*Corrected/Updated NASPH 22 Schedule

The schedule for the upcoming NASPH 2022 conference can be downloaded here. We are going paperless this year, so if you want a “hard-copy,” we recommend that you download and print the schedule prior to your departure. We look forward to seeing you soon!

All sessions will be held in SB Hall ((#34 on the campus map) in room 122 which is called the Multipurpose Room.

*Please note the corrected information for Thursday, Sept. 22. The first session begins at 1 pm, the second at 2:15 pm, and the last session at 3:30pm. We apologize for the mistake and look forward to seeing you soon!

For those interested in using public transportation from the Airport (DFW) to the University of Dallas, you can take take DART orange line (DFW to University of Dallas Station).: https://www.dart.org/ . There are no shuttles, however, from the hotel to the Campus, so you’ll have to use Uber or some other means.

CFP: Special Issue of Critical Hermeneutics

Please see the CFP here for an upcoming special issue of the journal Critical Hermeneutics that will be co-edited by Mirela Oliva, Christina Freni, and Theodore George. The issue will focus on hermeneutic realism and veritive hermeneutics.

NASPH at SPEP

Please join us at the NASPH satellite session at SPEP 2022 in College Station, TX. We will be hosting a reception on the evening of Wednesday, Oct. 12 and the following morning we will be hosting a panel on Gert-Jan Van Der Heiden’s The Voice of Misery: A Continental Philosophy of Testimony (State University of New York Press, 2020). More details can be found here. Special thanks to Ted George for organizing these two great events.

NASPH 2022 CFP & Conference Information (Updated 6.27.22)

The 17th annual NASPH meeting will be held at the University of Dallas September 22-24, 2022. You can view the CFP here. Submissions are due by July 15.

Additional Information

·      Location: University of Dallas, 1845 East Northgate Drive, Irving, Texas 75062-4736;

·      Campus Map:  https://udallas.edu/visitors/documents/Campus-Map_1-22.pdf

·      Airport: DFW Airport

·      Recommended Hotel (4 miles from UD; 11 miles from DFW Airport):
Fairfield Inn by Marriott 630 W John Carpenter Fwy. Irving, TX 75039  972.550.8800; Rate as of 5.2.22: $131–150

·      For a list of other Hotels near UDhttps://udallas.edu/visitors/hotels.php

Canadian Hermeneutics Institute

The 13th annual Canadian Hermeneutics Institute will be held via Zoom June 1-3 2022. This year’s topic is Hermeneutic Injustice, and it will be led by NASPH’s own David Vessey.

The program, registration information, and instructions on how to submit an abstract for presentation at the institute (the deadline is March 15) can be found at www.CHIannual.com.

Coming soon: Selected Writings of Hans-Georg Gadamer vol. II

Pol Vandevelde and Arun Iyer have been doing a real service to the hermeneutics community by editing and translating a number of Gadamer’s works. The second volume in that series, Ethics, Aesthetics, and the Historical Dimension of Language, will be published soon. You can pre-order your copy here.

Table of Contents:

Acknowledgements vii

Translators’ Preface viii

Translators’ Introduction x

I Language and Ontology (by Pol Vandevelde) xi

II The Situated Truth of a Work of Art (by Arun Iyer) xxv

Part 1 Ancient Ethics and Practical Philosophy

1 The Socratic Question and Aristotle (1990) 3

2 Aristotle’s Protrepticus in Consideration of the Historical Development of Aristotle’s Ethics (1928) 9

3 Heidegger and the Greeks (1990) 27

4 The Idea of Practical Philosophy (1983) 39

5 Reason and Practical Philosophy (1986) 47

Part 2 Aesthetics

6 On Poetics and Hermeneutics (1968/1971) 55

7 The End of Art? From Hegel’s Doctrine of the Pastness of Art to the Anti-art of Today (1985) 65

8 The Place of Poetry in the System of Hegelian Aesthetics and the Question of the Pastness of Art (1986) 77

9 Conceptual Painting? On Arnold Gehlen’s Time-Pictures (1962) 87

10 On the Reading of Buildings and Paintings (1979) 95

11 Poetizing and Thinking as Reflected through Hölderlin’s Remembrance (1987) 101

12 Goethe and Mozart – the Problem of Opera (1991) 113

13 The Lynceus Tower Song in Goethe’s Faust (1982) 121

14 What Makes Goethe’s Language Natural? A Congress Contribution (1985) 127

Part 3 The Dimension of Language

15 Language and Understanding (1970) 141

16 The Theory of History and Language (1987) 153

17 Of Teachers and Learners (1986) 159

18 Heidegger and Language (1990) 163

19 Homeland and Language (1992) 177

20 On the Way to Writing? (1983) 183

21 Voice and Language (1981) 193

22 Hearing – Seeing – Reading (1984) 203

23 Reading Is like Translating (1989) 211

Notes 217

Appendix: Glossary of German Terms 245

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