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Call for Publications

Theme: Political Correctnesss
Subtitle: Towards a Global Ethos
Publication: Philosophies
Date: Special Issue
Deadline: 1.4.2016

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At a time of increasing globalization, with interconnectedness and
communication intensifying, humanity is beginning to unify. It is
interesting to inquire according to which ethos. The expression
political correctness reflects a process wherein moral and religious
values increasingly share the stage with, and often defer to, more
general principles and strictures governing social conduct. But what
are these principles and strictures? In which sense are they
proposed, formulated, followed, enforced by politicians and other
social actors?

Political correctness is presently culturally embedded in a
particular socio-historical context, that of the political debates of
Western Societies. It stigmatizes some values and promotes norms from
the point of view of these societies. We may wonder if it will
evolve, and how, into a more open and inclusive perspective.

The aim of this special issue it to investigate the essence of
political correctness, if any. This is a philosophical approach. The
idea is not to claim or argue that it is wrong or right, but to
understand what it is and/or what it can be.

It is important to investigate the concepts, assumptions, contentions
and controversies of political correctness, to understand how it is
practiced, how it develops, how it can be constructed. Many issues
can be addressed:

- Origin and development of the expression “political correctness”
and its correlated semantical network in lay thinking and in the
public debate.

- The sensible topics of political correctness: liberty, economy,
religion, human and animal rights, sexuality, health, education,
nature preservation.

- The, so to say, “ten commandments” of political correctness: what
is good or/and bad according to political correctness, which actions,
for which reasons in what contexts? And why?

- How political correctness is related to central philosophical
questions, such as the meaning of life, truth and happiness.

Guest Editors:

Thalia Magioglou, London School of Economics and Politicial Science,
London, UK

Jean-Yves Beziau, University of Brazil, Rio de Janeiro

Send an abstract to e.magiog...@lse.ac.uk and/or
poli...@jyb-logic.org by April 1st. If your abstract is accepted you
will have until September 16, 2016 to send a full paper. 

For further information please see:
http://www.mdpi.com/journal/philosophies/special_issues/global_ethos




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