Seventh International Conference on Philosophy and Meaning in Life
June 25-27, 2025

Ӱԭ the Conference
Understood as a cluster of questions about the ultimate value and intelligibility of human existence, the topic of life’s meaning has always been an important part of philosophical inquiry, from ancient philosophers’ reflections on what characterizes the happiest form of life, to later philosophers’ concerns about the highest good in life, to modern philosophers’ attempts to understand such things as the vocation of humanity and the sense or absurdity of distinctly human endeavours.
In recent decades, there has been a notable resurgence worldwide of professional philosophical interest in life’s meaning, so understood. And the International Conference on Philosophy and Meaning in Life has become the most prominent annual venue for sharing the latest contributions to this resurgence. We are very pleased, accordingly, to announce our intention to host the next (and first North American) installment of the conference at Ӱԭ University.
Keynote Speakers
Program
The conference program can be downloaded here.
Registration & Fees
For regular (i.e., non-student) conference participants, the registration fee will be $200 (Canadian dollars) + the required 13% HST tax = $226. For student (including postdoctoral fellow) participants, the fee is $100 + HST = $113. The conference buffet dinner is included in the registration fee; however, if you wish to bring a guest to the dinner, there will be an extra charge of $35 + HST = $39.55.
We ask conference participants to register for the conference by paying their registration fees by May 15.
Subject to space limitations, students, faculty, and staff at Ӱԭ University are welcome to attend any of the conference presentations without registering.
Ӱԭ Ottawa and Ӱԭ University
Ottawa is Canada’s capital city, and features a number of tourist attractions. While here, for example, you can take a guided tour of the federal parliament buildings on , visit , or spend some time exploring the vibrant, bustling downtown. You might even consider one of your local organizer’s favourite pastimes, hiking the trails in the National Capital Commission’s nearby , which is just across the Ottawa River. For more information on Ottawa’s many tourist attractions, please visit .
Situated on a traditional, unceded territory of the Algonquin people, Ӱԭ University is located between the historic and Rideau River, about seven kilometers from the city’s downtown area.
There are no hotels within walking distance of the university, so if you are staying in a hotel (in the downtown area, say) you will want consider taxi services or public transportation for getting to and from the conference each day. Three prominent taxi services in Ottawa are , , and . also offers significant service throughout the city.
is Ottawa’s public transit service, which runs buses, paratransit, and some light rail transit. You can plan your trip to and from the university campus, and get information about fares, with OC Transpo’s helpful The main stop for buses coming into the university (“Ӱԭ U”), as well as the university’s light rail station (“Ӱԭ”), are on Campus Avenue. To plot your route to this stop or station with the Travel Planner, just enter “Ӱԭ University” in the destination box.
If you would prefer to stay on the university campus for the duration of the conference, the university’s Conference Services offers guest accommodations in the campus residences throughout the summer. Please visit for more information, or to book your room or suite.
Abstract Submission
Conference organizers welcome the submission of abstracts for presentations at this installment of the conference. Abstracts may be up to 500 words in total. Particular abstract topics may be about any issue of relevance to the ultimate value and intelligibility of human existence, including (but certainly not limited to) the relationship between love and life’s meaning, the role of reconciliation in a meaningful life, aesthetic aspects of meaning, moral requirements on a meaningful life, meaning and well-being in life, the impact of suffering on a meaningful life, potential threats to meaning from artificial intelligence, narrative-based concepts of meaning, tradition as a source of meaning, the phenomenology of meaning, meaning in the history of philosophy, memory and meaning, and making sense of cosmic perspectives on meaning.
To submit your abstract, please fill out the form below, titled Abstract Submission Form. You will have until January 15, 2025 to submit your abstract. Submitted abstracts will then be evaluated by the conference’s steering committee, and submitters will be informed about whether their abstracts have been selected for inclusion on the conference program by early March, 2025. We expect the official program to be finalized shortly thereafter, by the middle of that month.
Abstract Submission Form
To submit your abstract, please fill out this form. You will have until January 15, 2025 to submit your abstract. Your abstract should be in English, which will be the language of the conference presentations.
Sponsors
Department of Philosophy, Ӱԭ University
Ethics and Public Affairs Program, Ӱԭ University
Centre on Values and Ethics, Ӱԭ University
Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences, Ӱԭ University
Organizers
Local organizer: David Matheson (Ӱԭ University)
Steering committee:
Kiki Berk (Southern New Hampshire University)
Nobuo Kurata (Hokkaido University)
Iddo Landau (University of Haifa)
Thaddeus Metz (University of Pretoria)
Masahiro Morioka (Waseda University)
Tatsuya Murayama (Tohoku University)
Yujin Nagasawa (University of Oklahoma)
Rivka Weinberg (Scripps College)
Contact

If you have any questions about the conference, please feel free to contact the local organizer at david.matheson@carleton.ca.