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Call For Papers | Process Philosophy in Under-Explored Traditions in Philosophical History

Call For Papers | Process Philosophy in Under-Explored Traditions in Philosophical History

There are two dominant streams for talking about reality in the history of metaphysical thought – substance and process. These two streams are noticeable in virtually all traditions but the former seems to have gained more attention at the expense of the latter which offers a more robust and insightful framework for codifying reality. The metaphysical framework of substance has been elevated as absolute and universal in humanity’s comprehension of the self and the world. That metaphysical framework fails in providing a springboard on topics such as value and conscious nature of all ontological entities. As a result, topics such as the cellular basis of consciousness or biopsychism in plant neurobiology, panpsychism and its impact over the inter-relationship among all entities for environmental stability have not received penetrating and convincing analysis from the substance-based perspective. This is why an alternative framework in process metaphysics as broadly construed in all religious and philosophic traditions – African, Oriental, Anglo-American, and Continental become pertinent. 

In its most commonly shared formulation, process philosophy, regardless of tradition, lays emphasis on vital force, flux, biopsychism, dynamism, relationality and interconnection among entities such that nothing stands in isolation (see Mesle 2008; Ivakhkiv 2018). Among process philosophers, there is a shared acknowledgement that reality is ‘becoming’ and an interconnected web such that no event stands in isolation. Process philosophers eschew the mainstream and dominant outlook in traditional metaphysics that changelessness implies perfection (see Rescher 1996; Mesle 2008). Extant scholarship offers a more robust explanation for topics like ecology (Ivakhiv 2018; Maffie 2015; McLeod 2023), consciousness (Griffin 2007; Raud 2021; Zu 2025), agency (Valmisa 2025), relationality (Chimakonam & Ogbonnaya 2021; Maffie 2015; McLeod 2023), mystical experiences (Dambrowski 2023), and Being (Ofuasia 2024). These are hot topics that signal the importance of such metaphysics for contemporary scholarship. In spite of this common ground, process scholars in the afore-mentioned philosophical traditions have never engaged one another critically.

This conference will therefore be the first to birth this long overdue intellectual exchange as it offers an improved metaphysical framework for value and consciousness in all ontological entities to address various concerns that are facing humanity: economy, political, and environmental. Although there are hesitant answers to some of these global challenges facing humanity, the influence of substance-based analysis has yet to offer penetrative answers, in addition to the almost lack of interaction among scholars of process to explore their common ground for a common voice in the way that substance thought has done over the centuries.

Based on the foregoing established gap, abstracts, not more than 250 words, are invited from scholars and researchers of all traditions in philosophic history, who are interested in any of the sub-themes coverage of the Conference, as listed below.

There are no registration fees but all participants and observers must register before they can get the links to the talks/panels. This will be communicated in due course. For further information, please relate with Dr. Chukwueloka Uduagwu via email: cuduagwu@noun.edu.ng. More information will be made available to participants.

Note: all abstracts for the online conference MUST be submitted via the form linked on the below button.

Conference Sub-Themes

  • Folk wisdom and processism in the history of philosophy
  • Alternative logics and philosophy of becoming and relationality
  • Selfhood and process philosophy
  • Processism in Conversation: African, oriental, and Anglo-American
  • Being and relationality in history of philosophy
  • Pessimism, meaningfulness, and becoming
  • Vitalism, biopsychism, sentience, and panpsychism
  • Sagacity and processism in all philosophic: African, Eastern & Western
  • Processism and Islam
  • Quantum mechanics and process-relational philosophy
  • Electromagnetism, energy and relationality
  • Relationality and vitalism in philosophy of medicine
  • Processism in Buddhist and Hindu thought systems
  • Relationality and philosophy of action
  • Process theology and the nature of God in classical theology
  • Processism in Medieval Christian theology
  • Process theology and Indian religious systems and practices
  • Afro-Brazilian Religions and Process theology
  • Identity, (trans)gender and feminism in relational and vitalist contexts
  • Process philosophy and the question of alternative systems of logic
  • Africana philosophy and processism
  • Death and immortality in Afro-Indo process thoughts
  • Process-relational implications for environmental philosophy
  • Time and processism in Africa and beyond
  • Relational field metaphysics
  • The subjectivist principle and the reformed subjectivist principle

Confirmed Key Speakers

Jonathan O. Chimakonam – University of Pretoria, South Africa & President, Conversational Society of Philosophy, University of Calabar, Nigeria

Mercedes Valmisa Oviedo – Gettysburg College, USA

Daniel A. Dombrowski – Seattle University, USA & Editor-in-chief, Process Studies

Rein Raud – Tallinn University, Estonia

Jessica Xiaomin Zu – University of Southern California, USA & SACP Program Chair, American Academy of Religion

James Maffie – University of Maryland, USA

Alexus McLeod – Indiana University, USA & Editor-in-Chief, The Philosophical Forum

Members of the Conference LoC

Emmanuel Ofuasia – LoC Convener/Chair (emmanuel.ofuasia@up.ac.za)

Chukwueloka S. Uduagwu – Media & Publicities (cuduagwu@noun.edu.ng)

Abhishek Tripathi– Liaison officer (abhishektripathi190@gmail.com)

Important Dates

Jan 16, 2026

Abstracts submission deadline

Feb 13, 2026

Acceptance notification

Apr 15, 2026

Paper submission ends

May 19-21, 2026

Online conference takes place

Jul 31, 2026

Deadline for submission of papers for review and publication consideration

For enquires, please e-mail: cuduagwu@noun.edu.ng

References

Chimakonam, J. O. & Ogbonnaya, L.U. (2021). African metaphysics, epistemology and a new logic: A Decolonial approach to philosophy. Palgrave.

Dombrowski, D. (2023). Process Mysticism. SUNY Press.

Griffin, D.R. (2007). Whitehead’s Radically Different Postmodern Philosophy: An Argument for its Contemporary Relevance. SUNY Press.

Ivakhiv, A. (2018). Shadowing the Anthropocene: Eco-Realism for Turbulent Times. Punctum Books

Maffie, J. (2015). Aztec Philosophy: Understanding a World in Motion. University Press of Colorado.

McLeod, A. (2023). An Introduction to Mesoamerican Philosophy. Cambridge University Press.

Mesle, R. C. (2008). Process-Relational Philosophy: An Introduction to Alfred North Whitehead. Templeton Foundation Press.

Ofuasia, E. (2024). Ìwà: The process-relational dimension to African metaphysics. Springer Verlag

Raud, R. (2021). Being in Flux: A Post-Athropocentric Ontology of the Self. Polity.

Rescher, N. (1996). Process Metaphysics: An Introduction to Process Philosophy. SUNY Press.

Valmisa, M. (2025). All Things Act. Oxford University Press.

Whitehead, A.N. (1929 [1978]). Process and reality: An essay in cosmology. The Free Press.

Zu, J. (2025). Just Awakening: Yogācāra Social Philosophy in Modern China. Columbia University Press.

Emmanuel Ofuasia

Dr. Emmanuel Ofuasia is Decoloniality Research Group Associate at the University of Pretoria, South Africa. He specializes in: Process Ontology, African Philosophy of Religion, African Logic, Ifá Studies, and Animal Rights. He is the most published Nigerian on the subject of Process Ontology and has received research grants from organizations and institutions such as the Birmingham Centre for Philosophy of Religion in conjunction with the John Templeton Foundation and Culture and Animal Foundation (CAF). Dr. Ofuasia’s work has appeared in numerous journals, including Process Studies, and his first monograph, Ìwà: The Process-Relational Dimension to African Metaphysics, was published by Springer Cham in 2024.