Partners

We would like to thank Michaela Konrad for letting us use her art. Please check out her amazing work:

http://www.michaelakonrad.com


The project intercultural philosophizing is based on the assumption that problems of our world today can only be solved by contributions of all concerned cultures and traditions. WiGiP sees itself as a forum of such a philosophical polylogue.

The Society for Intercultural Philosophy (GIP) was founded in 1992 as a non-profit organization and now has members from all over the world who work together on the topic of intercultural philosophy. While philosophizing we think that it is important to expand the lenses of one's own cultural conditions in order to work systematically and historically in mutual exchange with the philosophical reflections of other cultures (and our own).


www.int-gip.de/home/

Since its founding in 1946, the Institute for Science and Art (IWK) has been dedicated to research, science education and adult education. Interculturality, education, gender studies, knowledge and society as well as art and culture are among the institute's main topics.

Forum Nepantla is an online project initiated by Federica Gonzalez Luna Ortiz, Fernando Wirtz, and Adrian Razvan Sandru that promote cross- and trans-disciplinary as well as cross-cultural thought in any style and from any perspective.

We understand intercultural philosophizing as the effort to interconnect contributions from all cultural traditions into philosophical discourses equally, this is to say, not just putting them aside each other in a comparative way, but rather bringing them into an open common space, so that all positions in this polylogue are kept open for change.

The Center for Interdisciplinary and Intercultural Studies (CIIS) is a central institution of the University of Tuebingen that promotes the dialogue between the sciences and the humanities in research and teaching. The CIIS is a place where the sciences and the humanities come together to work on various issues across subjects and to reflect on their relationship to each other as well as on their own fundamentals.