and Peter K.J. Park
Co-Sponsors: Center for Values in Medicine, Science, and Technology and
Ackerman Center for Holocaust Studies, The University of Texas at Dallas
This workshop seeks to weave together three historical threads that have
each separately received significant attention in recent years, but
which have not so far been followed together, perhaps due to the siloing
of different sub-disciplines of and approaches within the history of
ideas: (1) the role of racism in the formation of the philosophical
canon, (2) the role of racism in the emergence of science as a distinct
pursuit, especially the life and social sciences, and (3) the
disciplinary and professional differentiation of philosophy and science
from one another from the 18th to the 20th centuries.
We know from recent work in intellectual history that there are deep
connections between the development of racist thought and the emergence
of the modern concept and canons of philosophy, influenced especially by
Kant and certain of his followers. In this process, Asian and African
thinkers were read out of the canon, and philosophy was reconceived as a
specifically western intellectual formation beginning in Ancient
Greece.
Recent work has also shown that Kant's work on race is also deeply
imbricated with the development of biology and race science / scientific
racism. We also know from various historians that the emergence of
science, especially biology, physical anthropology, and psychology, is
also deeply involved with the development of racist thought in the 19th
century into the early 20th. In fact, the process starts earlier, with
18th-century changes in the field of natural history as it starts the
transition that results in the contemporary biological and human
sciences, and which is also tied up with the emergence of the modern
research university (Georg-August-Universität Göttingen being a key
nexus).
Taking place throughout the same period is the slow process of
differentiating science and philosophy, which in a way also begins with
Immanuel Kant, who is also central to the story of science & race
and philosophy & race. Kant's distinctions are one important
influence over the process of differentiating and separating of
institutions and professional identities, in the 19th century Anglophone
world represented in the diverging terms of "scientist" from "natural
philosopher" or "natural historian" or "moral philosopher" (thanks to
Whewell). This process culminated in the early 20th century with the
institutional extrication of philosophy and psychology, and the
influence of anti-psychologism in philosophy. (This framing privileges
the English language version of this trajectory, but similar changes
were going on throughout early modern Europe.) In turn, the philosophy /
psychology split and the anti-psychologism movement in philosophy was
central to the founding figures of *both* analytic and continental
philosophy, as well as the split between the two (many of the main
figures being in one way or another neo-Kantians).
What happens when we read all of these processes together? How do they
impact/inform contemporary science, philosophy, and our understand of
the relation between the two (or lack thereof)? These will be the
questions explored in this workshop. Our aim is to start a conversation
that explores these tangled threads, with the ultimate aim of weaving a
narrative that illuminates the connections between these so far separate
inquiries.
Proposals should include a 250-300 word abstract. Talks need not attempt
to cover the entire broad field laid out in this CFP, but we're
especially interested in talks that make new connections among some of
these threads.
**Submission Deadline:** January 15, 2018
Submit your proposals at: https://easychair.org/ conferences/?conf=vmst2018
The Center for Values in Medicine, Science, and Technology works to
foster diversity and inclusiveness in our programming, events, and
outreach efforts. Proposal authors and panel organizers will be asked to
submit an optional 50-100 word diversity statement with their
submission. We will also publish a statement of Conference Aims, Values,
and Norms and designate an ombuds for the conference, who can receive
confidential reports of inappropriate behavior and work with the
organizers to determine appropriate responses.
This workshop, as well as the workshop "Feyerabend 2018: Commemorating
the 40th Anniversary of *Science in a Free Society*," take place prior
to and in connection with the Values in Medicine, Science, and
Technology Conference. Workshop participants are encouraged to attend
the other workshop and stay for the conference. Submissions to the
workshops and the conference will be considered separately. Please be
sure you submit your proposal to the correct track.