SOCIETY FOR PHENOMENOLOGY AND EXISTENTIAL

Executive Co-Directors Walter Brogan, Villanova University Margaret Simons, Southern Illinois University, Edwardsville

Executive Committee Walter Brogan, Villanova University Steven Crowell, Rice University David Ingram, Loyola University, Chicago Kelly Oliver, SUNY at Stony Brook James Risser, Seattle University, Secretary/Treasurer Margaret Simons, Southern Illinois University, Edwardsville

Graduate Assistant Shannon Mussett, Villanova University

Committee on the Status of Women Tina Chanter, University of Memphis, Chair Linda Bell, Georgia State University Johanna Meehan, Grinnell College

Advisory Book Selection Committee Gary Shapiro, University of Richmond, Chair Gerald Bruns, University of Notre Dame Tina Chanter, University of Memphis Daniel Dahlstrom, Boston University Charles Harvey, University of Central Arkansas Michael Naas, DePaul University Max Pensky, Binghamton University David Wood, Vanderbilt University

Advocacy Committee Edward Casey, SUNY at Stony Brook, Chair Robert Bernasconi, University of Memphis Steven Crowell, Rice University Merold Westphal, Fordham University

Diversity Committee Linda Martín Alcoff, Syracuse University, Chair Eduardo Mendieta, University of San Francisco Lucius Outlaw, Haverford College

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Local Arrangements John Stuhr, Pennsylvania State University John Sallis, Pennsylvania State University

Local Contact Person Nancy Fedrow, (814-865-6398; [email protected])

Accommodations All sessions will be held at the Penn State Conference Center Hotel (also called the Penn Stater), 215 Innovation Boulevard, in State College, PA, about two miles from the main campus of The Pennsylvania State University

To reserve a hotel room: Call 800.832.0132 (Atherton Hotel) or 800.258.3297 (Days Inn Penn State) by September 6, 2000 Rates are: Atherton -- $68 (single), $78 (double); Days Inn - $74 (single), $84 (double). Early reservations are highly recommended.

NOTE: ROOM RESERVATIONS MUST BE MADE BY SEPTEMBER 6, 2000.

Graduate students may occupy rooms with up to four persons per room at the same rates as above with an additional cost of $10 per extra person per night. Graduate students wishing to share rooms may contact Nancy Fedrow ([email protected]) to place their names on a student list.

Travel Directions By Air: University Park Airport is served by U.S. Airways, United Airlines, and Northwest Airlines. There are direct flights to State College from Pittsburgh, Philadelphia, Detroit, and Washington DC. Free shuttle service to the hotels is available if arranged in advance. It is a relatively short taxi ride to either hotel. By Car from the East: Take I-80 in PA; use exit 24. Follow PA 26 South to U.S. 322 West Bypass. Turn right onto the Bypass then take the next exit: Penn State University Park/Research Park Exit. ?? To Penn State Conference Center Hotel from the above exit, turn right at the light and follow Park Avenue directly to Penn State Conference Center Hotel in Research Park. ?? To The Nittany Lion Inn from the above exit, turn left at the light and follow Park Avenue to the Inn entrance, on the left near North Atherton Street/ Business 322. By Car from the West: In PA, take I-80 East to Exit 20 (Woodland) just east of Clearfield. Then take Route 322 East to State College. ?? To Penn State Conference Center Hotel from the above, take 322 East Bypass to the Penn State University Park/Research Park Exit. Turn left at the stop sign and follow Park Avenue directly to the Penn State Conference Center Hotel. ?? To The Nittany Lion Inn from the above, stay on North Atherton Street/Business Route 322, past a variety of businesses. At the light at Park Avenue, turn left. The Inn is on your right. By Car from the Southeast: follow U.S. 322 West, through Lewistown, to State College. As you approach State College, take U.S. 322 West Bypass. Route is then the same as from the East. 2 By Car from the Southwest: follow U.S. 220 to U.S. 322 East. As you approach State College, take U.S. 322 East Bypass. Then same route as from the West. By Bus: Bus connections are available to and from State College on Fullington Trailways and Greyhound Lines. There is no direct rail service to State College.

Childcare Service Child care is available on weekdays at Daybridge Child Development Center, 301 Innovation Boulevard, next door to the Penn Stater. Three to four weeks advance notice is required. Phone the Assistant Director at 814-861-4391. Child care is also available at Cubs’ Club, 217 South Burrowes Street, not far from The Nittany Lion Inn, in downtown State College. Two to three weeks advance notice is required. Phone the owner at 814-231-8832. Both facilities normally are open only Monday through Friday. If weekend care is needed, the owner of Cubs’ Club will work with parents to provide suitable arrangements.

Audiovisual Equipment To make arrangements for audiovisual equipment, please contact Nancy Fedrow (814- 865-6398; [email protected]) by September 11, 2000.

Abstracts of Papers Abstracts provided by authors will be available at registration. Speakers should send abstracts to James Risser, Department of Philosophy, Seattle University, 900 Broadway, Seattle, WA 98122 by September 1, 2000.

Book Exhibit A publishers’ book display will be held in Presidents Hall 1 on the first floor of the Penn Stater, from noon Thursday until 1:00 p.m. on Saturday. This display is organized by SPEP in cooperation with publishers specializing in scholarship influenced by contintental philosophy and literary, social, and political theory. Publishers offer discounts on books ordered at the exhibit.

Web Site The complete program, with updates and corrections, is also accessible on the SPEP web page which may be found at http://www.spep.org. Paper abstracts will be available on the web page by late September.

Publication Notice SPEP retains the right of first review for papers presented at the annual meeting. Each presenter should bring two copies of her or his paper to turn in to the registration table at the time of registration. Decisions about publication will be based on this version. If the paper is selected for publication, there will be an opportunity for minor revisions. Decisions regarding publication will be communicated by mid-January 2001.

Program Notes The Society for Phenomenology and the Human Sciences, the Nietzsche Society, the Society for the Advancement of American Philosophy, the Society for and Theology, the Ancient Philosophy Society, and the International Association for Environmental Philosophy are meeting in conjunction with SPEP.

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Executive Committee Elections David Ingram’s term of office expires this year. The Executive Committee nominates John A. McCumber and Max Pensky to fill his position. The election will be held at the business meeting.

1. John A.McCumber received his Ph.D. in Philosophy and Greek from the University of Toronto. He has taught philosophy at the University of Michigan--Dearborn and the Graduate Faculty of the New School for Social Research. After 15 years in Northwestern University's Philosophy Department, he is now Chair of the German Department. He is the only professor at Northwestern to have held both the Koldyke Chair of Teaching Excellence and the Lane Professorship in the Humanities. In 1992 he became General Editor of the SPEP Series at Northwestern University Press. He is the author of many articles and five books: Poetic Interaction(Chicago, 1989), The Company of Words: Hegel, Language, and Systematic Philosophy (Northwestern, 1993); Metaphysics and Oppression: Heidegger's Challenge to (Indiana, 1999); Philosophy and Freedom: Derrida, Rorty, Habermas, Foucault (Indiana, 2000); and Time in the Ditch: American Philosophy and the McCarthy Era (Northwestern, forthcoming November 2000).

2. Max Pensky is at Binghamton University. He specializes in Contemporary Continental Philosophy, , Social and Political Philosophy, and German Cultural Studies. His principal publications include: Melancholy Dialectics: and the Play of Mourning (Massachusetts 1993, second edition, 2000); editor, The Actuality of Adorno: Critical Essays on Adorno and the Postmodern (SUNY 1997); editor/translator, Jurgen Habermas, The Postnational Constellation (Polity, 2000); Jurgen Habermas, The Past as Future (Nebraska, 1995); He has also published numerous articles on Benjamin, Adorno, Habermas, poststructuralism, German political culture, etc. He has given papers and served as moderator and commentator at many SPEP meetings. He is currently a member of the book panel advisory committee for SPEP.

Proposal to Raise Conference Registration Fee and Membership Dues At the 1999 business meeting of SPEP, the executive committee announced its intention to study the feasibility of revising the SPEP dues and registration fees and promulgate its proposal before the 2000 meeting. At the Penn State SPEP business meeting, the executive committee will present a motion to the membership to raise dues for faculty to $60 (a $25 increase), to raise faculty registration fees to $25 ($15 increase), and to increase the combined student membership/registration fee to $20 ($10 increase).

Justification

SPEP has grown into the second largest philosophy society in North America. The cost of organizing and hosting the annual conference in a way that reflects the size and quality of our group has spiraled. In addition, costs for mailings, business expenses, and activities of our society beyond its organization of the annual meeting have also grown.

In the last few years, we have struggled mightily to attract and encourage host institutions who have generously agreed to pay the lion’s share of the expenses for our meeting. Oftentimes, we 4 have succeeded in attracting the sponsorship of these institutions only late and in a crisis atmosphere. We have had little or no choice in terms of competing bids to offer to the membership. We have therefore had little control in terms of balancing the location preferences and needs of the membership.

The number of institutions who have not already hosted SPEP in the last few years and who have programs hospitable to the interests of our members and therefore might be expected to be interested in hosting us in the future are few in number.

The average cost of hosting SPEP in the last several years is around $12,000. This has been a major factor in discouraging potential host institutions from inviting us. It has become apparent that the membership needs to bear a greater burden of the costs.

We propose these raises be implemented for the 2001 year. This will allow us to garner sufficient funds to be able to underwrite increasingly larger portions of the cost of the meeting in 2002 and 2003, and by 2004 we will be self-sufficient to the degree that meeting sites and hospitality decisions can be made without relying completely on the support of others.

Announcing: First Annual SPEP Reception at the Eastern APA Meeting In conjunction with a special APA Eastern Division session in celebration of Hans- Georg Gadamer's 100th birthday, SPEP will host its first annual APA reception for all members and friends of the society. The time and room of this event will be announced on the SPEP website late this summer and also at the Penn State meeting in October. We are grateful to Rowman and Littlefield, Publishers, for generously offering to sponsor the reception. Please plan to join fellow members for this event.

Call for Papers The fortieth annual meeting will be hosted by Goucher College in Baltimore, Maryland. Instructions for submitting papers and proposals will be sent to members of SPEP in the Fall and will also be available on the SPEP web page at http://www.spep.org. The deadline for submissions will be February 1, 2001.

Notes of Appreciation We wish to thank John Stuhr and John Sallis, local arrangements chairs, and the students and faculty assisting them. We would also like to thank Nancy Fedrow for her efforts in coordinating the conference

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SOCIETY FOR PHENOMENOLOGY AND EXISTENTIAL PHILOSOPHY

THIRTY-NINTH ANNUAL MEETING

PENNSYLVANIA STATE UNIVERSITY STATE COLLEGE, PA

October 5 - 7, 2000

SPEP is a professional organization devoted to supporting philosophy inspired by Continental European traditions. SPEP is also actively committed to philosophical pluralism. It has become the second largest American philosophical society and accommodates such traditions as critical theory, , feminism, , , post- and phenomenology.

Publishers’ Book Exhibit Noon Thursday until 1:00 p.m. on Saturday Presidents Hall 1, Penn State Conference Center

Registration from 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Foyer of Penn State Conference Center

All Rooms Listed By Number Except For:

DH = Deans Hall NLI = Nittany Lion Inn PH = Presidents Hall

OTHER SOCIETY MEETINGS AT SPEP:

Nietzsche Society Ancient Philosophy Society Society for the Advancement of American Philosophy Society for Continental Philosophy and Theology Society for Phenomenology and the Human Sciences International Association for Environmental Philosophy

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THURSDAY AFTERNOON 1:00 – 3:30 p.m. T.I

Session 1 Body Images: Embodiment and Intercorporeality Routledge 206 Moderator: Shannon Sullivan, Pennsylvania State University Speaker: Donn Welton, SUNY at Stony Brook Speaker: Dorothea Olkowski, University of Colorado, Colorado Springs Respondent: Gail Weiss, George Washington University

Session 2 Reflection Revisited Fordham University Press 106 Moderator: Lorenzo Simpson, SUNY at Stony Brook Speaker: William Rehg, St. Louis University Speaker: Barbara Fultner, Denison University Respondent: James Swindal, John Carroll University

Session 3 The Thracian Maid and the Professional Thinker: Arendt and Heidegger SUNY Press 207 Moderator: Bernard Flynn, Empire State University Speaker: Peg Birmingham, DePaul University Speaker: Rudi Visker, Katholieke Universiteit Leuven Respondent: Jacques Taminiaux, Boston College

Session 4 Bodies and Pleasures: Foucault and the Politics of Sexual Normalization Indiana University Press 208 Moderator: Pamela Weems, Binghamton University Speaker: Ellen K. Feder, American University Speaker: Charles Scott, Pennsylvania State University Respondent: Ladelle McWhorter, University of Richmond

Session 5 Levinas Between Ethics and Politics: For the Beauty that Adorns the Earth Kluwer Academic Publishers 105 Moderator: Claire Katz, Pennsylvania State University Speaker: John Drabinski, Grand Valley State University Speaker: Silvia Benso, Siena College Respondent: Bettina Bergo, Loyola College, Maryland

Session 6 The Paradox of Subjectivity: The Self in the Transcendental Tradition Oxford University Press

7 PH2 Moderator: John Brough, Georgetown University Speaker: John J. Drummond, Fordham University Speaker: Dan Zahavi, University of Copenhagen Respondent: David Carr, Emory University

Session 7 Germinal Life: The and Repetition of Deleuze Routledge 108 Moderator: John Mullarkey, University of Sunderland Speaker: Leonard Lawlor, University of Memphis Speaker: Constantin Boundas, Trent University Respondent: Keith Ansell Pearson, Warwick University

THURSDAY AFTERNOON 3:45 – 6:30 p.m. T.II

Session 1 Technoscience and its Democratization Moderator: Steven Vogel, Denison University 206 “Difference, Democracy and of Technoscience,” Sandra Harding, UCLA “The Failure of Non-Humans,” Don Ihde, SUNY at Stony Brook “Democratizing Technology: Interests, Codes, Rights,” Andrew Feenberg, San Diego State University

Session 2 The Philosophy of Moderator: Eleanore Holveck, Duquesne University 107 “Menage à Trois: Freud, Beauvoir and the Marquis de Sade,” Debra Bergoffen, George Mason University “Being-with and Being-against: Heidegger Meets Hegel in The Second Sex,” Nancy Bauer, Tufts University “Must We Burn Foucault? Ethics as Art of Living: Beauvoir and Foucault,” Karen Vintges, University of Amsterdam

Session 3 Gadamer at 100: Issues in Hermeneutics Moderator: Stephen Watson, University of Notre Dame 207 “Know Thyself,” Graeme Nicholson, University of Toronto “Hermeneutics and Public Deliberation,” David Rasmussen, Boston College “Good Will and the Hermeneutics of Friendship,” John D. Caputo, Villanova University

Session 4 Can Art be True to the Earth? Moderator: Natalie Alexander, Truman State University 208 “Earth Art Sky: Distance in Dwelling” David Wood, Vanderbilt University “The Phenomenology and Archaeology of Art in the Land,” Gary Shapiro, University of Richmond “Lost in the Dark: Outside Art,” Darren Hutchinson, Vanderbilt University

8 Session 5 Flourishing Presence: Being-with-Others and Vital Subjectivity Moderator: Mark Wrathall, Brigham Young University 108 “From Intersubjective Communication to Communal Co-constitution,” Simon Glynn, Florida Atlantic University “Beyond Cultural Survival: Transforming Subjectivity,” Charles W. Harvey, University of Central Arkansas “, Intimacy and Selfhood: Being-within-and-alongside-Others,” Dawn Jakubowski, University of Central Arkansas

Session 6 Immanuel Kant: Beyond Historical Progress Moderator: Jeffery Edwards, SUNY at Stony Brook 106 “Cosmopolitanism as Natural History: The Dynamic Memory in Kant’s Historical and Political Writings,” Max Pensky, Binghamton University “Kant’s Writings on History: Genealogical Impulses and Political Implications,” Dianna Taylor, Binghamton University “Historical Judgment: Kant, Herder, Arendt,” Steven DeCaroli, Binghamton University

Session 7 Philosophizing Race in Latin America Moderator: Catherine Kemp, University of Colorado, Denver PH4 “Redrawing Racial Lines Through Sexual Excess: Gilberto Freyre in Casa Grande e Senzala,” Cynthia María Paccacerqua, Stanford University “Fanon, Philosophy, and Racism in Latin America,” Nelson Maldonado Torres, Brown University “Race in Mexican Philosophy: 1900-1950,” Manuel Vargas, Stanford University

Session 8 Deleuze-Foucault: Concepts and Intuitions, the Transcendental and the Empirical 105 Moderator: George Trey, St. Mary’s College “The Transcendental Empiricism of ,” Paul Bryant, Loyola University of Chicago “Dire, Voir, Pouvoir: Rendering a Deleuze-Foucault Problematic,” Noah Horwitz, Loyola University of Chicago “Forgetting the Empirical-Transcendental Doublet,” Matthew Lango, Loyola University of Chicago

THURSDAY PLENARY SESSION 8:00 p.m. Presidents Hall

Welcome: John Stuhr, Pennsylvania State University Moderator: John Sallis, Pennsylvania State University

“Perjurings”

Jacques Derrida École des Hautes Études en Science Sociales, Paris

Reception 10:00 p.m. 9 Deans Hall

FRIDAY MORNING 9:00 a.m. – Noon F.I

Session 1 Scholar’s Session: William McBride Moderator: Sally Scholz, Villanova University 106 Speaker: Joseph Catalano, Kean University Speaker: Tom Rockmore, Duquesne University Speaker: Lewis Gordon, Brown University Respondent: William McBride, Purdue University

Session 2 Fundamental Issues in Phenomenology Moderator: Dermot Moran, University College, Dublin 105 “Phenomenon, Semblance, and Certainty,” Andrew W. Lamb, University of Georgia “The Problem of the Motivation for the Reduction in The Idea of Phenomenology,” Tarjei Mandt Larsen, Universitetet i Tromso “Jakob Klein and the Phenomenology of History,” Burt C. Hopkins, Seattle University

Session 3 Deleuze and Hegel Moderator: Allegra de Laurentiis, SUNY at Stony Brook 107 “Deleuze, Hegel and the Transformation of Subjectivity,” Simon Lumsden, Macquarrie University “Deleuze and the Dialectic (a.k.a. Hegel and Marx),” Gregg Lambert, Syracuse University “Deleuze Contra Hegel: Concepts, Difference, and the Dialectic,” Daniel W. Smith, University of New South Wales

Session 4 Language, Logic, and Subjectivity: Pathways of Convergence Between Analytic and Continental Traditions 206 Moderator: David Cerbone, West Virginia University “Naming the Noumenal: Kant, Kripke, and the Genesis of the ,” Adrian Johnston, SUNYat Stony Brook “Intersubjectivity and Genesis as Dimensions of First Order Semantic Logic: On Lacan’s Psychoanalysis of Frege,” Michael Shim, SUNY at Stony Brook “Aspects of Meaning and Mind/World Unity: Heidegger and Davidson,” Robert Litzenberger, SUNY at Stony Brook “Generative Structuralism: Jakobson and Chomsky,” Jeremi Roth, SUNY at Stony Brook

Session: 5 Bourdieu’s Philosophical Promise

10 Moderator: Theodore Schatzki, University of Kentucky 207 “Bourdieu’s Promise,” Joseph Margolis, Temple University “Class Taste,” Paul Mattick “Bourdieu and the Field of Philosophy,” Richard Shusterman, Temple University “Bourdieu’s Promise for Feminism and Desire,” Melissa Clarke, The College of St. Rose

Session 6 Communication and Incommunicability in Adorno, Bataille, Levinas and Gadamer 208 Moderator: Bruce Ellis Benson, Wheaton College “Beyond Communication and Aesthetic : Adorno’s Ruptures,” Gerhard Richter, University of Wisconsin, Madison “Bataille’s Mystifying Communication,” J. Britt Holbrook, Emory University “Does the Endeavor to Understand the Supress the Other’s Otherness?” David Weberman, Georgia State University

Session 7 Cultural Difference and the Politics of Aporia Moderator: Nancy Holland, Hamline University PH4 “Already Weeping the Other’s Absence: Immigration, Colonialism, ,” Penelope Deutscher, Australian National University “Decolonisation and the Politics of Generosity,” Rosalyn Diprose, University of New South Wales “ReSpect(res) of Reconciliation,” Linnell Secomb, University of Sydney “The Force of Genre,” Robyn Ferrell, Macquarie University

Session 8 The Politics of the Universal With and After Derrida Moderator: Brian Seitz, Babson College 120 “Derrida on ‘Philosophical Nationality,’” Dana Hollander, Johns Hopkins University “The Body Politic: Universality, Singularity, and Sexual Difference,” Diane Perpich, Duquesne University “ and the Politics of the Living Dead,” Andrew Norris, Duquesne University

FRIDAY 12:15 – 1:15 p.m. THE ARON GURWITSCH MEMORIAL LECTURE Presidents Hall 2,3

Sponsored by the Center for Advanced Research in Phenomenology

Moderator: William McKenna, Miami University, Ohio

"Forms of Social Unity: Partnership, Membership, and Citizenship" John J. Drummond, Fordham University.

FRIDAY AFTERNOON 2:00 – 4:00 p.m.

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Session 1 “Teaching Diversity” Roundtable Discussion Sponsored by the CSW PH4 Moderator: Tina Chanter, University of Memphis “Teaching Lesbian and Gay Studies,” Mary Bloodsworth, Washington State University “Teaching Race Theory,” Julie Maybee, Lehman College, CUNY

Session 2 Ethics and Affect in Husserl Moderator: Maria Cimitile, Grand Valley State University 105 “A Phenomenological Search for the Ground of Ethics,” Richard Oxenberg, Emory University “The Site of Affect in Husserl’s Phenomenology: Sensations and the Constitution of the Lived Body,” Alia Al-Saji, Emory University

Session 3 The Question of Embodying Language: Nietzscheanizing Menses and Fleshing 107 Moderator: Patricia A. Glazebrook, Colgate University “A Nietzschean Logic as Model for Understanding Contemporary Phenomena like Premenstrual Syndrome,” Kristen Brown, Millsaps College “Discursive Bodies Materialized: Husserl and Heidegger Meet Butler’s Bodies,” Christine R. Metzo, University of Kentucky

Session 4 On the Phenomenology of Attention Moderator: Ronald Bruzina, University of Kentucky 106 “Where is the Phenomenology of Attention that Husserl Intended to Perform?” Natalie Depraz, Southern Illinois University at Carbondale “Interpersonal Attention and Exemplarity,” Anthony Steinbock, Southern Illinois University, Carbondale

Session 5 Seeing Race Moderator: Nahum Chandler, Johns Hopkins University 207 “Habits of Hostility: A Phenomenology of Racial Perception,” Linda Martín Alcoff, Syracuse University “Against Race,” Kalpana Seshadri-Crooks, Boston College

Session 6 Subjectivity and Intentionality in Levinas Moderator: Dennis Keenan, Fairfield University 206 “The Tension and Distension of Subjectivity: Time and Trauma in Levinas’ Otherwise Than Being,” Cynthia D. Coe, University of Oregon “Traversing Intentionality: Levinas on Sensibility and Proximity,” Leslie A. MacAvoy, McGill University

Session 7 Kant: Laws and Limits Moderator: Allen Scult, Drake University 108 “Before the Law: Hölderlin and Heidegger on Kant’s Phenomenology of Moral Experience,” D. Kelly Coble, American University, Cairo “On the Boundary of Intelligibility: Kant’s Conception of Radical Evil and the Limits of Ethical Discourse,” Evgenia V. Cherkasova, Penn State University 12

Session 8 Myth and Imagination Moderator: Ellen Armour, Rhodes College 208 “Re-Thinking Mythos: Irigaray, Heidegger, and the Task of Remythologizing the Feminine,” Kristi Sweet, Loyola University of Chicago “Imagination, Truth, and Vocation: Validity and Disclosure in Heidegger’s Anti- Aesthetics,” Lambert Zuidervaart, Calvin College

FRIDAY AFTERNOON 4:15 – 5:30 p.m. F.III

Session 1 Early Truth: Foucault’s Characterization of Socratic Parrhésia Moderator: Licia Carlson, Seattle University 206 Speaker: Alexandre Lopes de Miranda, Loyola University at Chicago Respondent: Laura Hengehold, Loyola University of Chicago

Session 2 “The Wounder Will Heal”: Cognition and Reconciliation in Adorno and Hegel 108 Moderator: Janet Donohoe, State University of West Georgia Speaker: Iain Macdonald, McGill University Respondent: David Sherman, University of Texas, Austin

Session 3 Dialectics and the End of Critique Moderator: Ferit Güven, Earlham College 207 Speaker: John A. McCumber, Northwestern University Respondent: Andrew Buchwalter, University of North Florida

Session 4 The Logic of the Body in Bergson’s Motor Schemes and Merleau-Ponty’s Body Schema 107 Moderator: Michael S. Ruse, Coastal Carolina University Speaker: David Morris, Trent University Respondent: Patrick Burke, Seattle University

Session 5 The Poem that is My Body: Incorporating Irigaray’s Phenomenology of Sexual Difference into Critical Theory 208 Moderator: Morny Joy, University of Calgary Speaker: Cynthia Willett, Emory University Respondent: Tina Chanter, University of Memphis

Session 6 Merleau-Ponty’s Invisible Man Moderator: Thomas Jeannot, Seattle University 106 Speaker: Jeremy Weate, University College London Respondent: Fred Evans, Duquesne University

Session 7 Negation and Difference Moderator: Christina Hendricks, St. Edwards College 105 Speaker: Marjorie Hass, Muhlenberg College

13 Respondent: Mary Beth Mader, University of Memphis

Session 8 Simulations, Series, Sense: The Photography of Duane Michals Moderator: Drew Hyland, Trinity College PH4 Speaker: John Carvalho, Villanova University Respondent: Wilhelm Wurzer, Duquesne University

FRIDAY 5:45 p.m.

SPEP BUSINESS MEETING

Presidents Hall 4 Agenda available at registration

FRIDAY 7:30 – 9:00 p.m.

THE COMMITTEE ON THE STATUS OF WOMEN Reception

Sponsored by SUNY Press Deans Hall

FRIDAY 8:15 P.M.

SPHS PLENARY SESSION President’s Hall 2

“Alfred Schutz’s Influence on American Sociology” George Psathas, Boston University

RECEPTION 9:45 p.m. Senate Suite 1-3

SATURDAY MORNING 9:00 – 11:45 a.m. S.I

Session 1 Scholar’s Session: Sandra Lee Bartky Moderator: Mechthild E. Nagel, SUNY at Cortland 207 Speaker: Linda LeMoncheck, Seal Beach, California Speaker: Jana Sawicki, Williams College

14 Speaker: Iris Marion Young, University of Chicago Respondent: Sandra Lee Bartky, University of Illinois at Chicago

Session 2 Feminism and Postcolonial Theory Moderator: Kim Hall, Appalachian State University 208 “Understanding Sexual and Racial Violence: Towards an Analysis of Interlocking Systems of Oppression,” Sherene Razack, University of Toronto “Reading the Other’s Past, Reading the Past as Other: Gender and Postcolonial History,” Betty Joseph, Rice University “Ethics and Radical : A Postcolonial Feminist Perspective,” Sangeeta Ray, University of Maryland

Session 3 Hermeneutics and Moderator: Alexander Kozins, Southern Illinois University, Carbondale 206 “Historicity and the Hermeneutics of Facticity,” Eric Nelson, Emory University “The Facticity of Responsibility,” Francois Raffoul, CSU at Stanislaus “The Body in its Hermeneutical Context,” Sakiko Kitagawa, University of Tokyo Respondent: John Van Buren, Fordham University

Session 4 Heidegger: Pragmatism, Naturalism, Transcendental Philosophy Moderator: Taylor Carman, Barnard College 106 “Heidegger’s Transcendentalism: A Response to Phillipse,” William Blattner, Georgetown University “Saying the Plan of Being: Heidegger, Topography, and the Transcendental,” Jeff Malpas, University of Tasmania “Heidegger in America; or How a Transcendental Philosopher Becomes a Pragmatist,” Mark Okrent, Bates College

Session 5 On Italo Calvino’s Six Memos for the Next Millennium: Thinking in Lightness and Multiplicity 109 Moderator: David Pettigrew, Southern Connecticut State University “Lightness, Quickness, Exactitude, Visibility, Multiplicity…Consistency?: Sei Proposte per il Prossimo Millennio,” Alejandro Vallega, CSU at Stanislaus “Thinking on ‘a Fragile Bridge of Fortune, Thrown Over Emptiness’ (On Italo Calvino’s Six Memos for the Next Millennium),” Daniela Vallega-Neu, CSU at Stanislaus “Calvino’s Open Encyclopedia,” Irene J. Klaver, University of North Texas

Session 6 Mourning by Numbers: Iteration, Incorporation, and Spectrality in Recent Works of 105 Moderator: Hugh Silverman, SUNY at Stony Brook “The Incorporation of Narcissus: Mourning and Narcissism in Derrida,” Pleshette DeArmitt, Depaul University “The Heteronomy of the Gaze of the Other: Spectrality, Alterity, Mourning,” Kas Saghafi, DePaul University “Derrida’s Political Mourning,” Michael Naas, DePaul University

Session 7 Spinoza in a Continental Context 15 Moderator: Katherine Rudolph, Rhode Island College 107 “Schelling’s Relation to Spinoza in the Freiheitschrift,” Jeffrey A. Bernstein, Miami University “Reading Spinoza with Balibar,” Julie R. Klein, Villanova University “Beyond Dualism and Idealism: Spinoza and Irigaray on the Fluidity of Bodies,” Sarah K. Donovan, Villanova University

Session 8 Nietzsche’s Animals Moderator: Babette Babich, Fordham University 108 “Nietzsche’s Feral Philosophy,” Ralph R. Acampora, Hofstra University Roundtable Discussion: Christa Davis Acampora, University of Maine; Daniel Conway, Pennsylvania State University; Brian Domino, University of Ohio; Lawrence Hatab, Old Dominion University; Duncan Large, University of Wales, Swansea; Graham Parkes, University of Hawaii; Alan Schrift, Grinnell College

SATURDAY NOON ANDRÉ SCHUWER LECTURE Presidents Hall 3 Sponsored by the Simon Silverman Phenomenology Center, Duquesne University

Moderator: Richard Rojcewicz, Point Park College

“On Tragedy and Ethical Life” Dennis J. Schmidt, Villanova University

SATURDAY 1:15 p.m. SPHS Business Meeting Room 104

SATURDAY AFTERNOON 1:30 – 4:30 p.m. S.II

Session 1 How to do European Philosophy in a Non-Eurocentric Way Moderator: Nancy Tuana, University of Oregon 206 Speaker: Ofelia Schutte, University of South Florida Speaker: Frank Kirkland, CUNY and Hunter College Speaker: Fred Dallmayr, University of Notre Dame

Session 2 Hermeneutics, Speech Acts, and Dialogue Moderator: Lawrence Schmidt, Hendrix College 109 “A Hermeneutic Concept of Truth?” Anne Marie Olesen, University of Aarhus “Gadamer and the Body Across Dialogical Contexts,” David T. Vessey, Beloit College “The Ontological Bond of the Promise: Paul Ricoeur’s Primordial Ethics of Commitment,” John Arthos, SUNY at Fredonia

Session 3 Derrida 16 Moderator: Peter A. Warnek, University of Oregon 207 “Hos ta eskhata tes grammés: Note on Derrida’s ‘Ousia and Grammé,’” Karin DeBoer, University of Amsterdam “Finitude and Ethics According to Derrida,” Matthias Lutkehermolle, Villanova University “Inventing Another Gesture: Politics, Identity and Undecidability,” Diane E. Enns, Binghamton University

Session 4 (Post)modern Theories of Race Moderator: Yoko Arisaka, University of San Francisco 106 “Existentialist Theory and Constructions of the Self,” Naomi Zack, SUNY at Albany “The Modernity of Race and the Race of Modernity,” Eduardo Mendieta, University of San Francisco “Nietzsche on Mixed Race,” Jacqueline R. Scott, Loyola University at Chicago

Session 5 Nietzschean Riffs Moderator: Brian Schroeder, Skidmore College 108 “Reifying a Cycle of Violence: Health, Disease, and Resentment in MacKinnon and Dworkin’s Feminist Legal Theory,” Caroline Joan Picart, St. Lawrence University “Why Nietzsche Can’t Sing the Blues: Angela Davis and Friederich Nietzsche,” James J. Winchester, Spelman College “Dionysian Epistemology or Musical Knowledge: Reality and Ideality in Nietzsche,” Brian K. Mackintosh, University of Alabama, Huntsville

Session 6 Feminist Renegotiations of Identity and Difference Moderator: Jennifer Hansen, Gettysburg College 208 “Differences in Equality: Beauvoir’s Demassification of the Universal,” Emily A. Zakin, Miami University “Resisting Essence: Kristeva’s Process Philosophy,” Noelle C. McAfee, University of Massachusetts at Lowell “Ethics of Care Revisited: Gilligan and Levinas,” Myra Bookman and Mitchell Aboulafia, University of Colorado at Denver

Session 7 Alterity, Autonomy and Community: Hegel in Contemporary Debates Moderator: Iain Thomson, University of New Mexico 107 “Interiority and Exteriority in Glas,” J. Murray Murdoch Jr., Fordham University “Faceless Ethics: Hegel and Levinas on the Universal and the Personal,” Matthew Edgar, Fordham University “A Formal Conception of Ethical Life,” Gwynn Markle, Fordham University

Session 8 The Limits of Disclosure Moderator: Lawrence Cahoone, Boston University 105 “Hiddenness,” James R. Mensch, Saint Francis Xavier University “The Apophantic Showing of Time: Heidegger’s Commentary on the Anaximander Fragment and Anaximander’s Three Inventions,” John M. Rose, Goucher College “On the Borders of Language and Death: Agamben and the Question of the Animal,” Matthew R. Calarco, Seattle University

17

SATURDAY PLENARY SESSION 5:00 p.m. Presidents Hall 2-4

Moderator: Teresa Brennan, Florida Atlantic University

“Obstacle Illusions”

Patricia Williams Columbia University School of Law

18 Minutes of the 1999 Business Meeting

The Business Meeting was called to order at 5:50 p.m. on Friday, October 8, 1999 by Linda Martín Alcoff. 1. The minutes of the 1998 meeting at Denver were submitted and accepted without correction. 2. Merold Westphal was appointed parliamentarian. 3. Linda Martín Alcoff expressed the sincere gratitude of the Society to Ken Liberman, John Lysaker, Nancy Tuana and all of the other faculty and student assistants from the University of Oregon at Eugene for their hard work as hosts for this meeting. John Draeger and Shannon Mussett, the graduate assistants from Syracuse University and Villanova University respectively, were also thanked for their diligent efforts on behalf of the Society. 4. Linda Martín Alcoff introduced the following speakers who spoke in memory of those who had passed away recently and who either had been active members of or had considerable influence on SPEP: a. Walter Brogan spoke in memory of Sherman Stanage b. Tom Nenon spoke in memory of Bernhard Rang c. Steven Crowell spoke in memory of Gian-Carlo Rota 5. Marya Bower presented the following statistical information for the 1999 meeting: The Executive Committee received 277 papers for consideration; of these 99 were submitted by women. The Executive Committee accepted a total of 90 papers; of these 32 were submitted by women. There are approximately 215 participants on the program; of these 79 are women. There are approximately 350 people registered as attending the meeting. 6. Marya Bower presented the budget and treasury report. The opening balance as of September 1, 1998 was $16,574.71. We received income of $33,211.42, for a total of $49,786.13. The expenses through August 31, 1999 were $27,926.67. This leaves a balance of $21,859.46. 7. Walter Brogan invited John Stuhr from the Pennsylvania State University to give a brief report about the arrangements for the 2000 meeting, which will be held on October 5-7, 2000. 8. Walter Brogan informed the membership that, although the Executive Committee was in communication with two institutions regarding the possibility of hosting the 2001 meeting, no formal invitation had been received. He invited members to consider hosting the 2001 meeting and future meetings. He noted that the Executive Committee was working on developing alternative means to help institutions with the cost of hosting the annual meetings, and he asked members e-mail him with suggestions regarding how this might be accomplished. 9. On behalf of the Executive Committee and the Society, Walter Brogan expressed appreciation to John Draeger, who is completing his service as graduate assistant to SPEP from Syracuse University. He also thanked Ladelle McWhorter for her many contributions to the work of the Society as Member-at-large on the Executive Committee. In addition, Brogan spoke of the important leadership provided by Linda Martín Alcoff during her term as Executive Co-Director. He invited the Society to express its thanks for the hard work and care shown by John, Ladelle, and Linda. Linda Martín Alcoff then noted that Marya Bower also was completing her second term as Secretary-Treasurer on the Executive Committee, having devoted over ten years to the Society since beginning as a graduate assistant. Alcoff invited Merold Westphal, Jack Caputo, and Debra Bergoffen to speak regarding Bower’s work with the Society. Alcoff then presented Marya Bower with a plaque and the members of the Society warmly expressed their appreciation. 19 10. Steven Crowell conducted the elections for the open positions on the Executive Committee. For the position of at-large member, the Executive Committee nominated Kelly Oliver and Iris Marion Young. No nominations were presented from the floor. Kelly Oliver was elected to the position. For the position of Secretary-Treasurer, the Executive Committee nominated James Risser. No nominations were presented from the floor, and Risser was elected by acclamation. For the position of Executive Co-Director, the Executive Committee nominated Margaret Simons. No nominations were presented from the floor, and Simons was elected by acclamation. 11. David Ingram introduced Johanna Meehan of the Committee on the Status of Women. Meehan spoke briefly about the work of the CSW during the past year. She thanked the speakers and participants in the CSW panel at this meeting and announced a tentative topic for next year, which is diversity and diversity education in the classroom. She invited the membership to attend the CSW reception, following the business meeting; she also thanked Rowman and Littlefield for their sponsorship of the reception. Meehan noted that Sharon Meagher had prepared a report of the CSW survey results in written form, for those who were interested in receiving a copy. The new project of the CSW is to compile an oral history of women in SPEP. She invited those who wished to contribute to the project to contact her via e-mail. Meehan then thanked Sharon Meagher for her three years of service to the CSW. The Committee nominated Linda Bell to replace Meagher. The membership confirmed this nomination and elected Linda Bell to the CSW. 12. Ladelle McWhorter made several announcements on behalf of the Executive Committee: a. The SPEP web site has a new address: it is www.spep.org. b. The Schutz lecture will be held tonight in the O’Neill Room at the Hilton Hotel. c. James Risser’s e-mail address for SPEP-related correspondence is: [email protected]. d. In order to facilitate the timely production of the Philosophy Today SPEP volume, authors are asked to include a version of their paper on disk, along with two printed copies. If submitters do not have a copy of the paper on disk with them at the conference, they are asked to forward one as soon as possible to Linda Martín Alcoff at Syracuse University. 13. Ladelle McWhorter noted that the Executive Committee had written two proposals advocating for the creation of two new committees and had made these proposals available to the membership prior to the Business Meeting. She asked Linda Martín Alcoff to speak briefly about the Committee on Racial and Ethnic Diversity. After Alcoff’s presentation, McWhorter invited the members to raise any questions or to share any concerns that they had. The sentiment among the membership was strongly in favor of the creation of this committee. McWhorter then asked Walter Brogan to speak briefly about the Advocacy Committee, and also invited the members to express their thoughts and concerns. There was a spirited discussion regarding the responsibilities and scope of this new committee. This discussion concluded with the membership affirming the creation of the Advocacy Committee. 14. Ladelle McWhorter invited New Business and Announcements from the membership: a. Lester Embree announced Olav Wiegand as winner of the 1999 Ballard Book Prize for his book: Interpretationen der Modallogik: Ein Beitrag zur phaenomenologischen Wissenschaftstheorie.

The meeting was adjourned at 7:16 p.m. GROUPS MEETING IN CONJUNCTION WITH SPEP (Listed Chronologically) 20

NIETZSCHE SOCIETY ANNUAL MEETING

Thursday, 9:00 a.m. – Noon Room 208 Session NS

The Death of God

Speakers: Thomas J. J. Altizer, SUNY at Stony Brook, Emeritus Alphonso Lingis, Pennsylvania State University

Respondent: Brian Schroeder, Skidmore College

Chair: George Leiner, Saint Vincent College

A brief business meeting will follow.

ANCIENT PHILOSOPHY SOCIETY

Thursday, 9:00 a.m. – Noon Room 206 Session APS

Moderator: Peter A. Warnek, University of Oregon

"Plato and the Magnetic Muse" Adriana Cavarero, University of Verona

"Stages on Plato's Longer Way" Mitchell Miller, Vassar College

"Speaking of the Earth: Figures of Transport in the Phaedo" John Sallis, The Pennsylvania State University

ANNOUNCING: First Annual Conference of the Ancient Philosophy Society. Villanova University, April 6-7, 2001. Invited Speaker: Remi Brague Université Paris-Sorbonne

Call for Papers for April 2001 Meeting: Papers are welcome on any topic in ancient Greek philosophy. Send inquiries/papers to Peter A. Warnek, Department of Philosophy, University of Oregon, Eugene, OR 97403.

A brief business meeting will follow.

21 SOCIETY FOR THE ADVANCEMENT OF AMERICAN PHILOSOPHY

Thursday, 9:00 a.m. – Noon Room 207 Session SAAP

Hermeneutics: Theories of Interpretation, American and Continental

Chair: Mitchell Aboulafia, University of Colorado, Denver

PANELISTS

Kenneth W. Stikkers, Southern Illinois University, Carbondale “Royce and Gadamer on Interpretation as the Constitution of Community”

Lawrence Schmidt, Hendrix College “Gadamer and Dewey on Language”

Thomas Jeannot, Seattle University "The Philosophical Hermeneutics of John Dewey: Art as Experience and Truth and Method"

Robert Innis, University of Massachusetts, Lowell “Perception, Interpretation and the Signs of Art”

THE SOCIETY FOR CONTINENTAL PHILOSOPHY AND THEOLOGY

Thursday, 9:00 a.m. – Noon Room 104 Session SCPT

A Panel Discussion of Thomas A. Carlson's

Indiscretion: Finitude and the Naming of God

Moderator: Bruce Ellis Benson (Wheaton College)

Speakers: John D. Caputo (Villanova University) Gregory Clark (North Park College) Catriona Hanley (Loyola College) Jeffrey Kosky (Williams College)

Respondent: Thomas A. Carlson

A brief business meeting will follow

22

THE SOCIETY FOR PHENOMENOLOGY AND THE HUMAN SCIENCES ANNUAL MEETING AND CONFERENCE PROGRAM October 5 - 7, 2000 Session SPHS

THURSDAY (3:30 – 5:30)

Scholar’s Session: George Psathas, Boston University 104 Moderator: Gary Backhaus, Morgan State University Speaker: Fred Kersten, Emeritus, University of Wisconsin Speaker: Michael Lynch, Cornell University

Friday, 9:00 – 10:50 a.m.

Session I Simmel and Social Investigations Moderator: Richard M. Owsley, University of North Texas 203 “Sophia and Phronesis: Simmel and Gadamer Critiquing the Scientific Method,” Dane Ratcliff, University of Wurzburg “The Cyborg Simmel,” Valerie Bentz, The Fielding Institute “Protonarrativity and the Ordinary Fragmentation of Consciousness” Philip Lewin, Independent Scholar

Session II Lived Relations: Exploring Interpersonal Connections Moderator: Francine Hultgren, University of Maryland 104 “Stepmothering as Homesteading: Phenomenology of Building and Dwelling in Relationality,” Barbara Fowler, University of Maryland “Listening to Nurses Voices in the Midst of Health Care Reform,” Roxanna Moran, Howard Community College “Seeking Significance: The Lived Experience of Teachers Using Personal Professional Development Plans in Supervision,” Mike Gibbs, University of Maryland “Bridging Relationships: A Phenomenological Study of Professional Development School Liaisons,” Maggie Madden, Maryland State Department of Education

Friday, 11:00 a.m. – 12:50 p.m.

Session I Simmel and the Phenomenological Approach to History Moderator: Richard M. Owsley, University of North Texas 203 “Georg Simmel: Kant’s Critique of Historical Judgment,” Richard M. Owsley, University of North Texas “Simmel’s Later Work in the Philosophy of History,” Gary Backhaus, Morgan State University “Time, Death, and History in Heidegger and Simmel,” John E. Jalbert, Sacred Heart University

Session II Self Expression in Language and its Sociological Epistemology Moderator: Linda Wing, The Fielding Institute 23 104 “A Voice-Story: The Lived Experience of Finding Voice,” Barbara Cavalier, The Fielding Institute “Problems of Autobiographical Consciousness in Late Life: Phenomenological Approaches,” Edmund Sherman, Ringel Institute of Gerontology “Meaning Beyond the Words: A Different Dialogue About Death,” Janette McDonald, Capital University “An Inquiry into the Logic of Sociological Explanations: Preliminary Work Toward an Epistemology for Sociology,” Natalie Margulies Berman, Independent Scholar

Friday, 2:00 – 3:50 p.m.

Session I Alfred Schutz Moderator: Valerie Bentz, The Fielding Institute 203 “The Significance of Alfred Schutz’s Theory of Life Forms for his Later Work,” Kentaro Yabe, Waseda University “Can We Trust the Life-World?,” Martin Endress, University of Konstanz “Alfred Schutz and Modernity: His Concepts of Typification, Anonymity and Abstraction and Their Implications for Modernity,” Kwang-ki Kim, Sungkyunkwan University “The Schutzian Legacy in Contemporary Sociology,” Mark Smith, Open University

Session II Articulating Phenomenologies of Embodied Speaking Subjects Moderator: Tom Craig, Brock University 104 “Semiosis in Therapeutic Discourse,” Isaac Catt, Millersville University “The Subject-in-Process: Within Pedagogic Relations of Materiality, Self- Interest, and Commodity Exchange,” Maureen Connolly, Brock University “A Funny Thing Happened on the Way Up to Renown: On the Concrete Essence of Chronic Illness and the Intercorporeal Weight of Human Suffering,” Tom Craig, Brock University “The Research Interview as Therapeutic Discourse: A Communicology of ‘Finding One’s Voice,’” Deborah Eicher-Catt, Pennsylvania State University

Friday, 4:00 – 5:50 p.m.

Session I Place Relations Moderator: Marc LaFountain, University of West Georgia 203 “Do Places Have Essences?: A Socio-Phenomenological Reflection on the Essentialist-Constructionist Debate,” Thomas M. Conroy, Saint Peter’s College “Further Explorations in Dead Space: Belonging and Attachment to Place in the East End of London, England,” Derek Shanahan, Millersville University “Alfred Schutz’s The Stranger and its Theoretical Lessons,” Maxim Koupovykh, University of Illinois “Institutions and Everyday Life: The Problem of Large-Scale Social Organization in Classical and Institutional Ethnographies,” Peter R. Grahame, Mount Saint Mary’s College

24 Session II Exploring the Existential Issues of Body, Time, and Place Moderator: Paulette Robinson, Towson University 104 “Revising in the Spaces,” Barbara Bass, Towson University “A Return to Lived Time,” Linda Diaconis: Villa Julie College “Becoming Artemis: Girls Developing Bodily Competence through Physical Activity,” Barbara Satina, The Pennsylvania State University “The Body Matrix: Students’ Experiences of Body in an On-Line Learning Environment,” Paulette Robinson, Towson University

SPHS PLENARY SESSION THE ALFRED SCHUTZ MEMORIAL LECTURE FRIDAY, 8:15 p. m. President’s Hall 2 and RECEPTION FRIDAY, 9:45 p. m. Senate Suite 1-3

“Alfred Schutz’s Influence on American Sociology” George Psathas Boston University

SATURDAY

Saturday, 9:00 – 10:50 a.m.

Session I Human Relations Moderator: Douglas Macbeth, Ohio State University 203 “Shifting the Bodymindset,” Adair Linn Nagata, The Fielding Institute “Modernity and Face-to-Face Interaction,” Tatsuhio Sakurai, Keio University “Constructing (In)Equality: The Domains of Relevance and Typifications of Married People,” Scott Harris, University of Oregon “Reason and Phenomenological Sociology,” Kyoko Utsunomiya, Toyo University

Session II Caretaking Moderator: David Rehorick, University of New Brunswick 104 “Ecological Identity, Emotion Work, and the Caretaking Self,” Mary F. Rogers, University of West Florida “To Nurture and Control: Emotions and Caretaking Identity,” Sandra Godwin, University of West Florida “Undertaking Couvade: Breach-Birthing a Research Tradition,” David Rehorick and Linda Nugent, University of New Brunswick “In Search of the Spirit: A Phenomenological Inquiry into the Meaning of ‘Spirituality’ in Nursing Care,” Tracy Carr and David Rehorick, University of New Brunswick

25

Saturday, 11:00 a.m. – 12:50 p.m.

Session I Eugene Gendlin’s Recent Work: “After Postmodernism,” Process, and First Person Ecology 203 Moderator: Ralph D. Ellis, Clark Atlanta University “Gendlin’s ‘After Postmodernism’ Epistemology,” Ralph D. Ellis, Clark Atlanta University “Focussing on the Flesh: Merleau-Ponty, Gendlin and the Lived Subjectivity,” Steven M. Rosen, City University of New York “Gendlin’s Process Theory as an Approach to the Mind/Body Problem,” Natika Newton, Suffolk Community College

Session II Educational Contexts for Lived Relationality: Community Making Through Cultural Conversations 104 Moderator: Francine Hultgren, University of Maryland “A Phenomenological Exploration of Lived Relation with Beginning Urban Teachers,” Richelle Patterson, University of Maryland “Understanding Teacher Commitment as a Middle Passage,” Terry Boer, College of Notre Dame of Maryland “The Mis-Placed Body Discovered and Developed: Educators Facilitating Bodily Competence for Girls,” Barbara Satina, The Pennsylvania State University “Virtual Relations: Building Community in an On-Line Learning Environment,” Paulette Robinson, Towson University

SPHS BUSINESS MEETING SATURDAY, 1:15-2:30 p.m. Room 104

Saturday, 2:30 – 3:50 p.m.

Session I Workshop: “Integrating Phenomenological Discourse and Somatic Practice” 203 Theresa Silow and Seymour Kleinman, The Ohio State University

Session II Workshop: “Encouraging Learning by Creating Phenomenological Classrooms” 104 Kurt Kraus and Jan Arminio, Shippensburg University

Saturday, 4:00 – 5:15 p.m.

Session I Workshop: “Observing, Describing, and Treating Manifestations of Stress in Conference Going Bodies,” 203 Maureen Connolly and Tom Craig, Brock University

Session II Workshop: “Multimedia as an Ethnographic Research 26 Tool,” 104 Kenneth Liberman, University of Oregon THE INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR ENVIRONMENTAL PHILOSOPHY Fourth Annual Meeting October 7-9, 2000

Saturday events will be held at the Penn State Conference Center (PSCC) at 215 Innovation Blvd., and which is also known locally as The Penn Stater. Lodging and all other events will be at the Nittany Lion Inn (NLI) at 200 West Park Ave. A free shuttle will be available, by appointment, for transportation between the two sites.

Registration will take place Saturday from 8:00 to 8:30 p.m. outside the President’s Room #3 & 4 (PSCC) and Sunday 8:30 to 10:30 a.m. outside the Assembly Room (NLI)

IAEP KEYNOTE ADDRESS SATURDAY, 8:30 p.m. PSCC President’s Room #3 &4

Moderator: Bruce Foltz, Eckerd College

“Finding Face in the Landscape in the Wake of Levinas,” Edward Casey, SUNY Stony Brook

RECEPTION, 10:00 p.m. PSCC Deans Room #1

SUNDAY, 9:00-11:15 a.m. This session, and all following sessions, in the Nittany Lion Inn Assembly Room Session 1 Continental Approaches to Environmental Philosophy Moderator: James Hatley, Salisbury State University “Nature Begins and Ends in Wonder: Aesthetics as Exposure to the Promise of Things, in Betrayal,” Steven David Ross, Binghamton University “Postmodern Environments,” Hugh J. Silverman, SUNY Stony Brook “What is Eco-Phenomenology?,” David Wood, Vanderbilt University

SUNDAY, 11:25 a.m. -12:35 p.m. Session 2 The Environmental Thought of Paul Shepard Moderator: Joseph P. Lawrence, College of the Holy Cross “In the Company of Others,” Allan Larsen, Slippery Rock University of Pennsylvania “Predator, Prey, and Humans,” Alphonso Lingis, The Pennsylvania State University

SUNDAY, 2:00-4:15 p.m. Session 3 Environmental Ontology Moderator: Irene Klaver, University of North Texas “A Liberating Ecology of the Other: A Hegelian Aufhebung of Levinas for Non-Human Others,” Hyo-Dong Lee, Vanderbilt University “The Nature of Artifacts,” Steven Vogel, Denison University “Nature, Nurture, Environment: How to Find our Way?,” Bruce Wilshire, Rutgers University 27

SUNDAY, 4:25-6:15 p.m. Session 4 Natural Science Moderator: Nathan Andersen, Eckerd College “Shifting Ground: Continental Philosophy and the Earth Sciences,” Robert Frodeman, University of Colorado, and John Van Buren, Fordham University “Conservation Biology, Risk, and Scientific Knowledge Production,” Wyatt James Galusky, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University “Deleuze’s Return to Science as a Basis for Environmental Philosophy,” Robert Mugerauer, The University of Texas at Austin

IAEP BUSINESS MEETING SUNDAY, 6:30 p.m. NLI Assembly Room

SUNDAY, 9:00-10:00 p.m. ENVIRONMENTAL PHILOSOPHY IN DIALOGUE NLI Assembly Room Moderator: Robert Frodeman, University of Colorado

GUEST SPEAKER: Eric Barron, Director of the Earth Systems Science Center, The Pennsylvania State University, “Global Warming and the Future of the Earth”

MONDAY, 8:30-10:15 a.m. Session 5 Ethics and After Moderator: Hwa-Yol Jung, Moravian College “Nature Through the Looking-Glass or, Environmentalism and the Problem of Freedom,” Robert Kirkman, SUNY Stony Brook “Children and the Ethics of Place,” Ingrid Stefanovic, University of Toronto “Imagination and Responsibility: Rethinking Heidegger’s Contribution to Environmental Philosophy,” Gail Stendstad, East Tennessee State University

MONDAY, 10:25-11:55 a.m. Session 6 Panel on Henry Bugbee’s Philosophy of Wilderness Moderator: Edward Casey, SUNY Stony Brook Panelists: Douglas Anderson, Penn State University; Daniel Conway, Penn State University; Edward Mooney, Sonoma State University; Bruce Wilshire, Rutgers Univ.

MONDAY, 1:10-3:30 p.m. Session 7 Environmental Praxis Moderator: Carl Mitcham, Colorado School of Mines “Gardening as Environmental Practice,” Silvia Benso, Siena College “Cove Mallard: A Case Study in Environmental Activism,” Patricia Glazebrook, Colgate “The Inoperative Earth,” Brian Schroeder, Skidmore College “Agrarian Economics,” Norman Wirzba, Georgetown College 28

Rooms are available (ask for SPEP rooms) for October 7-9 at the Nittany Lion Inn, 200 Park Ave., (800) 233-7505 or (814) 863-5050. Rates are $95 single, $110 double, $10 per extra person, and $15 per extra bed. Reservations must be made by September 4. IAEP Web Site (www.environmentalphilosophy.org) will post additional and updated information. The Society for Phenomenology and Existential Philosophy Membership Dues Payment and Conference Registration Form 2000-2001

Membership dues for the year beginning August 1, 2000 should be mailed to James Risser/ Department of Philosophy, Seattle University, Seattle, WA 98122. Please make your check payable in U.S. funds. Thank you.

Name______Last First Middle Initial Preferred Title

Department Position ______

Institution ______

______City State/Province Country Zip

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______City State/Province Country Zip

Phone Numbers: Office ( )______Home ( )______

Email:______Fax: ( )______

Send Mail To: (Circle One): Office Address Home Address

Highest Degree ______Date and Institution ______

Membership Dues Payment and Conference Registration We invite you to pay your membership dues at this time and to register in advance for the annual conference. (Please note that, although you are registering in advance for the conference, you must make your own hotel reservations.) Please circle the amount paid:

Regular Member: Paying Dues and Registration: $45.00 (Registration is $10.00. Dues are $35.00**)

29 Regular Member: Paying Dues Only** $35.00

Student / Emeritus Member $10.00 Dues are $10.00** There is no additional registration fee for the conference. Please indicate whether you are planning to attend the conference:

Yes, I am / No, I am not planning to attend the conference

** If you already subscribe to Philosophy Today, please subtract $10.00 from the regular dues or $5.00 from the student / emeritus dues payment noted above.

DATABASE INFORMATION

Please complete the rest of this form so that we may have up to date information regarding the areas of interest and specialization of our members.

Please circle the topics / figures in which you specialize:

Adorno Aesthetics Africana Ancient Arendt

Art/Architecture Asian Beauvoir Benjamin Blanchot

Critical Theory Deconstruction Deleuze Derrida Epistemology

Ethics Environmentalism Existentialism Feminism Fichte

Foucault Freud Gadamer Habermas Hegel

Heidegger Hermeneutics Husserl Idealism Irigaray

Kant Kierkegaard Kristeva Lacan Latin American

Levinas Literary Criticism Lyotard Marcel

Merleau-Ponty Modern Nietzsche Phenomenology Postcolonialism

Postmodernism Poststructuralism Psychology Race/Ethnicity Theory

Religion Ricoeur Sartre Schelling Science

Social/Political Wittgenstein Other (Please Specify):

Additional Information Requested

1. Please provide us with the names of people that you think would serve well in the following positions:

A. Member of the Executive Committee:

30 B. Member of the Committee on the Status of Women:

C. Member of the Advisory Book Selection Committee:

2. What issues/topics/people would you like to see on the program of future annual conferences?

3. Whom you would like to see as a plenary speaker at a future conference?

31

INDEX OF TOPICS

Key: D T.I = Thursday, 1:00 - 3:30 p.m. Davidson, F.I.4 T.II = Thursday, 3:45 - 6:30 p.m. Davis, Angela; S.II.5 F.I = Friday, 9:00 a.m. - Noon Death, S.II.8, SPHS F.II = Friday, 2:00 - 4:00 p.m. Deconstruction, F.I.7 F.III = Friday, 4:15 - 5:30 p.m. Deleuze, T.I.7, T.II.8, F.I.3, IAEP S.I = Saturday, 9:00 - 11:45 a.m. Derrida, Thursday Plenary, F.I.8, S.I.6, S.II = Saturday, 1:30 - 4:30 p.m S.II.3 APS = Ancient Philosophy Society Dewey, SAAP NS = Nietzsche Society Dialectics, F.I.3, F.III.3 SAAP = Soc. For Advancement of Am. Diversity, F.II.1 Phil. Dworkin, S.II.5 SCPT = Soc. For Cont. Phil. And Theology E SPHS = Soc. For Phen. And Human Ecology, IAEP Sciences Education, F.II.1, SPHS IAEP = Int. Assoc. of Environmental Embodiment, T.I.1, F.II.3, F.II.5, S.II.8, Phil. SPHS Emotion, SPHS A Environmentalism, IAEP Adorno, F.I.6, F.III.2 Epistemology, SPHS, IAEP Aesthetics, F.II.8, F.III.8, IAEP Eurocentrism, S.II.1 Agamben, F.I.8, S.II.8 Existentialism, F.I.1, S.II.4 Anaximander, S.II.8 Ancient, APS F Arendt, T.I.3, T.II.6 Fanon, T.II.7 Art, T.II.4, SAAP Feminist Theory, T.I.1, F.I.1, F.I.5, F.II.3, F.II.8 S.I.1, S.I.2, S.II.6 B Foucault, T.I.4, T.II.2, T.II.8, F.III.1 Balibar, S.I.7 Frege, F.I.4 Bataille, F.I.6 Freud, T.II.2 Beauvoir, T.II.2, S.II.6 Bergson, F.III.4 G Bourdieu, F.I.5 Gadamer, T.II.3, F.I.6, S.II.2, SAAP, Bugbee, Henry; IAEP SPHS Butler, F.II.3 Gendlin, Eugene; SPHS Gilligan, S.II.6 C Calvino, S.I.5 H Carlson, Thomas A.; SCPT Hegel, T.I.2, T.II.2, F.I.3, F.III.2, S.II.7, Chomsky, F.I.4 IAEP Colonialism, F.I.7 Heidegger, T.I.3, T.II.2, F.I.4, F.II.3, Community, T.II.5, SAAP, SPHS, F.II.7, F.II.8, S.I.4, S.II.8, SPHS, IAEP Gurwitsch Herder, T.II.6 Critical Theory, T.I.2, F.III.5, S.I.1 Hermeneutics, T.II.3, S.I.3, S.II.2, SAAP Cyborg, SPHS Hölderlin, F.II.7 32

Husserl, F.I.3, F.II.2, F.II.3, F.II.4 R Race Theory, T.II.7, F.II.1, F.II.5, S.I.2, S.II.4, Saturday Plenary I Ricoeur, S.II.2 Identity, SPHS Royce, SAAP Irigaray, F.II.8, F.III.5, F.III.7, S.I.7 S J Sade, T.II.2, Jakobson, F.I.4 Schelling, S.I.7 Schutz, SPHS Plenary, SPHS K Science, SPHS, IAEP Kant, T.II.6, F.I.4, F.II.7, SPHS Self/Subjectivity, T.I.6, T.II.5, F.I.3, F.I.4, Klein, F.I.2 F.II.6, S.II.4, SPHS Kripke, F.I.4 Sexuality, F.I.8 Kristeva, S.II.6 Shepard, Paul; IAEP Simmel, Georg; SPHS L Sociology, SPHS Lacan, F.I.4 Space, SPHS Latin American, T.II.7 Spinoza, S.I.7 Legal Theory, S.II.5, Saturday Plenary Structuralism, F.I.4 Levinas, T.I.5, F.I.6, F.II.6, S.II.6, S.II.7, IAEP T Technology/Technoscience, T.II.1, SPHS M Therapy, SPHS MacKinnon, S.II.5 Tragedy, Schuwer Marx, F.I.3 Medicine, SPHS W Merleau-Ponty, F.III.4, F.III.6, SPHS Wittgenstein, F.III.7 Michals, Duane; F.III.8

N Nature, IAEP Nietzsche, F.II.3, S.I.8, S.II.4, S.II.5, NS

P Phenomenology, T.II.4, F.I.2, F.II.2, F.II.4, F.II.5, F.III.5, S.II.8, SPHS, IAEP, Gurwitsch Phillipse, S.I.4 Place, SPHS Plato, F.III.7, APS Postcolonial Theory, S.I.2 Postmodernism, IAEP Pragmatism, S.I.4

Q Queer Theory, F.II.1

33

Bauer, Nancy; T.II.2 Benso, Silvia; T.I.5, IAEP Benson, Bruce Ellis; F.I.6, SCPT Bentz, Valerie; SPHS Bergo, Bettina; T.I.5 Bergoffen, Debra B.; T.II.2 PARTICIPANT INDEX Berman, Natalie Margulies; SPHS Bernstein, Jeffrey A.; S.I.7 Key: Birmingham, Peg; T.I.3 T.I = Thursday, 1:00 - 3:30 p.m. Blattner, William; S.I.4 T.II = Thursday, 3:45 - 6:30 p.m. Bloodsworth, Mary; F.II.1 F.I = Friday, 9:00 a.m. - Noon Boer, Terry; SPHS F.II = Friday, 2:00 - 4:00 p.m. Bookman, Myra; S.II.6 F.III = Friday, 4:15 - 5:30 p.m. Boundas, Constantin; T.I.7 S.I = Saturday, 9:00 - 11:45 a.m Brennan, Teresa; Saturday Plenary S.II = Saturday, 1:30 - 4:30 p.m Brough, John; T.I.6 APS = Ancient Philosophy Society Brown, Kristen; F.II.3 NS = Nietzsche Society Bruzina, Ronald; F.II.4 SAAP = Soc. For Advancement of Am. Bryant, Paul; T.II.8 Phil. Buchwalter, Andrew; F.III.3 SCPT = Soc. For Cont. Phil. And Burke, Patrick; F.III.4 Theology SPHS = Soc. For Phen. And Human C Sciences Cahoone, Lawrence; S.II.8 IAEP = Int. Assoc. of Environmental Calarco, Matthew R.; S.II.8 Phil. Caputo, John D.; T.II.3, SCPT . Carlson, Licia; F.III.1 A Carlson, Thomas A.; SCPT Aboulafia, Mitchell S.; S.II.6, SAAP Carmen, Taylor; S.I.4 Acampora, Christa Davis; S.I.8 Carr, David; T.I.6 Acampora, Ralph R.; S.I.8 Carr, Tracy; SPHS Al-Saji, Alia; F.II.2 Carvalho, John; F.III.8 Alcoff, Linda Martín; F.II.5 Casey, Edward S.; IAEP, IAEP Keynote Alexander, Natalie; T.II.4 Catalano, Joseph; F.I.1 Altizer, Thomas J.J.; NS Catt, Isaac; SPHS Andersen, Nathan; IAEP Cavalier, Barbara; SPHS Anderson, Douglas; IAEP Cavarero, Adriana; APS Arisaka, Yoko; S.II.4 Cerbone, David; F.I.4 Arminio, Jan; SPHS Chandler, Nahem; F.II.5 Armour, Ellen; F.II.8 Chanter, Tina; F.II.1, F.III.5 Arthos, John; S.II.2 Cherkasova, Evgenia V.; F.II.7 Cimitile, Maria; F.II.2 B Clark, Gregory; SCPT Babich, Babette; S.I.8 Clarke, Melissa; F.I.5 Backhaus, Gary; SPHS Coble, D. Kelly; F.II.7 Barron, Eric; IAEP Coe, Cynthia D.; F.II.6 Bartky, Sandra Lee; S.I.1 Connolly, Maureen; SPHS Bass, Barbara, SPHS Conroy, Thomas M.; SPHS 34

Conway, Daniel; S.I.8, IAEP Güven, Ferit; F.III.3 Craig, Tom; SPHS H D Hall, Kim; S.I.2 Dallmayr, Fred; S.II.1 Hanley, Catriona; SCPT de Laurentiis, Allegra; F.I.3 Hansen, Jennifer; S.II.6 de Miranda, Alexandre Lopes; F.III.1 Harding, Sandra; T.II.1 DeArmitt, Pleshette; S.I.6 Harris, Scott; SPHS DeBoer, Karin; S.II.3 Harvey, Charles W.; T.II.5 DeCaroli, Steven; T.II.6 Hass, Marjorie; F.III.7 Depraz, Natalie; F.II.4 Hatab, Lawrence; S.I.8 Derrida, Jacques; Thursday Plenary Hatley, James; IAEP Deutscher, Penelope; F.I.7 Hendricks, Christina; F.III.7 Diaconis, Linda; SPHS Hengehold, Laura; F.III.1 Diprose, Rosalyn; F.I.7 Holbrook, J. Britt; F.I.6 Domino, Brian; S.I.8 Holland, Nancy; F.I.7 Donohoe, Janet; F.III.2 Hollander, Dana; F.I.8 Donovan, Sarah K.; S.I.7 Holveck, Eleanore; T.II.2 Drabinski, John; T.I.5 Hopkins, Burt C.; F.I.2 Drummond, John J.; T.I.6, Gurwitsch Horwitz, Noah; T.II.8 Hultgren, Francine; SPHS E Hutchinson, Darren; T.II.4 Edgar, Matthew; S.II.7 Hyland, Drew; F.III.8 Edwards, Jeffrey; T.II.6 Eicher-Catt, Deborah; SPHS I Ellis, Ralph D.; SPHS Ihde, Don; T.II.1 Endress, Martin; SPHS Innis, Robert; SAAP Enns, Diane E.; S.II.3 Evans, Fred; F.III.6 J Jakubowski, Dawn; T.II.5 F Jalbert, John E.; SPHS Feder, Ellen K.; T.I.4 Jeannot, Thomas; F.III.6, SAAP Feenberg, Andrew; T.II.1 Johnston, Adrian; F.I.4 Ferrell, Robyn; F.I.7 Joy, Morney; F.III.5 Flynn, Bernard; T.I.3 Jung, Hwa-Yol; IAEP Foltz, Bruce V.; IAEP Fowler, Barbara; SPHS K Frodeman, Robert; IAEP Katz, Claire; T.I.5 Fultner, Barbara; T.I.2 Keenan, Dennis; F.II.6 Kemp, Catherine; T.II.7 G Kersten, Fred; SPHS Galusky, Wyatt James; IAEP Kim, Kwang-ki; SPHS Gibbs, Mike; SPHS Kirkland, Frank; S.II.1 Glazebrook, Patricia; F.II.2, IAEP Kirkman, Robert; IAEP Glynn, Simon; T.II.5 Kitagawa, Sakiko; S.I.3 Godwin, Sandra E.; SPHS Klaver, Irene J.; S.I.5, IAEP Gordon, Lewis; F.I.1 Klein, Julie R.; S.I.7 Grahame, Peter R.; SPHS Kleinman, Seymour; SPHS 35

Kosky, Jeffrey; SCPT Mitcham, Carl; IAEP Koupovykh, Maxim; SPHS Mooney, Edward; IAEP Kozins, Alexander; S.I.3 Moran, Dermot; F.I.2 Kraus, Kurt; SPHS Moran, Roxanna; SPHS Morris, David; F.III.4 L Mugerauer, Robert; IAEP LaFountain, Marc; SPHS Mullarkey, John; T.I.7 Lamb, Andrew W.; F.I.2 Murdoch, J. Murray Jr.; S.II.7 Lambert, Gregg; F.I.3 Lango, Matthew; T.II.8 N Large, Duncan; S.I.8 Naas, Michael; S.I.6 Larsen, Allan; IAEP Nagata, Adair Linn; SPHS Larsen, Tarjei Mandt; F.I.2 Nagel, Mechthild E.; S.I.1 Lawlor, Leonard; T.I.7 Nelson, Eric; S.I.3 Lawrence, Joseph P.; IAEP Newton, Natika; SPHS Lee, Hyo-Dong; IAEP Nicholson, Graeme; T.II.3 Leiner, George; NS Norris, Andrew; F.I.8 LeMoncheck, Linda; S.I.1 Nugent, Linda; SPHS Lewin, Philip; SPHS Liberman, Kenneth; SPHS O Lingis, Alphonso; NS, IAEP Okrent, Mark; S.I.4 Litzenberger, Robert; F.I.4 Olesen, Anne Marie; S.II.2 Lumsden, Simon; F.I.3 Olkowski, Dorothea; T.I.1 Lutkehermolle, Matthias; S.II.3 Owsley, Richard M.; SPHS Lynch, Michael; SPHS Oxenberg, Richard; F.II.2

M P MacAvoy, Leslie A.; F.II.6 Paccacerqua, Cynthia María; T.II.7 Macbeth, Douglas; SPHS Parkes, Graham; S.I.8 Macdonald, Iain; F.III.2 Patterson, Richelle; SPHS Mackintosh, Brian K.; S.II.5 Pearson, Keith Ansell; T.I.7 Madden, Maggie; SPHS Pensky, Max; T.II.6 Mader, Mary Beth; F.III.7 Perpich, Diane; F.I.8 Malpas, Jeff; S.I.4 Pettigrew, David; S.I.5 Margolis, Joseph; F.I.5 Picart, Caroline Joan S.; S.II.5 Markle, Gwynn; S.II.7 Psathas, George; SPHS, SPHS Plenary Mattick, Paul; F.I.5 Maybee, Julie; F.II.1 R McAfee, Noelle C.; S.II.6 Raffoul, François; S.I.3 McBride, William; F.I.1 Rasmussen, David; T.II.3 McCumber, John A.; F.III.3 Ratcliff, Dane; SPHS McDonald, Janette; SPHS Ray, Sangeeta; S.I.2 McKenna, William; Gurwitsch Razack, Sherene; S.I.2 McWhorter, Ladelle; T.I.4 Rehg, William; T.I.2 Mendieta, Eduardo; S.II.4 Rehorick, David; SPHS Mensch, James R.; S.II.8 Richter, Gerhard; F.I.6 Metzo, Christine R.; F.II.3 Robinson, Paulette; SPHS Miller, Mitchell; APS Rockmore, Tom; F.I.1 36

Rogers, Mary F.; SPHS Rojcewicz, Richard; Schuwer T Rose, John M.; S.II.8 Taminiaux, Jacques; T.I.3 Rosen, Steven M.; SPHS Taylor, Dianna; T.II.6 Ross, Stephen David; IAEP Thomson, Iain; S.II.7 Roth, Jeremi; F.I.4 Torres, Nelson Maldonado; T.II.7 Rudolph, Katherine; S.I.7 Trey, George; T.II.8 Ruse, Michael S.; F.III.4 Tuana, Nancy; S.II.1

S U Saghafi, Kas; S.I.6 Utsunomiya, Kyoko; SPHS Sakurai, Tatsuhio; SPHS Sallis, John; Thursday Plenary, APS V Satina, Barbara; SPHS Vallega, Allejandro; S.I.5 Sawicki, Jana; S.I.1 Vallega-Neu, Daniela; S.I.5 Schatzki, Theodore; F.I.5 Van Buren, John; S.I.3, IAEP Schmidt, Dennis J.; Schuwer Varadharajan, Asha; S.I.2 Schmidt, Lawrence; S.II.2, SAAP Vargas, Manuel; T.II.7 Scholz, Sally; F.I.1 Vessey, David T.; S.II.2 Schrift, Alan; S.I.8 Vintges, Karen; T.II.2 Schroeder, Brian; S.II.5, NS, IAEP Visker, Rudi; T.I.3 Schutte, Ofelia; S.II.1 Vogel, Steven; T.II.1, IAEP Scott, Charles, T.I.4 Scott, Jacqueline R.; S.II.4 W Scult, Allen; F.II.7 Warnek, Peter A.; S.II.3, APS Secomb, Linnell; F.I.7 Watson, Stephen H.; T.II.3 Seitz, Brian; F.I.8 Weate, Jeremy; F.III.6 Seshadri-Crooks, Kalpana; F.II.5 Weberman, David; F.I.6 Shanahan, Derek; SPHS Weems, Pamela; T.I.4 Shapiro, Gary; T.II.4 Weiss,Gail; T.I.1 Sherman, David; F.III.2 Welton, Donn; T.I.1 Sherman, Edmund; SPHS Willett, Cynthia; F.III.5 Shim, Michael; F.I.4 Williams, Patricia; Saturday Plenary Shusterman, Richard; F.I.5 Wilshire, Bruce; IAEP Silow, Theresa; SPHS Winchester, James; S.II.5 Silverman, Hugh J.; S.I.6, IAEP Wing, Linda; SPHS Simpson, Lorenzo; T.I.2 Wirzba, Norman; IAEP Smith, Daniel W.; F.I.3 Wood, David; T.II.4, IAEP Smith, Mark; SPHS Wrathall, Mark; T.II.5 Stefanovic, Ingrid; IAEP Wurzer, Wilhelm; F.III.8 Steinbock, Anthony; F.II.4 Stendstad, Gail; IAEP Y Stikkers, Kenneth W.; SAAP Yabe, Kentaro; SPHS Stuhr, John; Thursday Plenary Young, Iris Marion; S.I.1 Sullivan, Shannon; T.I.1 Sweet, Kristi; F.II.8 Z Swindal, James; T.I.2 Zack, Naomi; S.II.4 Zahavi, Dan; T.I.6 37

Zakin, Emily A.; S.II.6 Zuidervaart, Lambert; F.II.8

38