Taking social norms seriously
5. Juli 2024, 09:15 Uhr

Foto: Eline Gerritsen
Social norms have a major impact on our everyday lives – for better or worse. On the one hand, they seem indispensable as tools for cooperation, social stability and/or accountability. On the other hand, the unwritten rules of our society can function to perpetuate inequality and form an obstacle to positive change. We underestimate social norms when we primarily conceive of them as arbitrary and inconsequential norms we happen to accept, such as table setting rules. Instead, this broad category of norms reaches far beyond dinner parties and affects us in much larger ways, from filling in ideas of fairness to determining who gets to speak up.
To take social norms seriously as an important subject of philosophical inquiry, we must start from an accurate and comprehensive picture of what they are and what they mean to us. This requires combining explanations, justifications and criticisms developed from different perspectives. The aim of this conference is to bring together people from different subdisciplines in philosophy with a shared interest in social norms, in order to inspire a joint understanding of these norms and their effects.
This conference is part of the project The Normativity of Conventional Norms, funded by the Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF) and the Free and Hanseatic City of Hamburg under the Excellence Strategy of the Federal Government and the Länder.
Please register by emailing takingsocialnormsseriously"AT"gmail.com
Schedule:
5 July
9:15 - 10:05 | Camilo Martinez (Princeton) – Junk Norms |
10:20 – 11:10 | Lel Jones (UC Davis) – Micropleasures: Resistance via Affective Social Norms |
11:25 – 12:15 | Jon Bebb (Liverpool) – Why Be Normal? |
12:15 – 13:35 | Lunch |
13:35 – 14:25 | Temi Ogunye (Princeton) – Social Norms, Informal Activism, and the Efficacy of ‘Cancel Culture’ |
14:40 – 15:30 | Setareh Ezzatabadi (Calgary) – Norms, Motivations and Structures: Towards a Motivational Account of Social Practices |
15:45 – 17:15 | Keynote: Laura Valentini (LMU Munich) – Personal Sovereignty, Institutional Norms, and Social Critique |
6 July
9:30 – 10:20 | Giovanni Mariotti (Parma) – Social Norms and Habitual Practices: Rethinking the Artisanal Model |
10:35 – 11:25 | Jonathan Seglow (Royal Holloway) – Self-Respect as Normative Accountability |
11:40 – 12:30 | Alex Horne (Sydney) – Quasi-Authoritative Normativity |
12:30 – 14:00 | Lunch |
14:00 – 14:50 | Lizzy Ventham (Salzburg) – Social Norms and Private Matters |
15:05 – 16:35 | Keynote: Katharina Berndt Rasmussen (Stockholm & IFFS) – Modelling with Social Norms |