rapaport@cs.Buffalo.EDU (William J. Rapaport) (02/23/89)
PARTICULARISM CONFERENCE March 2-5, 1989 280 Park Hall SUNY Buffalo The purpose of this conference is to bring together a group of scholars in various disciplines who practice an approach which may be defined as particularist, in order to consider is implications for contemporary thought. "Particularism" characterizes a rapidly developing area of research strategies in which emphasis falls on observations and experiences rather than on systems and generalizations. In literary sutdies, this has taken form as an expressly anti-theoretical movement; concern has shifted towards the immediate experience of a work and the uniqueness or _quidditas_ of the aesthetic event. Particularist emphasis can also be seen in the biological and medical sciences. Reading Oliver Sacks, one realizes that some physicians regard the individual case as being in some degree inaccessible to any general diagnosis. In zoology, Stephen Jay Gould has argued for the importance of variety and exception in the survival of species. Mathematics is concerned with discontinutities and singularities. In social science, the "Annales" shcool, the Princeton school, and the New Historicists have establishede a powerful tradition in micro- history. Clifford Geertz has done the same for anthropology. In ethics, a borad plea for the priority of the particular case over the general principle has been entered by thinkers as various as Lyotard and Bernard Williams. Speakers: Naomi Schor (Romance Languages, Brown) David Hull (Philosophy of Science, Northwestern) Lawrence B. McCullough (Baylor College of Medicine) Paul Fry (English, Yale) Roland Kany (Tuebingen) Martha Nussbaum (Philosophy, Brown) Lawrence Blum (Philosophy, UMass/Boston) Rene Thom (Institut des Hautes Etudes Scientifiques) For further information, contact Irving Massey, Dept. of English, SUNY Buffalo, 716-636-2575, 882-7652