Sven Bernecker (Universities of California-Irvine and Cologne)
Christoph Kelp (University of Glasgow)
Jennifer Lackey (Northwestern University)
Veli Mitova (University of Johannesburg)
Mona Simion (University of Glasgow)
9-10 March 2022
Faculty of Philosophy, University of Seville
C/Camilo José Cela s/n, 41018, Seville, Spain
There is no registration fee but please register here:
https://forms.gle/6T24k4EEfoidAjFG6
You can reach the Philosophy Faculty by bus (routes C1, C2, B4, 52, B4, 25, 26, 38 and 38 A), underground (Metro, line 1) or tramway (Metrocentro line). From the Santa Justa rail station, the best option is bus route C1.
The bus line EA connects the airport to the Faculty (San Bernardo stop) with departures every 30 minutes. The cost is 4 euros per trip. Click here for more details.
Taxis from the airport to the Faculty cost between €22 and €25, approximately; supplementary charges may apply for suitcases heavier than 10 kg or depending on the time of the day.
The epistemic well functioning of our societies may be threatened in countless different ways. Many of these threats have been thoroughly investigated in recent literature, and include phenomena such as epistemic injustice, epistemic oppression, group polarization, epistemic colonialism, willful ignorance, fake news, conspiracy theorising, or different kinds of denialism.
While “Epistemic risk” is often considered narrowly just as the close possibility of false belief, in this workshop we intend to use the concept in a broader sense, to target the full array of issues that may put the proper functioning of our epistemic practices at risk by hindering the production, acquisition or transmission of epistemically valuable states, such as knowledge or understanding. Special emphasis will be put on how epistemic and political phenomena may endanger, when intertwined, the kinds of relationships of epistemic trust that sustain our epistemic communities.
The topic of the workshop is thus intended to be broad. Papers on social and political epistemology addressing any of the aforementioned topics are welcome, as well as those in the vicinity of these areas that also investigate different ways in which knowledge production, acquisition or transmission may be compromised in our societies.
To participate please send an abstract of approximately 1000 words (refs. excluded) to epistemic.risk.workshop@gmail.com .
There are only a few slots available, so a rather small number of papers will be selected for in-person presentation. There will be no parallel sessions and the selected contributors will have a similar time for presentation to those of invited speakers (approximately 75 minutes, including Q&A).
Deadline: 1st of December 2021.
Notification of acceptance: 15th of December 2021.
For inquiries please contact epistemic.risk.workshop@gmail.com
Moisés Barba Magdalena (Autonomous University of Madrid): moises.barba@hotmail.com
Daniel Barbarrusa (University of Seville): barbarrusa@us.es
Fernando Broncano-Berrocal (University of Barcelona): f.broncano-berrocal@ub.edu
Nacho Gómez-Ledo (University of Seville): igledo@us.es
Javier González de Prado Salas (UNED): jgonzalezdeprado@fsof.uned.es
Lola Medina Vizuete (University of Seville): lmvizuete@us.es
Jesús Navarro (University of Seville): jnr@us.es
Dani Pino (University of Seville): dps@us.es
Alba Aragón
Juan Luis Armesto
María del Campo
Alba González
Antonio Guillén
Proyecto de investigación E-RISK, “New Perspectives on Epistemic Risk” (PGC2018-098805-B-I00), financiado por MCIN/ AEI/10.13039/501100011033/ y por FEDER Una manera de hacer Europa.
Red Temática APPLY: https://www.madrid-philnetwork.com/blog
Website https://sites.google.com/view/epistemic-risk
PhilEvent: https://philevents.org/event/show/93865