Heidelberg School of Education
Voßstraße 2
Gebäude 4330
69115 Heidelberg
Deutschland
PUBLIC KEYNOTE BY PROF. DR. DR. THOMAS FUCHS, HEIDELBERG UNIVERSITY

The concept of conviviality is proposed to denote the sense of a primary connectedness with the living environment through our own sense of aliveness and embodiment. It includes three interconnected aspects:
- an epistemological aspect, according to which we can only recognize other living beings in their selfhood and distinguish them from inanimate things as fellow creatures, from the experience of our shared bodily existence.
- a natural philosophical and ecological aspect, which refers to the fundamental interdependence of all living beings;
- an ethical aspect, in which our kinship and connectedness with living beings be-comes the basis for an attitude of care and commitment towards them.
All three aspects are based on our embodiment which points to the fundamentally relational character of our existence, our life in relationships and in ecological contexts. Thus, our own experience of corporeality and aliveness can become the basis of an ecological ethic.
ABOUT THOMAS FUCHS
Prof. Dr. Dr. Thomas Fuchs is Karl Jaspers Professor of Philosophical Foundations of Psychiatry and Psychotherapy at Heidelberg University. A doctor of medicine, philosopher and psychiatrist, his research combines phenomenological psychopathology, anthropology and cognitive neuroscience with questions of ethics in psychiatry and medicine.
After studying medicine, philosophy and the history of science in Munich and working as a psychiatrist at the Technical University of Munich and Heidelberg University Hospital, he qualified as a professor of psychiatry and philosophy.
He has received numerous awards for his work, including the Margrit Egnér Prize for Anthropological Psychology (2012) and the Erich Fromm Prize for Humanistic Psychology (2024).