
Unfortunately all places for the event are already taken.
Video recordings of the event will be available mid-July on the Youtube channel of the Center for Post-Kantian Philosophy: youtube.com/channel/UCdKO5dwlv3AQA_Ar_n0hp5Q
For a long time, Marx was regarded in academic philosophy no less than in the general discussion as an author of the past, a name without a future. The intensifying crises of global capitalism, the escalating climate crisis, and the postcolonial discussion have brought his critique back into the critical consciousness of the present. At the same time, academic philosophy has rediscovered Marx as a crucial author who has a more open and diverse future than he was previously thought to have. The symposium The Futures of Marx brings together voices from the new international discussion of Marx that seek to tap into these more open futures and that draw from more diverse sources than the previous discussion. Three complexes are at the forefront: a redefinition of the relationship between nature and society in the Anthropocene, a broader critique of the capitalist way of life as a general inability to act, and an understanding of philosophical critique that is not satisfied with merely interpreting the world but wants to participate in its transformation. From Marx, an idea of liberation opens up that does not propagate a liberation of the human being at the expense of nature, but at the same time is supposed to be the “true resurrection of nature” itself. His critique does not aim, as the cliché would have it, at the demise of the individual in plan and collective, but at the rediscovery of our acting with, through and for others. And his “true critique” does not cling to immaterial ideals, as dogmatic critique does, but wants to become real. If we follow this new other Marx, the future must be materialistic, naturalistic and critical in a new way.
Thursday, June 29th – DIALECTICAL NATURALISM
with lectures by Amy Allen, Rahel Jaeggi, Thomas Khurana and Michael Thompson
11:30–12:45
Prof. Karen Ng (Vanderbilt)
Species-Being, Metabolism, and Natural Limits
Moderation: Dr. Tobi Wieland (FU Berlin)
12:45–14:00
Mittagspause
14:00–15:15
Prof. Thomas Khurana (Universität Potsdam)
The Resurrection of Nature: Marx’s Dialectical Naturalism
Moderation: Prof. Federica Gregoratto (FU Berlin)
15:30–16:45
Prof. Rahel Jaeggi (HU Berlin)
Defending Materialism
Moderation: Prof. Manon Garcia (FU Berlin)
17:00–18:15
Prof. Amy Allen (Penn State)
Universality, Necessity, and Progress: Marx and the Problem of History
Moderation: Prof. Rahel Jaeggi (HU Berlin)
18:30–20:00
Marx im Anthropozän: Krise, Aufstand, Transformation
Podiumsdiskussion mit Patrick Eiden-Offe (ZfL Berlin), Christian Schmidt (HU Berlin), Francesca Raimondi (FU Berlin)
Moderation: Alexey Weißmüller (Universität Potsdam)


- 01:00Roter Salon
The Futures of Marx • DIALECTICAL NATURALISM