The Analytic-Continental Divide Conference (
1999)
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Abstract
Some would conceive philosophy as being divided into Analytic and Continental. This, as John Searle points out, is rather like conceiving America as being divided into Business and Kansas. Searle’s wise saying has not, as yet, received the theoretical attention it deserves. In both cases we have a certain domain, which is conceived as being divided into two parts, one defined in spatial terms, the other defined in terms of objects, practices or features widely spread through some spatial area. We present a draft theory of such divides, and of the agglomerations (populations, movements, systems of beliefs) which are the vehicles for their division. It offers a general, ontological theory of Us and Them, of Analytics and Continentals, of the Hegemonic Colonizing Self and the Indigenous Colonized Other.
Presented at a conference on Bridging the Analytic-Continental Divide, Tel Aviv University, January 17-20, 1999.