Call for papers, vol. 17
Call for papers for vol. 17 of Naturaleza y Libertad
Read more about Call for papers, vol. 17Naturaleza y libertad publishes exclusively scientific material (papers, notes and commentaries, book reviews) related to the subject matter to which its title refers, which includes:
A distinctive feature of Naturaleza y Libertad is the importance it attaches to interdisciplinary and transdisciplinary aspects, which makes it a useful instrument to try to overcome the age-old separation between science and humanities.
The sequence of the publication is annual. In addition to the publication of miscellaneous issues, monographic issues are planned as well.
The journal publishes papers in Spanish and English, although occasionally texts may be published in other languages of the Iberian Peninsula, as well as in other international languages that are common vehicles for the expression of scientific knowledge.
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Call for papers for vol. 17 of Naturaleza y Libertad
Read More Read more about Call for papers, vol. 17
Monographic issue: Kant, Nature, Freedom
Editor: Pedro Jesús Teruel
Immanuel Kant has many things in common with Nature & Freedom. The journal was launched in 2012 to address two main lines of research. The first of these covers the philosophy of nature, with a special emphasis on determining the place occupied by human beings in the universe. This is also a constant in Kant’s work: his interest in Nature, its ontology and its processes, from his pre-critical work —in which this constituted a guiding thread— to the transcendental modulation in his critical period and the rethinking of all this in the writings of his mature years. The second of the journal’s main interests is philosophical anthropology, paying particular attention to those disciplines that study human beings as part of nature, ranging from biology, biochemistry and neuroscience to artificial intelligence and the sciences of complexity. The importance that Nature & Freedom attaches to interdisciplinarity and transdisciplinarity —a useful tool for trying to overcome the centuries-old separation between the sciences and the humanities— can also be ascribed to Kant. All of this establishes links between the journal’s approach and the work of the philosopher of Königsberg; in some ways, they reflect each other. Hence, the tercentenary of Immanuel Kant’s birth provides an excellent occasion for a special issue that takes this game of mirrors into account.
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