posted by organizer: leonegazziero || 2184 views || tracked by 2 users: [display]

SÊMAINÔ (I) 2016 : International Conference « SÊMAINÔ (I): Ancient Theories of meaning » (Lille, December the 5th, 6th and 7th, 2016)

FacebookTwitterLinkedInGoogle

 
When Dec 5, 2016 - Dec 7, 2016
Where Université Charles-de-Gaulle - Lille 3
Submission Deadline Apr 15, 2016
Notification Due Apr 30, 2016
Final Version Due Oct 15, 2016
Categories    philosophy   ancient philosophy   philosophy of language
 

Call For Papers

Call for Papers : International Conference « SÊMAINÔ (I): Ancient Theories of meaning » (Lille, December the 5th, 6th and 7th, 2016)
 
Organisation :
Leone Gazziero (French-Swiss Collaborative Research Project « SÊMAINÔ »)

Address :
UMR 8163 « Savoirs, Textes, Langage » (STL), Université Lille 3, Rue du Barreau - BP 60149, 59653 Villeneuve d’Ascq Cedex.

Contact :
leone.gazziero@univ-lille3.fr

Provisional Schedule :
April, the 15th, 2016 (submissions deadline) ; April, the 30th, 2016 (peer-review process completion and results notification) ; October, the 15th, 2016 (deadline for submitting detailed abstracts) ; December, the 5th, 6th and 7th, 2016 (Conference).
 
Event :

« What are linguistic signs and why do we need them ? »
« How do they mean what they mean ? »
« What effects do they have and what precautions are called for when we avail ourselves of them in order to convey our thoughts and feelings, argue with other people or try to influence their behaviour in some way or another ? »
 
Such and similar issues, whose roots go back at least as far as Plato and Aristotle (and arguably beyond), are of paramount importance, since they determine what questions ancient philosophers and other language specialists asked about linguistic signs, their meaning and their uses. Through debates whose emphasis shifted hence and forth between logic, grammar, rhetoric and theology, ancient understanding of what it takes for a linguistic expression to be meaningful has come in a variety of ways.
In order to make sense of this diversity and, more in general, in its effort to investigate the history of philosophy from the angle of theoretical variations on the themes of language and meaning, SÊMAINÔ Project – a French National Agency for Research (ANR) and Swiss National Science Funds (SNF) joint venture led by Leone Gazziero and Claudio Majolino (University Lille III) and Laurent Cesalli (University of Geneva) – invites paper submissions for its first International Conference (Lille, December, the 5th, the 6th and the 7th, 2016).
The Conference’s main objective will be to identify and categorise theoretical patterns implemented in Ancient and Late Ancient times in order to account for meaning as either a property of linguistic expressions, or a correlate of contents of thought, or else as a product of communication practices. Within the chronological boundaries of Classical and Late Antiquity, the range of issues open to discussion is deliberately broad and propositions’ focus may be either physical (linguistic signs have a materiality and a physiology of their own), morphological (typologies of parts of speech have been put forward by philosophers and grammarians alike) semantic (meaning, reference and everything that falls between), psychological (the actual handling of signs in its intellectual and affective dimension) or pragmatic (usage situations of linguistic expressions, both successful and biased)
Communications (speaking time: 50 minutes), either in French or in English, will follow a common pattern: upon acceptance of their propositions, authors will select one or more texts (or sections thereof), which they will expound and comment upon. A bibliography and a detailed abstract will be sent by October the 15th 2016 in order to be circulated beforehand amongst the Conference’s participants. Communications, whose Authors are willing to, will be submitted to further review in order to be published in the Conference Proceedings.
Interested Authors are invited to submit a 500-1000 words proposition either in French or in English. These should be prepared for blind review by removing all identifying information. Author’s name and institutional affiliation will be provided in the email or as a separate cover page.
Submissions are to be sent – no later than April, the 15th, 2016 – as .pdf or .docx attachments to
 
leone.gazziero@univ-lille3.fr
 
All queries may be directed to the same email address.

Related Resources

LT4HALA 2024   Third Workshop on Language Technologies for Historical and Ancient LAnguages
Sensuality and Robots: An Aesthetic Appr 2024   Call for Papers - Sensuality and Robots: An Aesthetic Approach to Human-Robot Interactions
Mathematically Modeling Early Christian 2024   Call for Papers - Mathematically Modeling Early Christian Literature: Theories, Methods, and Future Directions
ISPiF 2024   Call for Abstracts - 2024 Meeting on Frontiers and Borders in Philosophy and Film
Critical Plant Theories and Cultures: Ex 2024   Call For Papers - Critical Plant Theories and Cultures: Exploring Human and More-than-human World Entanglements
PJA 75(2) 2025   The Beauty of Storytelling and the Story of Beauty (The Polish Journal of Aesthetics)
LAK 2024   14th International Conference on Learning Analytics and Knowledge
Philosophical Approaches to Games and Ga 2024   Call For Papers - Philosophical Approaches to Games and Gamification: Ethical, Aesthetic, Technological and Political Perspectives
Relations 2024   Relations. Beyond Anthropocentrism
PJA Call for Guest Editors 2025   The Polish Journal of Aesthetics: Call for Special Issue Proposals and Guest Editor Recruitment