Dear All (apologies for cross-posting),

The following event might be of interest:

University of Western Sydney, Centre for Citizenship and Public Policy
Occasional Seminars
2009

"The Disunity of Reason, Reflective Disclosure, and Democratic
Politics," 
Nikolas Kompridis, University of Toronto

Wed, April 8, 3-5pm

Bankstown campus, Building 1, Room 1.1.117

Details available on the website of the Centre for Citizenship and
Public Policy: http://www.uws.edu.au/ccpp 

ABSTRACT:
I propose a conception of practical reason that starts from the
acknowledgement of pluralism and the irreducibility of reasonable
disagreement. This leads me to question the presumption of the “unity
of reason” which underlies Kantian and neo-Kantian conceptions of
reason. I argue that this view not only underestimates the depth of
cultural pluralism it also approaches the problems of pluralism in
completely the wrong way as problems to be “managed” or
“mastered.” Taking pluralism seriously requires that we begin
from the presumption of the disunity of reason, from which it follows
that we will occasionally require more than a translation of the reasons
of others: we will require learning the language of others. An
alternative conception of practical reason is conceived in terms of
practices of reflective disclosure, my reformulation of Heidegger’s
complex notion of “world-disclosure.” I connect this idea of
practical reason as a practice of reflective disclosure to the Kantian
and Arendtian idea of freedom as the capacity to initiate a new
beginning.

BIO:
Nikolas Kompridis is a Visiting Professor with the Department of
Political Science, University of Toronto. His areas of specialisation
are: Contemporary Political Theory (rationality and
practical reason); 19th and 20th Century Political Thought; Aesthetics
and Cultural Studies: Aesthetics and
Ethics; Aesthetics and Democratic Politics; Philosophy of Art,
Literature, Film and Music. He is the author of
Critique and Disclosure: Critical Theory between Past and Future,
Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 2006; Philosophical Romanticism (editor),
London and New York, Routledge, 2006; and numerous articles published in
Parrhesia, Political Theory, European Journal of Political Theory,
Critical Horizons and the Oxford Handbook of Philosophy and Literature.



Dr. Robert Sinnerbrink
Lecturer, Department of Philosophy
Building W6A, Balaclava Rd
Macquarie University
North Ryde, NSW 2109
Sydney Australia
e-mail: [email protected]
Tel: +61 2 9850 9935
Fax: +61 2 9850 8892
www.phil.mq.edu.au/staff/sinnerbrink.htm
Chair, Australasian Society for Continental Philosophy
http://www.ascp.org.au/
Book review co-editor, Critical Horizons: A Journal of Philosophy and
Social Theory
http://www.acumenpublishing.co.uk/critical_horizons_aims.asp?TAG=&CID=

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