The notion that the human being is defined by its ability to speak and act in the first person is a hallmark of modern philosophy. For Descartes, Leibniz, or Kant, the first distinctly human word is: “I”. This conference investigates the view that there is no “I” without a “You” and that the human being is only fully constituted by relations of second personal recognition. To speak and act in the first person means to speak and act as the second person of a second person. But if that is so, what defines a relation between different beings as second personal? How is a second personal relation established or entered? And what fundamental normative implications does it have for the ones engaged in it?
The conference “The Struggle for Recognition and the Authority of the Second Person” will draw on two discussions that have developed comprehensive perspectives on these issues: It connects the discussion on “struggles for recognition” which has established a new paradigm for critical theory with the discussion on “the second person standpoint” which has informed new approaches in contemporary ethics. The conference will relate insights from these two perspectives and investigate their implications for issues in ethics and meta-ethics, political and social philosophy, philosophy of law and language. Among the questions to be addressed are: What is the relation between the first, the second, and the third person? What defines an interpersonal relation as second personal and in what ways can we fail to actualize this type of relation? How does a transcendental account of the second personal stance as the condition of possibility of normativity relate to the genealogical account of interpersonal recognition as the result of political and historical struggles? And finally: under which circumstances and in what way may the ideal of a second personal relation and of mutual recognition turn out to be ideological?
The conference “The Struggle for Recognition and the Authority of the Second Person” will draw on two discussions that have developed comprehensive perspectives on these issues: It connects the discussion on “struggles for recognition” which has established a new paradigm for critical theory with the discussion on “the second person standpoint” which has informed new approaches in contemporary ethics. The conference will relate insights from these two perspectives and investigate their implications for issues in ethics and meta-ethics, political and social philosophy, philosophy of law and language. Among the questions to be addressed are: What is the relation between the first, the second, and the third person? What defines an interpersonal relation as second personal and in what ways can we fail to actualize this type of relation? How does a transcendental account of the second personal stance as the condition of possibility of normativity relate to the genealogical account of interpersonal recognition as the result of political and historical struggles? And finally: under which circumstances and in what way may the ideal of a second personal relation and of mutual recognition turn out to be ideological?
Thursday, September 27, 2018
Conference Room: AUDITORIUM
Coffee Breaks: Room 108 (Morning), Room 116 (Afternoon)
9.00 – 9.30 Thomas Khurana (Yale/Essex)
Introduction
9.30 – 11.00 Terry Pinkard (Georgetown)
Are We Struggling for Recognition?
Seyla Benhabib (Yale)
Response
Chair Katrin Trüstedt (Yale)
11.15 – 12:45 Sebastian Rödl (Leipzig)
Freedom as Right
Frederick Neuhouser (Columbia)
Response
Chair Francey Russell (Yale)
12:45 – 2.00 LUNCH BREAK
2.00 – 3.30 Miranda Fricker (CUNY)
Moral Protagonists and Their Powers
Kristina Lepold (Frankfurt)
Response
Chair Matthew Congdon (Vanderbilt)
3:45 – 5.15 Jay Wallace (Berkeley)
Recognition and the Moral Nexus
Berislav Marusic (Brandeis)
Response
Chair Lorenzo C. Simpson (Stony Brook)
5.30 – 7.00 Stephen Darwall (Yale)
Recognition, Second-Personal Authority, and Non-Ideal Theory
Chair Rahel Jaeggi (Berlin/Princeton)
Friday, September 28, 2018
Conference Room: AUDITORIUM
Coffee Breaks: Room 108
Reception: Room 108
9.00 – 9.30 Presentation of the Activities of the Humboldt Foundation
9.30 – 11.00 Beate Rössler (Amsterdam)
Relational Autonomy and Second Personal Morality
Dirk Quadflieg (Leipzig)
Response
Chair Kirk Wetters (Yale)
11.15 – 12.45 Paul Franks (Yale)
Fichte’s Kabbalistic Realism: Summons as ẓimẓum
Matthias Haase (University of Chicago)
Response
Chair Jörg Schaub (Essex)
12.45 – 2.00 LUNCH BREAK
2.00 – 3.30 Robert Stern (Sheffield)
Is Hegelian Recognition Second Personal? Not Necessarily.
Peter Dews (Essex)
Response
Chair Robin Dembroff (Yale)
4.00 – 5.30 Axel Honneth (Columbia/Princeton)
»You« or »We«. The Limits of the Second-Person-Perspective
Chair Rüdiger Campe (Yale)
5.30 – 7.00 HUMBOLDT RECEPTION (Room 108)
SPONSORED BY
THE AMERICAN FRIENDS OF THE ALEXANDER VON HUMBOLDT FOUNDATION
Conference Room: AUDITORIUM
Coffee Breaks: Room 108 (Morning), Room 116 (Afternoon)
9.00 – 9.30 Thomas Khurana (Yale/Essex)
Introduction
9.30 – 11.00 Terry Pinkard (Georgetown)
Are We Struggling for Recognition?
Seyla Benhabib (Yale)
Response
Chair Katrin Trüstedt (Yale)
11.15 – 12:45 Sebastian Rödl (Leipzig)
Freedom as Right
Frederick Neuhouser (Columbia)
Response
Chair Francey Russell (Yale)
12:45 – 2.00 LUNCH BREAK
2.00 – 3.30 Miranda Fricker (CUNY)
Moral Protagonists and Their Powers
Kristina Lepold (Frankfurt)
Response
Chair Matthew Congdon (Vanderbilt)
3:45 – 5.15 Jay Wallace (Berkeley)
Recognition and the Moral Nexus
Berislav Marusic (Brandeis)
Response
Chair Lorenzo C. Simpson (Stony Brook)
5.30 – 7.00 Stephen Darwall (Yale)
Recognition, Second-Personal Authority, and Non-Ideal Theory
Chair Rahel Jaeggi (Berlin/Princeton)
Friday, September 28, 2018
Conference Room: AUDITORIUM
Coffee Breaks: Room 108
Reception: Room 108
9.00 – 9.30 Presentation of the Activities of the Humboldt Foundation
9.30 – 11.00 Beate Rössler (Amsterdam)
Relational Autonomy and Second Personal Morality
Dirk Quadflieg (Leipzig)
Response
Chair Kirk Wetters (Yale)
11.15 – 12.45 Paul Franks (Yale)
Fichte’s Kabbalistic Realism: Summons as ẓimẓum
Matthias Haase (University of Chicago)
Response
Chair Jörg Schaub (Essex)
12.45 – 2.00 LUNCH BREAK
2.00 – 3.30 Robert Stern (Sheffield)
Is Hegelian Recognition Second Personal? Not Necessarily.
Peter Dews (Essex)
Response
Chair Robin Dembroff (Yale)
4.00 – 5.30 Axel Honneth (Columbia/Princeton)
»You« or »We«. The Limits of the Second-Person-Perspective
Chair Rüdiger Campe (Yale)
5.30 – 7.00 HUMBOLDT RECEPTION (Room 108)
SPONSORED BY
THE AMERICAN FRIENDS OF THE ALEXANDER VON HUMBOLDT FOUNDATION
Registration |