Philosophy Festival

with Katherine Angel, Helen Macdonald, Philippe Van Parijs, Thomas Hertog, Marjolein de Boer e.a.
Sat 30/03/2024 - 13:30
Daytime Show

Ticket prices

  • € 20 - € 7 (students)
  • The ticket price includes coffee, fruit juice or water between 3pm - 4pm in STUK.
    Between the day programme and the evening programme, you can eat in the STUK café at democratic prices.

This year, the Philosophy Festival starts at the Schouwburg and continues at STUK. Participants can also opt for an all-English series of afternoon sessions.

Theme: Chaos

Since its inception, philosophy has sought to bring order out of chaos. Distrust appearances, Plato claimed, and discover the stability behind apparent anarchy. Even today, when technological, cultural and political upheaval makes the world uncertain again, we often seek for fixed constructions under which to find shelter.

Still, some philosophers have appreciated and even commended the chaotic. Heraclitus’ slogan that ‘one never steps into the same river twice’ continues to capture the imagination. Disorder is sometimes frightening but it can also enable an unprecedented freedom to change the world and ourself.

13.30 - 15.00 h - Schouwburg

Tomorrow Sex Will Be Good Again – with Freud

This year’s Philosophy Festival (aka Feest van de Filosofie) revolves around the risks, possibilities and temptations of chaos. British philosopher and essayist Katherine Angel kicks off with a lecture on the fragile world of desires, where playing with the boundaries of chaos is central.

15:00 - 16:00 h - Coffee break in STUK
Coffee, fruit juice or water is included in your ticket.

from 16.00 h - STUK

Helen Macdonald, known for her literary-scientific memoir H is for hawk, joins philosopher Sylvia Wenmackers in a conversation about the power of science fiction. How can the imagination of alternative worlds open up new perspectives in the here and now? 

Stefan Hertmans reflects on how artists draw inspiration from their environment, without ever reducing themselves to it. 

In a musical lecture, Tomas Serrien explores how we recognize music in the auditory chaos of our lives. With which expectations do we listen to music, and which sounds threaten to escape us? 

Physicist Thomas Hertog draws philosophical lessons from his pioneering research into the big bang that shaped the laws of the natural world.

Culturally and politically, too, we are confronted with chaos, including the chaos of multilingualism in our metropolises – the modern Tower of Babel. Philippe Van Parijs and Ilke Adam discuss how we can transform this linguistic chaos into positive energy. 

Tom-Jan Meeus dissects the ‘spectacular emptiness’ of the current political landscape, where politicians increasingly make spectacular proposals that turn out to be meaningless a week later. Steven Vanackere , former philosophy student and director of the National Bank of Belgium interviews Tom-Jan Meeus.

Finally, we return to the relationship to ourselves, when Marjolein de Boer sheds a philosophical light on our ageing body which confronts us with our inability to put time on pause.

Children are also welcome to come and philosophise.

DIVE INTO THE DETAIL PROGRAMME.

More info

an initiative of the Institute of Philosophy (KU Leuven), in collaboration with STUK , 30CC and Dito vzw

this event is part of the Maand van de Filosofie and realised with the support of Uitgeverij Peeters