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APA NEWSLETTERS
Philosophy and the Black
Experience
Jesse Taylor, Editor
Philosophy and Computers
Jon Dorbolo, Editor
Feminism and Philosophy
Joan Callahan, Editor
Hispanic/Latino Issues in
Philosophy
Linda Alcoff, Comm. Chair
Philosophy and Law
Richard Nunan, Editor
Philosophy and Lesbian,
Gay, Bisexual and
Transgender Issues
Timothy Murphy, Editor
Philosophy and Medicine
Rosamond Rhodes, Editor
Teaching Philosophy
Tziporah Kasachkoff &
Eugene Kelly, Co-EditorsNavigation
Newsletters Index (99:1)
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APA
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Fall 1999
Volume 99, Number 1
Newsletter on Philosophy and
the Black Experience
Calls for Papers
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Conference on African Philosophy: The Next
Fifty Years
(In conjunction with the Seventeenth Annual Hanna Lecture at Hamline University)
Deadline March 1, 2000
Conference Date: April 2729, 2000
The Conference on African Philosophy: The Next Fifty Years invites paper abstract
submissions for the meeting to be held April 2729, 2000. The conference is sponsored
by the Department of Philosophy, Hamline University, Saint Paul, Minnesota. Submit a
double-spaced abstract between 750 and 1,000 words. Each submission should also have a
cover page that includes personal information, an exact word count for the abstract, an
e-mail address, and be postmarked by March 1, 2000. Send submissions to Prof. Samuel Imbo,
Hamline University, 1536 Hewitt Avenue, Box 219, St. Paul, MN 55104, or e-mail your
abstracts to <imbo@hamline.edu>. We also wish to hear from those interested in
chairing a session.
Those whose papers are accepted will be notified by March 15, 2000. Limited travel
stipends are available for presenters in Africa and the Caribbeans. The conference will be
held on the campus of Hamline University. For more information, contact Professor Imbo.
Updated information about the conference will be available in future announcements.
The conference encourages paper submissions related to its forward-looking theme.
Specific topics include:
The state of
the discipline (African philosophy at the start of the new millenium);
Connections
between African philosophy and the larger discipline (challenges of assimilation or
accommodation);
Feminist
contributions to African philosophy;
Developing
subfields within African philosophy (ethics, political theory, epistemology, metaphysics);
Linkages
between African and African American experiences;
Insiders and
outsiders (challenges of diversity);
Religious
contributions to African philosophy;
Strategies and
hopes for the future.
The Paul Robert and Jean Shuman Hanna Lectureship in
Philosophy was created in 1982 to bring a distinguished teacher and scholar in philosophy,
of national or international reputation, to Hamline University. The seventeenth annual
Hanna Lecture and keynote address for the conference will be delivered by Professor Kwasi
Wiredu. Prof. Wiredus topic will be "Free Will as an Ideal: An African
Viewpoint."
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