International Online Conference CALL FOR PAPERS - The Limits of Reason
Faculty of Philosophy
Universidad Complutense de Madrid, Spain
1st June 2022
Reason is and has been a central component of Western philosophy, both as that which distinguishes it from alternative Western forms of thinking and from non-Western discourses generally. One of the key defining features of this privileging of reason is its often implicit association with redemption, whether this is thought epistemologically, where it is associated with illumination in contrast to the confusion associated with darkness; morality, where it is associated with goodness over evil; and onto-politically, where it is associated with order over chaos.
However, this valorization has also always been accompanied by a certain mistrust: epistemologically, this has given rise to debates questioning the importance of formal logic and affirming the primacy of faith; metaphysically, it has manifested itself in the affirmation of non-rational foundations and the place of reason; morally, it has come to the fore in terms of an interrogation of the good/evil binary opposition as well as a questioning of the power of reason to guide our moral activities; and onto-politically, it has manifested itself in terms of a questioning of, amongst things, the nature and importance of order and, indeed, the exclusion inherent in reason’s historical affirmation of a universal, singular truth. This appears to set up a binary opposition between the affirmation of reason and its rejection. However, as a number of its critics explicitly understand, their critiques criticise reason through rational means; that is, through reason itself. As such, they recognize that it is not possible to simply discard reason. Instead, they aim to disrupt the apparent binary reason/non-reason opposition to re-evaluate the meaning, place, and limits of reason.
This one-day online international conference inserts itself into this historical debate by inviting a reconsideration of reason from the perspective of its limits and limitations. We are particularly interested in contributions that engage with the heterogeneity of reason, as well as those that explore the boundary between reason and its other (whatever that might be). Given this, suitable topics might include, but are certainly not limited to: