Program Unit In-person November Annual Meeting 2026

Global-Critical Philosophy of Religion Unit

Call for Proposals

Annual meeting, co-sponsor, SACP & GCPR (Global-Critical Philosophy of Religion Unit)

Womb Cosmologies: A Cross-Cultural Conversation

The metaphor and notion of womb have been the focus of inquiry and theorization in many cosmological and philosophical systems. The Chinese classic Daodejing frequently alludes to the metaphor of the womb/vagina as the generative force of the cosmos (mother of all things), e.g., the spirit of the valley and the gate of the obscure she-best. The Arabic term for compassion/mercy raḥama comes from the root raḥm (womb). The Buddhist term for universal Buddha-nature, tathāgatagarbha, is literally the womb (garbha) of the thus-gone/come-one. This co-sponsored panel invites scholars and philosophers to join a cross-cultural conversation about different womb cosmologies, their relations to love ethics, as well as their promises in bringing forth a friendlier future.

 

Annual meeting, co-sponsor ANT of REL & GCPR

Global Philosophies of Religion beyond the Text 

In collaboration with the Global-Critical Philosophy of Religion Unit, we seek to sponsor a panel engaging with non-textual and non-Western sources for the philosophy of religion. Papers should consider forms of lived religious reasoning, argumentation, or enactment from sources other than texts, such as oral traditions, rituals, performances, arts, etc. We imagine papers that explore “philosophies from below,” including non-hegemonic and marginalized systems of knowledge, indigenous ways of knowing, conspiracy and other forms of stigmatized knowledge, peripheral epistemologies, etc., and that treat those forms of knowledge as valuable resources for a cross-cultural inquiries in the philosophy of religion.

 

Annual meeting, GCPR session (potential co-sponsor African Religions, TBD after submissions)
African and Afro-diasporic philosophy of religion

The field of African philosophy of religion, including scholarship on African traditional religions, Christianity and Islam in the African continent, or on syncretic expressions like Candomblé and Umbanda in South America, or like Haitian Vodou, Cuban Santería and Trinidadian Orisha in the Caribbeans, to quote but a few, is a rapidly expanding one.

The past decade has notably seen overviews that classify the concept of God in African traditional religions as resulting in modified monotheisms with either theistic or non-theistic conceptions of a limited-God, up to panentheism (Aga Adaga, Emmanuel Ofuasia); as well as scholarship on the implications that the concept of God or of that of ancestor bear on the meaning of life (Thaddeus Metz); or the burgeoning of studies that examine how ritual-centric practices, embodied epistemologies and syncretic dynamics can enrich philosophical debates on metaphysics and epistemology (José Eduardo Porcher).

This panel is an invitation to consider how selected issues and debates within this rich scholarship in the field of African and Afro-diasporic philosophy of religion can question the categories and expand the scope and methods of traditional philosophy of religion.

Statement of Purpose

The Global-Critical Philosophy of Religion (GCPR) Unit seeks to globalize and otherwise diversify the contents, categories, and methods of philosophy of religion, by critically reflecting on current practices of the field, by developing conceptual frameworks for cross-cultural philosophizing, and by exploring innovative methods for cross-pollination between religio-philosophical traditions.

GCPR is “global” and “critical” in distinctive ways—global, in facilitating panels and sessions that are always populated by scholars representing different religio-philosophical traditions; critical, in interrogating the vocabularies and methodologies used to carry out such cross-cultural, inter-religious philosophizing. Our two key goals follow from this mission: first, to offer and reflect on new categories of inquiry for cross-cultural, inter-religious philosophy of religion; second, to explore and implement new methods for philosophizing about religion cross-culturally and inter-religiously. This, in turn, involves experimenting with session formats that are designed to foster conversations that go beyond “description” or “presentation” to interactive philosophizing about religion, including the pre-circulation of papers, designing sessions that cultivate engagement between panelists, and empowering moderators to lead conversations into “deeper” hermeneutic, phenomenological, comparative, and evaluative topics and issues.

Chair Mail Dates
Agnieszka Rostalska arostalska@gmail.com - View
Nathan R. B. Loewen nrloewen@ua.edu - View
Review Process: Participant names are visible to chairs and steering committee members at all times
The Review Process will be a continued dialogue between the chairs and the members of the steering committee.