HISTORY OF PHILOSOPHY
Academic Year 2020/2021 - 1° Year - Curriculum Educatore nei servizi per l'infanziaLearning Objectives
The course proposes a historical and critical analysis of modern philosophical thought. It has three general training objectives: to provide knowledge about the authors and the subjects dealt with; to provide philosophical tools to improve self-knowledge and relationship with others; to stimulate critical and argumentative skills regarding some current problems (work, social conditioning, the needs of the person, dialogue between science and society on topics of general interest, etc.).
To this end, the course is divided into two sections: an "institutional part" and a "monographic part".
The institutional part is dedicated to the founding authors of modern philosophical thought, from Bruno to Kant, with a brief foray into the 19th century dedicated to Nietzsche. It will deal with some nodal points of reflection around man, Nature, the possibility of knowing the world and oneself, happiness and other aspects of life and relationship with others.
The monographic course (thematic in-depth analysis) is dedicated to the relationship between the individual and society, with particular reference to three aspects: 1. the psychic dimension of the individual and the "language" through which it expresses itself: a study aimed at improving self-awareness, self-confidence and self-confidence; 2. the tension between personal needs and the social context;
3. dialogue between philosophy and psychology to improve the relationship with oneself and with others.
The first in-depth study is entitled "From the cosmos to the sea of consciousness. Myths, philosophy, nature and the discovery of one's Self"; the second is entitled "Nature, personal development and happiness. Freud, Marcuse and the Principle of Reality"; the third is entitled "Instructions to make oneself unhappy: philosophical reflections to live better with oneself and with others".
Course Structure
1. Lessons with slide projection; 2. interactive work with the students during the lessons; 3. summary and evaluation of learning (these are not "ongoing tests" but only colloquial comparisons that are held at the beginning of each lesson and which serve to have a general check of the progress of the learning and the ability to intervene on the topics already covered.
Students and female students who will carry out group work in the classroom (activities reserved only for those attending lessons) may be exempted from exhibiting one or more texts during the final exam, according to the procedures that will be communicated in class. This solution is optional and will be confirmed in relation to the number of students attending. In any case, it only applies to students who take the exam by the end of September.
If the teaching is given in mixed mode or at a distance, due to the Covid emergency, the necessary variations may be introduced with respect to what has been stated previously, in order to respect the program foreseen and reported in the syllabus. The learning verification can also be carried out electronically, should the conditions require it.
Detailed Course Content
The course includes an institutional part (manual) and an in-depth part (monographic part).
The institutional part provides a basic knowledge of the history of Western philosophy, with particular reference to the authors and currents listed below: Giordano Bruno; Scientific thought in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries: Copernicus, Brahe, Kepler, Galilei, Newton; Modern philosophy: Bacon, Descartes, Cartesianism and Jansenism, Hobbes, Pascal, Spinoza, Locke, Leibniz, Vico, Berkeley, Hume, the Enlightenment, Kant, Nietzsche; the contrast between rationalism and empiricism.
The monographic part is dedicated to the relationship between the individual and society and foresees three thematic in-depth studies: the first is entitled "From the cosmos to the sea of consciousness. Myths, philosophy, nature and the discovery of one's Self" and will be carried out along the lines proposed in the book Dal cosmo al mare (book 2); the second is entitled "Nature, personal development and happiness. Freud, Marcuse and the Principle of Reality" and will be analysed through a reading and group work in the classroom of Eros and Civilization (book 3); the third is entitled "Instructions to make oneself unhappy: philosophical reflections to live better with oneself and with others" and will be developed through reading and group work in the classroom of Paul Watzlawick's book indicated among the recommended texts (book 4).
Textbook Information
RECOMMENDED TEXTS
- Mori, History of Modern Philosophy, Laterza, 2019 [290 pages; also available in ebook format]
- E. Coco, Dal cosmo al mare. La naturalizzazione del mito e la funzione filosofica, Olschki, 2017 [130 pages]
TEXTS TO BE EXHIBITED FOR THE EXAM ONLY FOR THOSE WHO DO NOT CARRY OUT GROUP WORK IN THE CLASSROOM
3. H. Marcuse, Eros e civiltà, Einaudi, 2001 [230 pages; it is possible to use also the English edition]
4. P. Watzlawick, Istruzioni per rendersi infelici, Feltrinelli, 2013 [112 pages]
POWER POINT of the lessons and NOTES in PDF format, available on the Studium platform.