TANKE, Joseph (University of Hawai’i)
“Painting From The Outside: Reconstructing the Early Foucault’s Account of Art”
This presentation develops an answer to the question with which aesthetics has sought to displace the priority of metaphysics throughout the course of modern Western philosophy, namely, how is there something rather than nothing? It does this by examining Michel Foucault’s account of the constitutive role played by madness [folie] in the arts of modernity. By isolating Foucault’s remarks on van Gogh, Nietzsche, and Artaud, we develop Foucault’s early and largely abandoned notions of art and creativity, with the aim of explaining how nothing can produce something. This project entails a close reading of the significance that Foucault builds into terms such as “reason,” “unreason,” “art,” and “madness” throughout the course of his major work the History of Madness, and the account it offers of the various stages in the development of Western reason. By isolating Foucault’s remarks on van Gogh, we seek to place his understanding of painting in dialogue with thinkers such as Martin Heidegger, Meyer Schapiro, and Jacques Derrida; however, unlike the famed debate regarding the “truth in paining,” it will be argued that one virtue of the Fouaultian approach to van Gogh (and painting) resides in the fact that it offers us a historical-ontological account of how a non-place, such as madness, can be configured so as to produce novel forms of experience.
TIAN, Lin and Peter ZHANG (Grand Valley State University)
“Interality and the City: The Case of Xi’an”
This article scrutinizes what makes the city urbane by foregrounding interality (间性), which is a newly coined philosophical concept that wills nothing short of a paradigm shift in philosophical inquiry. As a polysemous term, interality can mean empty space, interplay, relationality, betweenness, and beyondness, etc. To illustrate the point, the article uses Xi’an, the highly cultured tourist city in Northwest China, as an “object of study” and compares it with other cities such as Hangzhou, Suzhou, Kyoto, and London, where appropriate. The article makes the following main points: 1) Interality is what gives a city its spirit (i.e., breath). Without interality, the city is suffocating and soulless. 2) Overdevelopment makes a city unlivable precisely because it squeezes out the city’s interalities. 3) The good urbanist values interality as much as elegant physical structures. 4) Interality, urban rhythmanalysis, flow, and affordance. 5) The recovery and reinvention of interalities. 6) A thick description of interalities in Xi’an over the past thirty years. 7) Implications of the study.
THÉOFILAKIS, Fabien (University of Montreal, Canada)
“The Development of a Geographic Vision in the National Socialist Worldview”
Fabien Théofilakis (History and German Studies, University of Montreal) will talk on “The Development of a Geographic Vision in the National Socialist Worldview.” Looking at written and visual sources created by the leaders of Third Reich, among them the notes written by Adolf Eichmann during his 1961 trial, he traces the conceptual development of the so-called German “Lebensraum” (vital space) as a spatial ideal for the new Europe. This vision, contrary to current scholarly assumptions, was not uniformly understood to begin with, but developed out of a dynamic and contingent negotiation of maps, proposed by different Nazi agencies. Looking at primary maps, he extracts debates about deporting “Reichsfeinde” (enemies of the Reich) on the one hand and re-Germanizing newly conquered territories on the other. Tracing this dynamic as a spatial discussion, he argues, sheds new light on the Nazi project. Finally, he compares these historically produced maps to the spatial scales and aesthetic that scholars have recently employed when studying the Holocaust.
THOMPSON, Kirill O. (National Taiwan University, Taiwan)
“Fallingwater”: Daoist Inklings about Place for Design and Sustainability
The Laozi offers poetic reflections on the formation of opposites and interplay of being and non-being, which arise and return to dao. This formation and interplay of opposites and being and non-being against the backdrop of imperceptible, inchoate dao yield an aesthetic view of not just the formations of things but of the couching formation of reality, which together yield place. (Arguably, the human sense of place refers to “place” in this sense rather than to coordinates on a map.) This aesthetic view of place registers the dynamic mutual dependence of the opposites, e.g., being and non-being, that form this floating world in the perspective of dao. The present paper will note implications this aesthetic view has for ontology and fundamental philosophy but will concentrate on its implications for grasping and working with place, design, and functionality, particularly as illustrated in the thought and designs of Frank Lloyd Wright. As intimated by Laozi, ch. 11, working with place, design, and functionality in this perspective tends to foster efficiency and sustainability. I conclude by attributing these assets to the rich ontology and fundamental philosophy of Laozi’s position, and suggesting how this aesthetic view could facilitate the design of more efficient and sustainable as well as elegant structures, implements, and artifacts.
Reference text. Laozi 11:
Thirty spokes join at one hub,
But it is the non-being (the hole) that gives the use of the cart.
Lumps of clay are molded to form a vessel,
But it is the non-being (space within) that gives the use of the vessel.
Doors and windows are constructed to form a chamber,
But it is the non-being (space within) that gives the use of the room.
While the materials are the asset,
But it is the non-being (within) that gives the function.
THOMPSON, Paul B. (Michigan State University)
“The Allure of the Local in Food Ethics”
Philosophical inquiry into food security, the environmental impact of agriculture and fair treatment for small farmers and other food system workers has recently congealed into the field of “food ethics”. Taking up an alternative food movement’s interest in mounting resistance to large corporate actors and the global food system, advocacy for “locavore” eating practice is a topic in food ethics that links to the Conference theme of “place”. Emphasis on local food systems links several disparate normative rationales, however, and not always in ways that cohere. First, local food systems are said to place a lower burden on the environment than the global food system, providing an environmental ethics rationale. Second, local food systems allow money to circulate in local economies, providing a rationale based on local job creation within communities of place. Third, local food systems are said to promote sociality and convivial social relations, serving a political value of place-based solidarity. Finally, aesthetic qualities such as terroir are said to enrich the experience of eating foods from specific places. Do these notions of place converge or diverge? The answer is that while there are tensions, there is a surprising sense in which quotidian practices of local food culture have the capacity to invest place with distinct but mutually supporting conceptions of value. Food practice is thus a cornerstone for sense of place.
TIMM, Jeffrey (Wheaton College)
“A Place Beyond Place: The Divine Madman and the New Materialism”
The New Materialism rejects “transcendence” and “objectivity” within the study of embodied, emplaced and “embraided” cultural experience. Recently scholars like Vasquez (2011) and Harvey (2013) have argued for an approach to the study of religion as everyday life, celebrating difference and employing “otherness” as a methodology. From the otherness of the Vajrayana the gaze turns to the new materialism, wondering exactly what is new about it. Contrasting the natural embeddedness of traditional indigenous cultures with the alienation from place and self in the modern west sets the stage for a third possibility: Vajrayana.
Kyimed Lhakhang is a sacred temple in western Bhutan identified with the divine madman and, despite its emplacement or embraidedness in a particular and meaningful landscape, it forever points to a transcendence of place and “going beyond, beyond.” This Vajrayana cultural understanding of place is directly linked to an appreciation and cultivation of alternate states of consciousness. It is here that the divine madman and his ancient wisdom tradition, attuned through insights of biogenetic structuralism, quantum physics and fractal geometry, may have some helpful suggestions for the New Materialists.
TIWALD, Justin (San Francisco State University)
“The Importance (or Lack Thereof) of Local Ties in Neo-Confucian Character-centered Theories of Governance”
This paper revisits the great Confucian debate about two systems of regional governance: the ancient “enfeoffment” or “feudal” (fengjian 封建) system and the more centralized “commandery” or “province-county” (junxian 郡縣) system. One important dimension of this debate concerned the advantages of having regional governors with ties to the localities that they govern. Proponents of the enfoeffment system thought that local ties make an official more invested in and knowledgeable about the communities he governs, whereas defenders of commanderies thought that local ties make it more difficult to centralize and unify authority.
I offer a novel approach to this debate, one which takes account of another major current in Confucian thought that I describe as a preference for “character-centered theories of governance.” According to character-centered theories, successful governance depends more fundamentally on the virtue of those who govern than on the institutional rules and regulations to which they adhere. I look at two of the most sophisticated character-centered theorists, Hu Hong 胡宏 (1106-1161) and Zhu Xi 朱熹 (1130-1200) and explain how they are able to use character-centered foundations and frameworks to justify their particular views about the value and function of local ties. Both Hu and Zhu prefer the enfeoffment system because it fosters and builds on local ties, but whereas Hu thinks the enfeoffment system is necessary for good governance, Zhu thinks it an implication of his character-centered theory that both the enfeoffment and the commandery systems can bring about successful governance. Hu and Zhu thus illustrate different ways of conceiving the relationship between virtuous governance and historical and personal connections to one’s place. Other issues that overlap with the theme of space are the use of fixed boundaries to reduce conflict, the centralization vs. decentralization of power, and the value of what Hu Hong calls “being rooted” in the place in which one lives.
TOYODA, Mitsuyo (Tokyo Institute of Technology, Japan)
“Towards the Growth of Agrarian Literacy”
One of the concerns that J. Baird Callicott shares through his works is the impoverishment of the value of agriculture. With the trend of increasing mechanization, farmers are enforced to pursue efficiency and profits by introducing whatever technological measures available. Agriculture is a business based on the relationship between farmers and consumers. Farmers’ choices are thus significantly influenced by the choices of consumers. Thus, Callicott writes, “Farmers are asked to make costly changes in their method of production for the sake of everyone else’s quality of life.”
In order to consider the value of agriculture that has been dismissed in recent agricultural business, Callicott cites Aldo Leopold’s land aesthetic. Aesthetics goes beyond instrumental evaluation. It is the appreciation of the existence of certain things per se. Leopold’s land aesthetic, according to Callicott, “recognizes the beauty of neglected natural environments.” It is not about the appreciation of scenic beauty of agricultural landscapes but the understanding of their history of evolutionary and ecological biology. Biological literacy is thus the foundation of Leopold’s aesthetics.
The connection between agriculture and biodiversity began to be emphasized in Japanese agricultural policies. Farmlands are now valued from various perspectives such as ecological habitat, scenic beauty, therapeutic function, disaster prevention, etc. Several agrarian villages have been selected as GIAHS sites by FAO and have been recognized as important bio-cultural heritages. In spite of these progresses, the future prospect is not bright. In this paper, I examine unique agrarian aesthetics in Japanese tradition and consider the difficulties and hopes concerning current agricultural conservation movement. One of the possible solutions is the cultivation of agrarian literacy.
TRIGG, Dylan (University of Memphis)
“Place, Culture, and Nostalgia: a Phenomenological Perspective”
The reception of nostalgia in the 19th and 20th century is striking. At once an emblem of political conservatism, nostalgia is also an invariant aspect not only of individual existence but also of different cultures. From the Japanese concept “mono no aware” to the Portuguese term “Saudade,” nostalgia is a nuanced and culturally mediated concept. In this paper, I assume a phenomenological perspective on nostalgia, exploring the points of converge and divergence between Eastern and Western attitudes toward pastness, longing, and transience. My claim is that spatiality plays a central role in the formation of nostalgia, such that our experience of the past is tied up with the materiality of places, both in the presence and in their absence. I explore this claim through situating Freud’s short essay “On Transience” in dialogue with Kazuo Ishiguro’s The Remains of the Day.
TSAI, George (University of Hawai’i)
“Blame and the Blamed's Place in (or beyond) the Moral Community”
How does blame achieve its desired-effect of modifying the behavior of the blamed? More specifically, how does the blamed's place or position with respect to the moral community (whether the blamed is situated within or beyond the moral community) make a difference to how, and whether, blame is able to achieve its desired-effect? In exploring these questions, I argue that it is a rather complex matter how blame operates to change the blamed, and that this complexity matches the fact that the blamed (as a group) are a morally and psychologically diverse lot.
TURNER, Paul M. Turner (DePaul University)
“The Estrangement of Presence in the Zhuangzi”
It is well-known that the Zhuangzi 莊子 portrays apparently irreconcilable opposites as, in fact, mutually dependent on one another. This is most clearly the case with two sets of terms in the text's second chapter, shi-fei 是非 ('that's it' and 'that's not') and shi-bi是彼 ('this' and 'that'). Each term plays a role in distinguishing between what is correct or incorrect, and especially with regard to determining just what is properly virtuous, good, beautiful, and so on. Much of the English language commentary to date portrays these pairs of contraries as being primarily linguistic. Their contrariety seems merely semantic, then, while the contraries in fact form a unity either insofar as their meanings require one another, or there is an underlying unity beyond language which the use of names somehow distorts.
In this paper, I will take up and radicalize Brook Ziporyn's suggestion about the status of perspective in the Zhuangzi, which is that a thing does not merely have but rather is such a perspective. This is to say that a thing's affirmation and negation structures its presence. What this means is that affirming and negating are not activities which beings undertake in an everyday sense, or 'within language', but are rather better understood as ontologically constitutive of a being which can act or speak. I will argue that a thing in the Zhuangzi is a clearing and lighting-up (ming 明) which essentially emerges from the dark and confused chaos of nonbeing (hundun 渾沌), where illumination has the sense of 'forming a meaningful world'.
What is remarkable, then, is that the presence of any thing involves the chaos of nonbeing, or what it is not, such that its presence depends on what is not there. This means, I contend, that all presence is simultaneously there and beyond itself, so that there is essential uncertainty as to 'where' it is. To make this case, I will provide close readings of several key passages from the inner chapters, focusing on moments where things are shown to emerge out of, or exist within, formlessness and ambiguity, such as the Qiwulun's 齊物論 'music from empty holes' and the final chapter's account of Emperor Chaos' hospitality toward guests. What will be key for the analysis is the way such 'ex nihilo' emergence—understood in a nontraditional sense—means that beings are inextricably rooted in what is unformed and nowhere, and still further how this no-place is a common ancestral 'home' for each of the myriad things.
VAIDYA, Anand Jayprakash (San Jose State University) and Victor PINEDA (University of California, Berkeley)
“How Can Disability Studies Help Global Philosophy Think about Place and Space: Lessons from the work of Dr. Victor Pineda”
Recent work at the intersection of justice studies, disability studies, phenomenology, and the metaphysics of space and place suggests that paying attention to how persons of disabilities experience and understand “space” and “place” is central to the very construction of space and place from the standpoint of equality and justice. In this talk we present the pioneering work of Dr. Victor Pineda, who is the key architect of the AWE movement (A World Enabled Movement).
We present his work against the background of Amartya Sen and Martha Nussbaum who have also drawn attention to the experiences of persons with disabilities in their articulation of the capabilities approach to justice. However, we argue that Dr. Pineda’s work is pioneering and goes beyond those of Sen and Nussbaum in so far as he argues for the thesis that our current understanding of disability is confused, since we take a medical or biological approach to disability rather than a social and environmental approach to disability. We show how his careful argumentation suggests that everyone is disabled relative to some environment or place because disability is a functional notion tied to an individual in a space that is a constructed place through affordances it allows a person to optimize in freedom and being. We rehearse his empirical research on the United Arab Emirates in which he shows how laws concerning disability have shaped the production of the city life.
We conclude by suggesting that cross-cultural research on disability provides a pathway forward for researchers in a variety of fields. The grand unification we point is research space and place that combines disability studies and future studies with comparative philosophy and theories of justice in political theory and philosophy.
VALMISA, Mercedes (Princeton University)
“The World is a Cage” or The Place of Freedom in Early Chinese Philosophy
Zhuangzi 莊子 23, “Geng Sang Chu” 更桑楚, speaks of a bow master who would make a cage of the world so that no bird finds escape. What is the place of human freedom in a cage-like world? Much as birds flying in an immense cage, we seem to freely move around without realizing our boundaries. Are we in control? Can we actually choose how to act? Do we even have an influence over the course of events?
Inspired by the long-standing Western philosophical debate on the (in)compatibility of determinism and free will, I analyze the way in which Early Chinese authors argued that behaving adaptively could lead to a kind of non-dualist, compatibilist freedom that I call “Adaptive Freedom.” I begin with a Song-times debate on the historical and philosophical reasons for feudalism (Su Shi 蘇軾vs Zhu Xi 朱熹), which helps illuminate similar positions with regard to fate and free action in Early China.
In a complex web of interactions between actors and environment, the place of freedom emerges between an inherently deterministic and limit-imposing universe, and the awareness of a strategic, purposeful and adaptive agent. This analysis provides an alternative reading of compatibilist freedom for contemporary philosophical debates, and turns away all arguments in favor of dominant determinism, fatalism and passive resignation in Early China.
van der BRAAK, A.F.M. (Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, The Netherlands)
“The Secular and the Sacred as Contested Spaces? A Cross-cultural Hermeneutical Investigation into Western and Chinese Perspectives”
In the Abrahamic religious traditions, the notion of the sacred is often conceived in terms of nearness to God and God’s grace. The sacred is thus differentiated from the secular, and is set apart as mysterious and inconceivable. Emile Durkheim has even singled out such a ‘setting apart’ of the sacred as the defining element of religion: “A religion is a unified system of beliefs and practices relative to sacred things, that is to say, things set apart and forbidden” (Durkheim, The elementary forms of religious life: 47). Charles Taylor has argued in A secular age that one aspect of secularization in the West (the emptying of public spaces of all reference to the sacred) has resulted from the growing opposition and separation between ‘secular’ spheres of activity (economic, political, cultural, educational, professional, recreational) and ‘sacred’ spheres of activity (religious, spiritual). In the West, the secular and the sacred have become contested spaces over the past centuries.
This paper wants to contrast this Western perspective on the secular and the sacred with a Chinese one. In classical Chinese, there was no exact term to describe ‘religion’. In the nineteenth century, the phrase zongjiao was coined, with a combined meaning of ‘ancestral teaching’ and ‘pious doctrine’. Absent in this phrase is the connotation that is present in religare: re-establishing the bond between the superhuman and the human, and bridging the gap between the divine and the secular (Yao and Zhao, Chinese religion: 27). Instead, the concept of zongjiao draws the divine nearer to the human world. In this way, religion is demystified and rooted in human experience and expectations. Rather than emphasizing the tension between the human and the divine (e.g., a separation from the divine needs to be reconciled through grace as a way to salvation), zongjiao emphasizes communication, correspondence and mutuality, which enables confidence in the human capacity for transformation and perfection.
Each individual is believed to possess the source and resource to reach perfection or enlightenment. As a result of this, the sacred (shensheng) is conceived of as a permanent presence. The Chinese term is a combination of shen (the mysterious or spiritual) and sheng (sagacity), referring to the realm where the supernatural and the human are integrated into a perfect unity by which humans have reached enlightenment. Since the transition from the secular to the sacred is a continual process, the sacred can therefore be practiced, sought after and learned about: the Way exists everywhere.
This paper uses a cross-cultural hermeneutical approach to investigate the philosophical and theological presuppositions behind the Western approach to the secular and the sacred as contested spaces, and investigate an alternative hermeneutic of the secular and the sacred that is closer to the Chinese perspective.
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