The upcoming conference The Organic and the Normative seeks to investigate the phenomenon of vital normativity, which refers to the capacity of living beings to (co)determine and (co)constitute their own conditions of existence, preservation, and development. The conference aims to approach the phenomenon of vital normativity from at least four different perspectives.
Scheduled for July 30th to August 1st, 2024, at the University of Ljubljana in Ljubljana, Slovenia, the conference will provide a platform for interdisciplinary dialogue in the form of lectures by invited speakers from diverse fields as well as ample opportunities for in-depth discussions.
The conference is open to the public. Recordings of all sessions will also be made available online on various platforms (subject to participants’ approval), while a dedicated website will feature presentations of articles from the speaker line-up. More details on the venue and conference schedule will be available soon.
Jul 30โAug 1
2024
Ljubljana, Slovenia
Preลกernova dvorana, ZRC SAZU, Novi trg 4 (Google Maps)
The conference is part of the โVital Normativity: Beyond the Is/Ought Divideโ project, which is part of the โNew Horizons for Science and Religion in Central and Eastern Europeโ initiative organised by the Ian Ramsey Center of the University of Oxford in cooperation with the John Templeton Foundation. The event is also made possible with the kind support of the Faculty of Arts, University of Ljubljana.
We are grateful to the Slovenian Academy of Science and Arts (ZRC SAZU) for hosting us in their venue.
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Speakers
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Talks
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July 30
Tuesday
See schedule
14:00
Sebastjan Vรถrรถs
Introduction
14:15โ15:00
Alejandro Fรกbregas-Tejeda
The Pulses of Vital Normativity: A Metaphilosophical Birdโs-Eye View
Abstract
What is the nature of vital normativity? How may normative judgments about what living beings do or donโt do be backed or defended? What is the meaning, if any, of normative concepts, such as โvalueโ or โnorms,โ when dealing with non-human organisms? When similar ontological, epistemological, or semantic questions are raised about (human) moral normativity, a helpful philosophical lens that is usually adopted to try to sketch some answers, without much surprise, is metaethics. In contrast, when it comes to vital normativity, neither the philosophy of biology nor the philosophy of the cognitive sciences, to give two examples of fields currently engaged with these quandaries, espouses explicit metaphilosophical perspectives to hone in on its horizon. Here, I take initial steps to map a wide-ranging conceptual space for vital normativity from a metaphilosophical vantage point.
First, by drawing parallels with metaethical debatesโbut without positing equivalence or isomorphisms between moral and vital normativity, only a convergent metatheoretical structuring of positions about themโI outline the divide between vital normativity realism and non-realism. This includes spelling out a distinction between cognitivist and non-cognitivist positions about the truth-aptness of normative statements concerning living processes, introducing the possibility of an โerror theoryโ for vital normativity, and differentiating between โconceptualistโ and what I call โagentualistโ commitments about the instantiation of normative properties and states of affairs.
Second, I delve deeper into vital normativity realism by contrasting naturalist and non-naturalist positions (e.g., primitivism, intuitionism). To address the former, I analyze the metaphilosophical commitments and assumptions of recent approaches and standpoints on organismal agency and teleology that have been articulated in the philosophy of biology to naturalize the normativity of developing organisms. I argue that when the naturalization of vital normativity is countenanced, the naturalist still has to offer a rejoinder to a modified version of G. E. Mooreโs โopen question argumentโ regarding the equivalence of (organismal) normative and non-normative concepts when the latter are used to account for the emergence of the former. Furthermore, I outline some of the challenges that we naturalists need to undertake moving forward.
Finally, I provide closing reflections on this metaphilosophical exercise. For all of us who care about vital normativity (or its lack thereof), being aware of where we fall on the metaphilosophical spectrum is important to engage in productive discussions and not talk past one another.
15:00โ15:15
Discussion
15:15โ16:00
Predrag ล ustar
A Kantian Normative Landscape for the Life Sciences
16:00โ16:15
Discussion
16:15โ16:30
Break
16:30โ17:15
Vera Straetmanns
Formal Teleology in Agnes Arberโs Philosophy of Plants
17:15โ17:30
Discussion
17:30โ18:15
Andreas Weber
Bodies Are Love Processes
18:15โ18:30
Discussion
19:00
Dinner
July 31
Wednesday
See schedule
9:00โ9:45
Timotej Prosen
Creative Normativity: Some Insights and Lingering Questions in Canguilhem, Simondon and Enactivism
9:45โ10:00
Discussion
10:00โ10:45
Sebastjan Vรถrรถs & Jan Halรกk
Life as the Advent of the Problematic: Vital Normativity in Canguilhem, Merleau-Ponty, and Varela
10:45โ11:00
Discussion
11:30โ13:30
Lunch Break
14:00โ14:45
Charles T. Wolfe
Organisms as Material Agents, Organisms as Meaning-Makers
14:45โ15:00
Discussion
15:00โ15:45
Johannes Jรคger
Organizational Continuity as the Basic Norm for Living Systems
15:45โ16:00
Discussion
16:00โ16:15
Break
16:15โ17:00
Arantza Etxeberria Agiriano
The Normativity of Organic Reproduction
17:00โ17:15
Discussion
17:15โ18:15
General Discussion
19:00
Dinner
August 1
Thursday
See schedule
9:00โ9:45
Ela Praznik & Moritz Kriegleder
Like a Rolling Stone? Normativity in Enactivism and Active Inference
9:45โ10:00
Discussion
10:00โ10:45
Xabier E. Barandiaran
An Organismic Approach to Cognitive Normativity
10:45โ11:00
Discussion
11:00โ11:15
Break
11:15โ12:00
Konrad Werner
A Long Way from Salience to Values and Norms
12:00โ12:15
Discussion
12:15โ13:00
Christopher Donohue
โHumility and Limitation’: Cassirer on Kant, Goethe, and on Life, Organism and Ethics
13:00โ13:15
Discussion
13:15โ14:30