Dear Colleagues,
You are invited to the November edition of the UP Philosophy Seminar Series.
Topic: Conversational
Thinking as Social Philosophy
By Dr L. Uchenna Ogbonnaya, University of Pretoria
Abstract: Conversational thinking is a philosophical system with methodological
and doctrinal orientations. Its methodological component can be employed to
address existential-phenomenological issues confronting humanity. The doctrinal
ambience of the system can be teased out into epistemological, logical, metaphysical,
and axiological theories. In this paper, I situate conversational thinking as a
doctrine within the area of philosophy known as social philosophy. I ground my
position by arguing that 1.) the conversational (arumaristic)
relationship that ensues between nwa-nsa and nwa-nju in nwa-izugbe
is a social relationship and 2.) the existential-phenomenological issues
such as gender, identity relations, politics, race, religion, xenophobia, etc
that conversational thinking addresses are social issues. Thus, I will go about
my task by discussing conversational thinking as a method and philosophy with
an insight into social philosophy. I will demonstrate how conversational
thinking is social philosophy by addressing selected social issues such as
ethnicity, gender, political polity, race, religion and xenophobia. Finally, I
will conclude by pointing out how the two conversational agents (nwa-nsa and
nwa-nju) function as social agents in society (nwa-izugbe [the
conversational point]), and the significance of this type of conversational analysis
of social issues.
Date: Tuesday, Nov
30 2021
Time: 14: 00 SAST/ 13:00 WAT
Registration: ZOOM: https://zoom.us/meeting/register/tJYscu6gqTopHdcwUJSk55hp5eBG3VD1WNLu
Please, click the link to
register.
The UP Philosophy Seminar series offers researchers the platform to
present their original ideas and theories to ignite academic debates. To
present your own world-shaking ideas, please write
to us attaching a short abstract of 200 words max that speak to any aspect of your
research that reflects thinking as a deep, critical, creative and, more
importantly, imaginative endeavour.
Contact: JO
Chimakonam, jonatha...@up.ac.za