STORIA DELLA FILOSOFIA CONTEMPORANEA I

Anno accademico
2023/2024 Programmi anni precedenti
Titolo corso in inglese
HISTORY OF CONTEMPORARY PHILOSOPHY - I
Codice insegnamento
FT0209 (AF:377064 AR:257561)
Modalità
In presenza
Crediti formativi universitari
6 su 12 di STORIA DELLA FILOSOFIA CONTEMPORANEA
Livello laurea
Laurea
Settore scientifico disciplinare
M-FIL/06
Periodo
3° Periodo
Anno corso
2
Spazio Moodle
Link allo spazio del corso
L'insegnamento ricade tra quelli di base comuni del corso di laurea in filosofia e ha lo scopo di fornire agli studenti necessari strumenti metodologici per un apprendimento critico delle principali problematiche storico-filosofiche dell'epoca contemporanea, anche in connessione con altri saperi e ambiti di ricerca. In particolare gli obiettivi dell'insegnamento sono rivolti all'acquisizione della comprensione, della conoscenza e dell'interpretazione critica dei principali testi filosofici della contemporaneità.


Il corso si propone di fornire una conoscenza approfondita dei filosofi e dei contesti storico-culturali di maggiore rilievo, dei problemi dell'epoca contemporanea e dell'interrelazione oggi sempre più stretta tra i vari saperi "specialistici".
Per tali motivi compito didattico è quello di fornire conoscenze e formare capacità di comprensione affinché lo studente possa costruirsi un'autonomia critica di giudizio e corrette abilità linguistiche e comunicative.
Conoscenza generale dei processi e delle dinamiche della storia filosofia moderna.
Course title: Dialectics as a critical model: crisis thinking, crisis of thinking

Description: From a major device of Sophist rhetoric to a combined process of criticism and foundation proper to a realism that does not want to embrace correspondentialist theories of truth, dialectics was certainly one of the most decisive and controversial philosophical operations of the 19th and 20th centuries. Its consolidation as a critical device modified not only the configurations of theory, but opened up real possibilities in the field of practices of social transformation. A considerable part of the history of social revolutions in the 20th century was described, by its own agents, through the mobilization of dialectics.
However, often reduced to a bureaucratic 'method', other times denounced as the expression of modern reason's aspirations to identity without remainders, dialectics has, in recent decades, been discredited for allegedly being a figure of a thought incapable of relating to difference and singularity. This leaves the question of whether the understanding of dialectics currently hegemonic effectively takes into account the potential that emerges from the texts of its main authors.
With this question in mind, this course aims to rethink dialectics as a privileged form of critical thinking from the rereading of three of its main protagonists: Hegel, Marx and Adorno. The aim is to defend the hypothesis that, between Hegelian dialectics, Marxist dialectics and negative dialectics, the lines of continuity are deeper than they initially appear. It is enough to be more attentive to the relationship between dialectics and social crises. Hegelian dialectics is the dialectics necessary for the historical possibilities of the early nineteenth century, just as Marxist dialectics is for the mid-nineteenth century and negative dialectics is for the late twentieth century. As an ontology whose systems of position and presupposition change in response to the modifications of historical configurations, as an "ontology in situation", dialectics is reoriented in continuous movement.
In this course, we will operate through a dynamic of permanent confrontation in which dialectical criticism will be confronted with important questions coming from sectors of 19th and 20th century philosophy. This will allow us to address the central question of this course, namely: is it possible to understand dialectics as a fundamental critical model for the historical configurations of the present, with its crises, ruptures and paralysis?

Bibliography for the exam:

ADORNO, Theodor et HORKHEIMER, Max; Dialectic of Enlightenment, London: Verso, 1998 (Dialettica dell’Illuminismo, Einaudi, 2010)
HEGEL, G.W.F.; The phenomenology of Spirit, Cambridge University Press, 2019 (Fenomenologia dello spirito, Bompiani, 2000)
MARX, Karl; Capital: a critique of political economy (volume I), Penguin Classics, 1992 (Il Capitale, volume I, UTET, 2017).
Course title: Dialectics as a critical model: crisis thinking, crisis of thinking

Description: From a major device of Sophist rhetoric to a combined process of criticism and foundation proper to a realism that does not want to embrace correspondentialist theories of truth, dialectics was certainly one of the most decisive and controversial philosophical operations of the 19th and 20th centuries. Its consolidation as a critical device modified not only the configurations of theory, but opened up real possibilities in the field of practices of social transformation. A considerable part of the history of social revolutions in the 20th century was described, by its own agents, through the mobilization of dialectics.
However, often reduced to a bureaucratic 'method', other times denounced as the expression of modern reason's aspirations to identity without remainders, dialectics has, in recent decades, been discredited for allegedly being a figure of a thought incapable of relating to difference and singularity. This leaves the question of whether the understanding of dialectics currently hegemonic effectively takes into account the potential that emerges from the texts of its main authors.
With this question in mind, this course aims to rethink dialectics as a privileged form of critical thinking from the rereading of three of its main protagonists: Hegel, Marx and Adorno. The aim is to defend the hypothesis that, between Hegelian dialectics, Marxist dialectics and negative dialectics, the lines of continuity are deeper than they initially appear. It is enough to be more attentive to the relationship between dialectics and social crises. Hegelian dialectics is the dialectics necessary for the historical possibilities of the early nineteenth century, just as Marxist dialectics is for the mid-nineteenth century and negative dialectics is for the late twentieth century. As an ontology whose systems of position and presupposition change in response to the modifications of historical configurations, as an "ontology in situation", dialectics is reoriented in continuous movement.
In this course, we will operate through a dynamic of permanent confrontation in which dialectical criticism will be confronted with important questions coming from sectors of 19th and 20th century philosophy. This will allow us to address the central question of this course, namely: is it possible to understand dialectics as a fundamental critical model for the historical configurations of the present, with its crises, ruptures and paralysis?

Bibliography for the exam:

ADORNO, Theodor et HORKHEIMER, Max; Dialectic of Enlightenment, London: Verso, 1998 (Dialettica dell’Illuminismo, Einaudi, 2010).
HEGEL, G.W.F.; The phenomenology of Spirit, Cambridge University Press, 2019 (Fenomenologia dello spirito, Bompiani, 2000).
MARX, Karl; Capital: a critique of political economy (volume I), Penguin Classics, 1992 (Il Capitale, volume I, UTET, 2017).
La valutazione degli studenti terrà conto senz'altro della partecipazione alle relazioni e alle discussioni in classe.
Lezioni frontali, commento a testi scelti, discussioni collettive.
Italiano
orale
Programma definitivo.
Data ultima modifica programma: 13/09/2023