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CODE 65038
ACADEMIC YEAR 2019/2020
CREDITS
SCIENTIFIC DISCIPLINARY SECTOR M-FIL/06
LANGUAGE Italian
TEACHING LOCATION
  • GENOVA
SEMESTER 2° Semester
TEACHING MATERIALS AULAWEB

OVERVIEW

H2020 wishes for the formation of inclusive, innovative and reflexive societies in Europe. This course offers students a critical analysis (1) of the main thinkers in the last two centuries and (2) of the most discussed themes in the recent philosophical debate. It aims at furnishing the suitable skills in order to be involved with autonomy in this field. The historiographical criteria will be made explicit paying attention to the context of the texts that will be studied in depth.

 

AIMS AND CONTENT

LEARNING OUTCOMES

Getting acquainted with the major currents in contemporary philosophy: hermeneutics, analytical philosophy, philosophy of science, practical philosophy, post-structuralism, postmodern philosophy. Students will analyze in detail the thought and work of one or more authors.

AIMS AND LEARNING OUTCOMES

This teaching offers students the essential historical and philosophical instruments to appreciate contemporary thought with a good degree of autonomy.

 

A student’s profile expected at the end of this teaching can be expressed through the following 5 learning outcomes:

1) Knowledge and understanding. Knowledge of the most important periods, currents and figures which have characterized the Western philosophical thought from the Nineteenth century to nowadays. Understanding the basic argumentative strategies and the development of the specific lexicon in this period

2) Applying knowledge and understanding. Knowing how to contextualize the main articulation of contemporary philosophy in an adequate manner, reading the classics of the Eighteenth-Nineteenth centuries thought and providing a founded interpretation, making the historiographical criteria used clear

3) Making judgements. Acquiring critical consciousness through the reading of the texts of contemporary thinkers and of present philosophical currents

4) Communication skills. Improving the mastery of the specific lexicon of contemporary philosophy, re-elaborating it in relation to different contexts of discussion, both scientific and popular

5) Learning skills. Increasing an autonomy for investigation in the historical-philosophical field, learning to master the conceptual instruments and the classics of contemporary thought, useful to the professional activity in order to become teacher, researcher or staff emplyee.

PREREQUISITES

A basic knowledge of the history of contemporary philosophy, a familiarity with the main authors of the Eighteenth and of the Nineteenth centuries and, at least partly, of the themes they deal with are welcome

TEACHING METHODS

Issues in Contemporary Thought is a course made up of 36 hours, shared out as follows:

 

6 hours will be dedicated to introducing students to the themes and to the general methodologies of the course through traditional lectures

10 hours will be dedicated to studying in depth single fields from an historical point of view, having recourse to traditional lectures, spaced out discussions and dialogues prompted by the reading of relevant texts or by the illustration of iconographical material

10 hours will be used to analyse philosophical currents and the thinkers who belong to them. The possibility to offer the class presentations (e.g. power point) arranged with the lecturer will be gave to the students.

10 hours for the monographic investigation through a seminar work  

SYLLABUS/CONTENT

After a presentation of the historiographical criteria of the Anglo-American analytic authors, the schedule of the teaching provides the discussion of the following currents, paying attention to the context of their beginning and making reference to the resemblances, to the differences and to the relationship between them:

  • Bentham’s and Mill’s utilitarianism
  • European philosophy after Hegel
  • the influence of the economic and evolutionist theories
  • America pragmatism
  • logical positivism
  • the origin and the development of analytic philosophy
  • the philosophical schools in continental Europe until Habermas

 

Concerning the historical treatment of cross-themes, five of the following fields will be taken into consideration, paying attention to the interests of the students:

  • logic
  • philosophy of language
  • epistemology
  • ontology and metaphysics
  • philosophy of mind
  • ethics
  • aesthetics
  • political philosophy
  • philosophy of religion

 

In this academic year a further study will regard the philosophical theology devoloped into the analytic field and encouraged by Fergus Kerr under the influenced of Wittgenstein. Some of its favoured themes are ascribable to epistemology, the philosophy of mind and the philosophical anthropology.

RECOMMENDED READING/BIBLIOGRAPHY

A. Kenny, Nuova storia della filosofia occidentale. Filosofie dell’età contemporanea, Einaudi, Torino 2013

F. Kerr, La teologia dopo Wittgenstein, Queriniana, Brescia 1992

M. Damonte, Un contributo alla storiografia della filosofia analitica, in R. Davies (a cura di), Analisi. Annuario della Società Italiana di Filosofia Analitica 2011, Mimesis, Milano-Udine 2011, pp. 331-342

TEACHERS AND EXAM BOARD

Exam Board

MARCO DAMONTE (President)

ELISABETTA CATTANEI

SIMONA LANGELLA

LETTERIO MAURO

LESSONS

LESSONS START

24 February 2020

EXAMS

EXAM DESCRIPTION

Oral exam through a single interview scheduled after the end of the lessons. It concerns themes dealt with during the course. Students who have attended the course (at least 26 hours) or that have produced a presentation and that have actively participated in the debates proposed during lessons will be exonerated from some part of the syllabus.

ASSESSMENT METHODS

During the oral exam the level of the knowledge of the themes discussed and the skill of autonomous processing of the proposed content will be checked. In particular evaluation will be based on:

  • quality of the exposition as effectiveness and fluency (max. 5/30)
  • correctness and appropriateness of the specific lexicon (max. 5/30)
  • ability concerning the critical thinking and its usage reacting to possible objections (max. 5/30)
  • skills in correctly setting the authors and the texts studied in their historical-cultural context (max. 10/30)
  • skills in personal processing and integrating the subjects of the course with competences that the candidate already possessed  (max. 5/30)

  

Exam schedule

Data appello Orario Luogo Degree type Note
16/01/2020 10:00 GENOVA Orale
16/01/2020 15:00 GENOVA Orale
06/02/2020 10:00 GENOVA Orale
06/02/2020 15:00 GENOVA Orale
13/05/2020 15:00 GENOVA Orale
15/05/2020 10:00 GENOVA Orale
11/06/2020 10:00 GENOVA Orale
11/06/2020 15:00 GENOVA Orale
02/07/2020 10:00 GENOVA Orale
02/07/2020 15:00 GENOVA Orale
23/07/2020 10:00 GENOVA Orale
23/07/2020 15:00 GENOVA Orale
10/09/2020 10:00 GENOVA Orale
10/09/2020 15:00 GENOVA Orale

FURTHER INFORMATION

Literature for possible wider study and material for participating in the seminar sessions will be furnished by the lecturer during lessons and will be published on AulaWeb.

For Erasmus students the following other language bibliography can be useful:

A. Kenny, A New History of Western Philosophy. Vol. IV. Philosophy in the Modern World, Oxford University Press, Oxford 2007

F. Kerr, Theology after Wittgenstein, Basil Blackwell, Oxford 1986

Students who cannot attend lessons can get in touch with the lecturer (e-mail: marco.damonte@unige.it; 010-2099775).