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Extreme beliefs and responsibility

29 June 2023 - 30 June 2023

Description

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Workshop theme This workshop explores the relation between extreme beliefs and extreme behavior on the one hand and responsibility on the other. The first part concerns the issue of who is responsible. For instance, should we target the individual, the community, or none, i.e., are structural factors to blame? The second part concerns what kind of responsibility is at issue. For instance, how do legal, moral, and epistemic responsibility relate to each other with respect to extreme beliefs? The third part…
Workshop theme This workshop explores the relation between extreme beliefs and extreme behavior on the one hand and responsibility on the other. The first part concerns the issue of who is responsible. For instance, should we target the individual, the community, or none, i.e., are structural factors to blame? The second part concerns what kind of responsibility is at issue. For instance, how do legal, moral, and epistemic responsibility relate to each other with respect to extreme beliefs? The third part concerns when responsibility attributions are appropriate and when not. What are excusing or exculpating conditions of individual or group responsibility for extreme belief?   It is the third in a series of interdisciplinary workshops of the extreme beliefs project, in which we study extreme belief and behavior as found in fanaticism, fundamentalism, extremism, conspiracy theorizing, and terrorism. Key to the project is the idea that we ought to take extreme believers and actors seriously, meaning that (i) those actors are to be understood as relatively normal, healthy, reason-responsive human beings, yet with problematic ideas and possibly harmful behavior, and that (ii) their reasons, beliefs, narratives, and religiosity are to be understood as crucial to understanding and explaining these phenomena. The project brings philosophical tools, concepts, arguments, and other resources to a so far largely empirical debate. Two previous workshops were devoted to conceptually mapping the terrain, and explanations of extreme belief behavior. Two future workshops will be devoted to extreme beliefs and subjectivity and resilience towards extreme beliefs.   Invited Keynote Speakers Ian James Kidd (Philosophy, University of Nottingham) Janja Lalich (Sociology) Ken Levi (Law, Lousiana State University) Paulina Sliwa (Philosophy, University of Vienna)   Format The two-day workshop will be plenary with sessions consisting of keynote lectures (45 min), responses (15 min), and Q&A (30 min). We also plan to have an interdisciplinary session at the end of the second day. Several keynotes will be invited, others will be selected based on submitted abstracts. The focus will be on the face-to-face meetings, but there will be room for online presentations if needed.   Abstract Submission We welcome submissions of 500-word abstracts, to be sent to extremebeliefs.fgw@vu.nl 15 January 2023 the latest. Notifications of acceptance will be given in February. Those who submitted an abstract might also be invited as respondents. We encourage submissions from researchers from the global south and underrepresented groups in academia.   Book series on extreme beliefs Together with an international and interdisciplinary group of experts on kinds of extreme beliefs, we will publish an OUP book series on extreme beliefs. The aim of the series is to crystallize an approach to extreme beliefs in which the perspective of the extreme believer is crucial in understanding, explaining, and mitigating extreme beliefs. One volume, edited by Naomi Kloosterboer, Chris Ranalli, and Rik Peels, will be dedicated to the theme of the responsibility workshop. Presentations at the workshop may be considered for inclusion in the volume. For more on the volume and the book series, see here.   Organizers  Naomi Kloosterboer, Nora Kinderman, Chris Ranalli, Rik Peels & Jedidja Kloens. The extreme beliefs project is funded by the European Union’s Horizon 2020 Research and Innovation Program (Grant Agreement No. 851613).

Details

Start:
29 June 2023
End:
30 June 2023
Website:
www.extremebeliefs.com

Venue

VU University, Amsterdam, Hoofdgebouw, De Boelelaan 1105, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam / VU University Amsterdam, 1081 Amsterdam, The Netherlands
Hoofdgebouw, De Boelelaan 1105, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam / VU University Amsterdam, 1081 Amsterdam, The Netherlands
Amsterdam, North Holland The Netherlands
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Workshop theme

This workshop explores the relation between extreme beliefs and extreme behavior on the one hand and responsibility on the other. The first part concerns the issue of who is responsible. For instance, should we target the individual, the community, or none, i.e., are structural factors to blame? The second part concerns what kind of responsibility is at issue. For instance, how do legal, moral, and epistemic responsibility relate to each other with respect to extreme beliefs? The third part concerns when responsibility attributions are appropriate and when not. What are excusing or exculpating conditions of individual or group responsibility for extreme belief?

 

It is the third in a series of interdisciplinary workshops of the extreme beliefs project, in which we study extreme belief and behavior as found in fanaticism, fundamentalism, extremism, conspiracy theorizing, and terrorism. Key to the project is the idea that we ought to take extreme believers and actors seriously, meaning that (i) those actors are to be understood as relatively normal, healthy, reason-responsive human beings, yet with problematic ideas and possibly harmful behavior, and that (ii) their reasons, beliefs, narratives, and religiosity are to be understood as crucial to understanding and explaining these phenomena. The project brings philosophical tools, concepts, arguments, and other resources to a so far largely empirical debate. Two previous workshops were devoted to conceptually mapping the terrain, and explanations of extreme belief behavior. Two future workshops will be devoted to extreme beliefs and subjectivity and resilience towards extreme beliefs.

 

Invited Keynote Speakers

Ian James Kidd (Philosophy, University of Nottingham)

Janja Lalich (Sociology)

Ken Levi (Law, Lousiana State University)

Paulina Sliwa (Philosophy, University of Vienna)

 

Format

The two-day workshop will be plenary with sessions consisting of keynote lectures (45 min), responses (15 min), and Q&A (30 min). We also plan to have an interdisciplinary session at the end of the second day. Several keynotes will be invited, others will be selected based on submitted abstracts. The focus will be on the face-to-face meetings, but there will be room for online presentations if needed.

 

Abstract Submission

We welcome submissions of 500-word abstracts, to be sent to extremebeliefs.fgw@vu.nl 15 January 2023 the latest. Notifications of acceptance will be given in February. Those who submitted an abstract might also be invited as respondents. We encourage submissions from researchers from the global south and underrepresented groups in academia.

 

Book series on extreme beliefs

Together with an international and interdisciplinary group of experts on kinds of extreme beliefs, we will publish an OUP book series on extreme beliefs. The aim of the series is to crystallize an approach to extreme beliefs in which the perspective of the extreme believer is crucial in understanding, explaining, and mitigating extreme beliefs. One volume, edited by Naomi Kloosterboer, Chris Ranalli, and Rik Peels, will be dedicated to the theme of the responsibility workshop. Presentations at the workshop may be considered for inclusion in the volume. For more on the volume and the book series, see here.

 

Organizers 

Naomi Kloosterboer, Nora Kinderman, Chris Ranalli, Rik Peels & Jedidja Kloens. The extreme beliefs project is funded by the European Union’s Horizon 2020 Research and Innovation Program (Grant Agreement No. 851613).

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The OZSW event calendar lists academic philosophy events organized by/at Dutch universities, and is offered by the OZSW as a service to the research community. Please check the event in question – through their website or organizer – to find out if you could participate and whether registration is required. Obviously we carry no responsibility for non-OZSW events.