Monthly Archives: September, 2008

Appearance of Value

Has anyone thought about how money acquires value? It is very chilling to understand that the total amount of money in circulation far exceeds any backing assets of real value! What is value anyway? utility? perception? Gives a new meaning to our cultural commonsense that money is maya!
 

The Protestant Reformation: Understanding the Western Mind

A fascinating documentary by historian Tristram hunt. It explains the philosophical beginnings of Protestantism, its various influences on what we hold today as modern and secular. This documentary also gives us an insight into what drives modern western culture and what has shaped their perception of the world and their place in it.

Part – 1 Politics of Belief




Part-2: Godly Family 
 
 

Part-3: The Refomation of the Mind


 
Part-4 : No Rest for the Wicked

season 3 – Katopanishad part 10

Part 10 of the series of lectures on Katopanishad. This lecture deals with first verse of the third valli (section) of the first chapter.


Announcement and Call for Papers : Rethinking Religion in India II: ‘Rethinking Secularism’

Announcement and Call for Papers
Rethinking Religion in India II: ‘Rethinking Secularism’
10-13 January 2009 – New Delhi, India


www.cultuurwetenschap.be/conferences/RRI



Dear colleague,


We would like to invite you to the second conference of Rethinking Religion in India: ‘Rethinking Secularism’. The conference will be held from 10 to 13 January 2009 in New Delhi, India.


When India became independent in 1947 there were high hopes that secularism would adequately protect the nation against communal strife. Six decades later, however, recurrent communal riots, the rise of Hindutva and key events like the destruction of the Babri mosque in Ayodhya have led to a crisis of Indian secularism. Nevertheless, no adequate understanding of the nature of these problems is provided by the current social sciences. Instead, an ideological struggle between secularism and Hindutva has hijacked all reflection and debate on the nature of Indian culture and society.


Rethinking Religion in India II is the initiative of a group of intellectuals who think this clash between secularism and Hindutva is pernicious. Within the general aims of the five-year conference cluster, this second conference intends to move beyond the framework which presents liberal secularism as the only possible solution to communal strife. Under the motto of “Rethinking Secularism,” it will examine the limitations of the conceptual framework shared by Hindutva and secularism. The Research Centre Vergelijkende Cultuurwetenschap (Ghent University, Belgium), India Platform UGent (Ghent University, Belgium), the Centre for the Study of Local Cultures (Kuvempu University, India) and the Karnataka Academy of Social Sciences and Humanities (Karnataka, India) invite you for four days of reflection on the possibilities that lie beyond this normative straitjacket.


The conference will work towards these ambitions in four formats:


– The Platform Sessions will have a one-on-one debate between two thinkers who will focus on the question “Is secularism the solution to communal conflict in India?” Achin Vanaik (Delhi University) and Jakob De Roover (Ghent University) have been invited as central speakers in the debate.


– The Roundtable Sessions will invite a distinguished group of thinkers to reflect on three different problems related to the aim of rethinking secularism: (1) Freedom of Religion and Religious Conversion; (2) Secularism, Hindutva and the Aryan Invasion Theory; and (3) Liberal Secularism and Religious Fundamentalism: Opposites or Alter Egos? A preliminary list of speakers and respondents consists of Achin Vanaik (Delhi University); Ashis Nandy (Centre for the Study of Developing Societies); Dilip K. Chakrabarty (University of Cambridge); Edwin Bryant (Rutgers University); Scott Appleby (University of Notre Dame); Winnifred F. Sullivan (State University of New York); Akeel Bilgrami (Columbia University); Geoffrey Oddie (The University of Sydney); Laurie L. Patton (Emory University); Richard King (Vanderbilt University); S.N. Balagangadhara (Ghent University); Vivek Dhareshwar (Centre for the Study of Culture and Society), Timothy Fitzgerald (University of Stirling).


A call for papers – deadline 30 September 2009 – is open for the following two sessions
(see www.cultuurwetenschap.be/conferences/RRI  >  call for papers):


– The Parallel Paper Sessions will deal with (1) Indian Religion and the Issue of Conversion; (2) The Caste System and Indian Religion; (3) Colonialism and Religion in India; (4) Religion and Law in India; (5) Rethinking Religion in Asia. We invite submission of abstracts for these sessions (online submission).


– “How To…?” Workshop sessions: One of the workshops will deal with the question ‘How to teach about the Indian traditions and religions?’ We invite proposals for workshops dealing with similar questions (online submission).


For more information, please visit our website at www.cultuurwetenschap.be/conferences/RRI


A number of interviews, presentations and debates of the first conference, Rethinking Religion in India I, can be watched on www.youtube.com/cultuurwetenschap



Looking forward to welcoming you at our conference,


The Organising Committee



Contact:
Marianne Keppens & Esther Bloch
Research Centre Vergelijkende Cultuurwetenschap,
Ghent University,
Apotheekstraat 5,
B-9000 Gent, Belgium
tel: +32 (0)9 264 93 71
fax: +32 (0)9 264 94 83
e-mail: Marianne.Keppens@UGent.be  &  Esther.Bloch@UGent.be