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Call for Papers

Theme: Civilizational Values at the Crossroads
Type: 45th Annual Meeting
Institution: International Society for the Comparative Study of
Civilizations (ISCSC)
Location: Rio de Janeiro (Brazil)
Date: 10.–13.6.2015
Deadline: 1.4.2015

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Civilizations cannot be properly studied or compared without
examining their basic value systems. But what exactly are values? How
are they exemplified across civilizations? Do values even exist? Are
they relative or absolute? Are “decline” and “progress” relative
terms? Are there universal values? Possible topics include:

Values in Crisis

- Do we now live in a Nihilistic Age? What does this mean?
- Values in transition.
- “Civilization and its’ Discontents”
- Moral Crises and Catharses: How have watershed events in the
  History of Civilizations helped destroy old values and usher in new
  ones?

Values and Power

- Is “the good” defined by the powerful? What do ancient thinkers say
  (Cf. Thrasymachus, Thucydides)? What about modern thinkers
  (Nietzsche, Foucault, Gabriel Garcia Marquez)?
- Hard Power vs. Soft Power: Which Shall Prevail?
- Ideology, Politics and Soft Power
- Wisdom and Soft Power
- Realism and Soft Power

Religion, Science and Values

- Do we live in a secular age (Taylor)? A post- secular age? Is this
  era the time of the Second Religiousness (Spengler)? What specific
  values are represented by Fundamentalist religious movements
  worldwide? How is their rise to be interpreted?
- Science and Religion represent different explanatory frameworks. Is
  science really “value-free”? Should it be? Is this even possible?
  Are these different explanatory frameworks compatible or
  incompatible?

Values and Economics

- Was the 2008 Financial Crisis first and foremost a moral crisis?
- Has postmodern capitalism become morally bankrupt?
- Sustainability vs. Profit: Which Path Shall We Take?

Values in Conflict

- Conflict vs. Cooperation: Can war ever be eradicated? Should it?
- Clashes of Civilizations: How do we maximize good and minimize
  evil? Who defines these terms? According to which criteria?

Values and Culture

- North vs. South, East vs. West. As this is the first ISCSC
  conference to be held in South America, we are extremely interested
  in any papers specifically on South American and Meso-American
  civilizations, history, value systems, etc., especially Brazil and
  its’ complexities, challenges and paradoxes.

Send abstracts of about 300 words to the Program Chair Michael
Andregg at: mmandr...@stthomas.edu

Abstracts must include your proper name, email address, and
institutional affiliation, if any.

The above themes and subthemes are just guidelines. Any professional
treatment of civilizational issues, especially comparative, is
appropriate.

Deadline for abstracts is April 1, 2015, but earlier submissions are
encouraged. Conference language is English, but papers may be read in
Spanish or Portuguese if accompanied by a supplement in English
outlining the paper’s basic argument.

For more information, please visit the ISCSC website at:
http://www.wmich.edu/iscsc/


Contact:

Michael Andregg
1976 Field Avenue
St. Paul, MN 55116
USA
Phone: +1 651 962-5907
Email: mmandr...@stthomas.edu
Web: http://www.wmich.edu/iscsc/




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