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2024/10/15

【Vanguard Summit 12】Human/Non-human Relationships and Sustainable Development

 

 

 

 

Date: Tuesday, November 5, 2024

Time: 08-50 – 17:30 (GMT+08)

Format: ZOOM webinar

Link: https://list-waseda-jp.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_xN24KDXnRFuQd7gy6DGC8A

 

Human/Non-human Relationships and Sustainable Development

 

Abstract:

As the looming effects of the Anthropocene grow more menacing, the world scrambles to propose remedies to the existential crisis for humanity brought about by climate change and biodiversity loss. The 2024 UBIAS common theme, "Human/Non-human," may provide a key to addressing this issue. In this symposium, we will explore potential solutions from two apparently contrasting but in fact mutually complementary approaches.

 

In the first part, as a radical approach to the issue, we will delve into its roots: the anthropocentrism deeply embedded in Western cultures, where the idea of the Great Chain of Being has changed little except  replacing God with Man at the top of the hierarchy. The fact that animal rights advocates prioritize animals that exhibit empathy toward humans, for instance, lends evidence to this unyielding anthropocentrism. Consequently, what we are in dire need of is a "flat ontology" that does not forsake human accountability—one that reorients the human-nonhuman relationship not by treating the nonhuman as merely necessary for human survival, but by recognizing that all beings have equal rights to exist on this planet. A key issue in this reorientation involves the relative value of the myriad entities, a subject that is critical to the extent to which de-anthropocentrism can be pursued and has sparked heated debates. We believe that further academic discussions on the human-nonhuman relationship will help clarify these issues and contribute to the development of more concrete strategies to combat the Anthropocene.

In the second part, the issue will be addressed from a more piecemeal approach. While framing the problem as a crisis of human survival have obviously been prompted by anthropocentric concerns, the slowness in enhancing sustainability indicates that future generations are not being treated equally with the current generation. If they were, we would be implementing stronger measures for climate change and biodiversity conservation. In other words, future generations exist on the boundary between human and non-human. While anthropocentrism suggests we treat them as human, they are not being afforded the same rights as present-day humans.

 

The second part of the symposium will begin by highlighting the gap between the "should be" and the "is" in this context, using climate change as a case study. Following this, two practical solutions to treating future generations as equals will be proposed. The first solution introduces the idea of "future design," a concept that encourages thinking from the future back to the present, rather than from the present forward to the future. The second solution will present practical attempts to enhance our empathy for future generations.

 

For more details, please see: https://drive.google.com/file/d/10FArfZmdO1jf1BlyImewUzKJGuFdKh9T/view?usp=sharing

 

Speakers:

Sebastian Hsien-hao LiaoDistinguished professor, Department of Foreign Languages and Literatures; Dean, Institute for Advanced Studies in the Humanities and the Social Sciences, National Taiwan University, Taiwan 

Hung-chiung Li (Associate Professor, Department of Foreign Languages and Literatures, National Taiwan University, Taiwan)

Chishe Li (Professor, Department of Foreign Languages and Literatures, National Taiwan University, Taiwan)

Ken-Ichi Akao (Professor, School of Social Sciences, Waseda University, Japan)

Tatsuyoshi Saijo (Director, Future Design Research Center, Kyoto University of Advanced Science; Emeritus Professor, Research Institute for Humanity and Nature, Japan)

Ryuji Yamazaki-Skov (Specially Appointed Associate Professor, Faculty of Glocal Policy Management and Communication, Yamanashi Prefectural University; Guest Associate Professor at Osaka University, Institute for Open and Transdisciplinary Research Initiatives, Osaka University, Japan)

 

Agenda:

Time

Session

Speaker

Topic

08:50 – 09:00

Opening Remarks

Sebastian Hsien-hao Liao & Ken-Ichi Akao

09:00 – 09:50

A1

Sebastian Hsien-hao Liao

(Distinguished professor, Department of Foreign Languages and Literatures; Dean, Institute for Advanced Studies in the Humanities and the Social Sciences, National Taiwan University, Taiwan)

Mind and Compassion:

From Settler Colonialism to Panpsychism

10:00 – 10:50

A2

Hung-chiung Li

(Associate Professor, Department of Foreign Languages and Literatures, National Taiwan University, Taiwan)

Intra-active Causality: From Democracy to Accountability in Karen Barad

11:00 – 11:50

A3

Chishe Li

(Professor, Department of Foreign Languages and Literatures, National Taiwan University, Taiwan)

Looking Backward: Realism by the Future Generations

12:00 – 13:00

Lunch Break

13:00 – 13:50

B1

Ken-Ichi Akao

(Professor, School of Social Sciences, Waseda University, Japan)

Distant Future Generations and the Emissions Gap in Climate Change Issues

14:00 – 14:50

B2

Tatsuyoshi Saijo

(Director, Future Design Research Center, Kyoto University of Advanced Science; Emeritus Professor, Research Institute for Humanity and Nature, Japan)

Future Design: Futurability, Presentability and Pastability

15:00 – 15:50

B3

Ryuji Yamazaki-Skov

(Specially Appointed Associate Professor, Faculty of Glocal Policy Management and Communication, Yamanashi Prefectural University; Guest Associate Professor at Osaka University, Institute for Open and Transdisciplinary Research Initiatives, Osaka University, Japan)

Enhancing Empathy for Future Generations: An Approach Beyond Human/Non-Human Dualism

16:00 – 17:30

Round Table

All Speakers

 

Organized by:

Institute for Advanced Studies in the Humanities and Social Sciences, National Taiwan University

Waseda Institute for Advanced Study, Waseda University

 

Co-organized by:

Institute for Advanced Social Sciences, Waseda University

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