Appel à contribution pour le colloque “Virtues of Argumentation”

Call for ProposalsOntario Society for the Study of Argumentation (OSSA)

VIRTUES of ARGUMENTATION

May 22-25, 2013

University of Windsor

Keynote speakers:

Daniel H. Cohen, Department of Philosophy, Colby College
Marianne Doury, Communication & Politics,
CNRS – Paris

G. Thomas Goodnight, Annenberg School of Communication, University of Southern California

The OSSA Program Committee invites proposals for papers which deal with argumentation, especially as it intersects with cognition and/or community.

Abstracts prepared for blind refereeing must be submitted electronically no later than SEPTEMBER 7, 2012 to <ossa@uwindsor.ca>  (write ‘[your last name] OSSA abstract’ in the subject line).

They should be between 200 and 250 words long. Additional information on how to prepare proposals will be available on the conference website, in the coming months: www.uwindsor.ca/ossa.

OSSA wishes to promote the work of graduate students and young scholars in  the field of argumentation studies. Thus we strongly encourage submissions from this group.
The J. Anthony Blair Prize ($1000 CDN) is awarded to the student paper presented at the Conference judged to be especially worthy of recognition. The competition is open to all students whose proposals are accepted for the Conference.
Canadian graduate students who need financial assistance in order to attend should advise the Organizing Committee when they submit their proposals.
For the purpose of the Conference, a graduate student is one who has not completed the graduate program by September 7, 2010.  (Additional information about this prize will also be available on the website.)

Program Committee:

H. V. Hansen – C. W. Tindale – J. A. Blair – R. H. Johnson

University of Windsor

www.uwindsor.ca/ossa

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CFP: Creating Publics, Creating Democracies

Status: CfP Call for papers
Conference
Creating Publics, Creating Democracies
18.06.12-19.06.12
University of Westminster, London, UK

That there is a relationship between publicness and democracy has often been taken for granted. However, at this time of widespread instability, political upheaval and experimentation, when publics are increasingly being called upon to act, it is sometimes in the name of democracy, but not always. By exploring how ideas and practices of publicness and democracy are being constituted, enacted, related and reconfigured in different settings, this workshop aims to investigate the modes of public action and democracy being invoked, imagined and struggled over around the world. We welcome paper proposals from a diversity of approaches, particularly research and works in progress that help us to collectively consider:

- How issues become matters of public concern and how, where and when public practices intersect with forms of democracy, or other forms of politics?
- How actors (individuals, groups, institutions, networks, materials, devices) become public and whether forms of democratic politics emerge as a result?
- How public spaces are assembled and how they become spaces of democratic or other forms of politics?
- How relations between modes of public action and forms of democratic politics are being mediated and how methodologically such relations can be traced, mapped, analysed, theorised and better understood?

Building on the success of the July 2011 interdisciplinary workshop, Creating Publics[1], we seek working papers from fields including (but not limited to): anthropology, politics and public policy, cultural studies, environmental studies, sociology, science and technology studies, information studies, geography, planning and media studies. We hope that through engaging with empirical and/or conceptual works together, this workshop will serve as an opening for conversations about the creation of publics and democracies.

We invite abstracts of up to 250 words to be submitted to Sarah Batt (a.s.c.batt@open.ac.uk) by 16 March 2012. For further information or if you have questions, please contact Sue Pell (exs02sp@gold.ac.uk). The workshop programme will be announced in May.

The two-day workshop event will be held in central London on 18 & 19 June 2012. This initiative is a collaboration organised by: The Publics Research Programme at The Centre for Citizenship, Identities and Governance at the Open University; The Centre for the Study of Democracy at the University of Westminster; The Centre for Global Media and Democracy at Goldsmiths College, University of London.

[1] Creating Publics, July 2010: see http://www8.open.ac.uk/ccig/events/creating-publics-workshop
See: Publics Research Programme: http://www8.open.ac.uk/ccig/programmes/publics
Centre for the Study of Democracy: http://www.westminster.ac.uk/research/a-z/centre-for-the-study-of-democracy

Original event posting via: http://discourseanalysis.net/wiki.php?wiki=en%3A%3AEvents&id=662

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Appel à contribution pour le colloque “Logic, Argumentation and Critical Thinking”

Nous vous signalons un call_for_papers_2013 pour le colloque “Logic, Argumentation and Critical Thinking” qui se tiendra du 8 au 11 janvier 2013 à l’université Diego Portales, Santiago du Chili.

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Annonce de communication: The Communication of Certainty and Uncertainty ( linguistic, psychological, philosophical aspects)

3 – 5 October 2012
University of Macerata (Italy)

The Certainty or Uncertainty of a piece of information communicated by a speaker plays a significant role both in building knowledge or beliefs in the interlocutor’s mind and in choosing the appropriate linguistic and non-linguistic behaviour during and after verbal interactions.

The Conference focuses on how interlocutors express their individual degrees of Certainty or Uncertainty towards the piece of information they are giving hearers/readers during the communicative process, i.e. at the time when (= Now) and in the place where (= Here) communication occurs. This topic may be related, more or less directly, to what in the linguistic literature is called epistemicity and evidentiality.

The Conference topic can be approached from different perspectives and in different – European and non European – languages.

Proposals are invited for papers mainly on linguistic, psychological and philosophical aspects of the communication of Certainty and Uncertainty. The Conference aims to be interdisciplinary and therefore welcomes proposals from scholars from different areas.

We are particularly interested in studying the communication of Certainty and Uncertainty in dialogue; we are interested in how it evolves during the interactional sequences between at least two interlocutors, how an interlocutor switches from Certainty to Uncertainty and vice-versa, how a content communicated as Certain or Uncertain is disrupted or argued, negotiated and co-constructed by the interlocutors. This may also be approached from a non-verbal communication standpoint.

Deadline for abstract submission : 30 April 2012

Notification of acceptance: 15 June 2012

Click on “read more” for more information or download the Call for Paper [PDF]

Conference website

Registration

Early bird by 31 August 2012
Regular after 31 August 2012

Registration fee

Regular: € 120 (early bird) – € 140 (regular)
Students: € 60 (early bird) – € 70 (regular)

Website: http://www.unimc.it/cuc
Contact: conference.cuc@unimc.it

Convenors

Andrzej Zuczkowski (University of Macerata, Italy)
Sibilla Cantarini (University of Verona, Italy)
Anita Fetzer (University of Würzburg, Germany)

Plenary speakers

1. Jan Nuyts (University of Antwerp, Belgium)
2. Franz Hundsnurscher (University of Münster, Germany)
3. Werner Abraham (University of Vienna Austria)

CALL FOR PAPERS

The Certainty or Uncertainty of a piece of information communicated by a speaker plays a significant role both in building knowledge or beliefs in the interlocutor’s mind and in choosing the appropriate linguistic and non-linguistic behaviour during and after verbal interactions.

The Conference focuses on how interlocutors express their individual degrees of Certainty or Uncertainty towards the piece of information they are giving hearers/readers during the communicative process, i.e. at the time when (= Now) and in the place where (= Here) communication occurs. This topic may be related, more or less directly, to what in the linguistic literature is called epistemicity and evidentiality.

The Conference topic can be approached from different perspectives and in different – European and non European – languages.

Proposals are invited for papers mainly on linguistic, psychological and philosophical aspects of the communication of Certainty and Uncertainty. The Conference aims to be interdisciplinary and therefore welcomes proposals from scholars from different areas.

We are particularly interested in studying the communication of Certainty and Uncertainty in dialogue; we are interested in how it evolves during the interactional sequences between at least two interlocutors, how an interlocutor switches from Certainty to Uncertainty and vice-versa, how a content communicated as Certain or Uncertain is disrupted or argued, negotiated and co-constructed by the interlocutors. This may also be approached from a non-verbal communication standpoint.

Possible related topics

- Lexical and morphosyntactic markers of evidentiality and epistemicity
- Decision making
- Deceptive communication
- Counterfactual thought
- Knowledge and Beliefs
- Probability, Possibility, Reliability, Likelihood, Plausibility
- Language and Cognition
- Language acquisition and development
- Discourse analysis (literary, political, journalistic, scientific etc.)
- Mitigation and hedging
- Politeness
- Speech Acts
- Temporal dimensions and verbal tenses
- Epistemic future
- Types of sentences
- Awareness, Emotion and Memory
- Language and Power
- Argumentation and Persuasion
- Artificial Intelligence
- Embodied agents

Organizing committee

Andrzej Zuczkowski, Ilaria Riccioni, Ramona Bongelli, Carla Canestrari: Research Centre for Psychology of Communication, University of Macerata, Italy.
Sibilla Cantarini: Department of Foreign Languages and Literatures, University of Verona, Italy
Anita Fetzer: Lehrstuhl für englische Sprachwissenschaft, University of Würzburg, Germany.

Scientific committee

Karin Aijmer (University of Gothenburg, Sweden), Luigi Anolli (University of Milano-Bicocca, Italy), Lawrence Berlin (Northeastern Illinois University, Chicago, USA), Ramona Bongelli (University of Macerata, Italy), Carla Canestrari (University of Macerata, Italy), Giovanni Gobber (Catholic University of the Sacred Heart, Milano, Italy), Franz Hundsnurscher (University of Münster, Germany), Wolf Peter Klein (University of Würzburg, Germany), Alessandro Laudanna (University of Salerno, Italy), Vincenzo Lo Cascio (University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands), Giuseppe Mininni (University of Bari, Italy), Francesco Orilia (University of Macerata, Italy), János Sándor Petöfi (University of Macerata, Italy; University of Pécs, Hungary), Ricardo Pietrobon (Duke University, North Carolina, USA), Isabella Poggi (University of Roma 3, Italy), Ilaria Riccioni (University of Macerata, Italy), Christoph Schubert (University of Vechta, Germany), Anne-Marie Simon-Vandenbergen (Ghent University, Belgium), Marcello Soffritti (University of Bologna, Italy), Stefania Stame (University of Bologna, Italy)

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