[with apologies for cross-posting]

Dear Colleagues,

The American Academy of Religion is now accepting proposals for this year's 
annual meeting, which will be held in Denver, Colorado, November 19-22. I 
wanted to highlight the CFP (below) for the Hindu Philosophy unit. Proposals 
should be submitted online through the 
PAPERS<https://papers.aarweb.org/content/welcome> system; the deadline is 5pm 
(EST) on Tuesday, March 1. I hope some of you will consider submitting.

Best wishes,
Michael

Michael S. Allen, unit co-chair (with Parimal G. Patil)
Assistant Professor
Department of Religious Studies
University of Virginia


The Hindu Philosophy unit of the American Academy of Religion is pleased to 
invite proposals for two sessions to be held at this year’s Annual Meeting:


1. Philosophical Roundtable. This format brings together several participants 
to discuss either a single argument or a closely related series of arguments 
from a single author. This year we will focus on Kumārila’s arguments for 
svataḥ-prāmāṇya, or the “intrinsic validity” of cognitions, at Śloka-vārttika 
II.33-61. The goal is not to have traditional presentations but to create a 
space for lively and rigorous discussion. In lieu of traditional paper 
proposals, therefore, we instead invite prospective participants to write a 
short philosophical analysis either of the section as a whole or a single 
argument from the section. One might, for example, criticize Kumārila’s 
argument, or extend it, or defend it against further objections, or note 
something surprising in the argument, or simply assess its strengths and 
weaknesses.


2. Traditional Papers Session. For this session we are looking for individual 
paper proposals (rather than full panel proposals). We are especially 
interested in papers on yogic perception or the philosophy of perception more 
broadly, but we are also open to a wide range of other topics related to Hindu 
philosophy. Possible topics include but are by no means limited to: Philosophy 
of Language, Philosophy of Materiality, Discourses of Ultimate Reality, 
Philosophy and Pedagogy, Lived Philosophy, “Philosophy” as a Category, Stock 
Examples, Philosophy and Literature, and Philosophy in Vernacular Texts.

3. Co-sponsored Session on Sikh Philosophy. We also seek papers for a session 
on Sikh philosophy, with an emphasis on exchanges and influences between Sikh 
and non-Sikh traditions, for a co-sponsored session with the Sikh Studies unit.

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