Freedom of research and public use of reason: developing critical thinking
through four philosophical approaches

Prof. Mario Vergani
Prof. Vittorio Morfino
Dr. Stefano Pippa
Dr. Didier Contadini

English

The cycle of lectures is designed as an exercise of critical thinking, which
improves reflexive and argumentative abilities.

Which social and institutional conditions affect research practices? What
effects in the political sphere and in the context of public communication
does the exercise of different research practices have to deal with?

This year, the seminar will provide PhD students with some philosophical approaches to analyse in depth this classical subject with reference to some
issues of the current public debate. Each lecture will start with a brief presentation of some fundamental theses and models of analysis of the topic by the speakers, followed by a discussion.

The lectures are open to first, second, and third year doctoral students working in scientific, humanistic, and technological areas of research. The cycle of lectures is organized in the context of the PhD program “Education in the Contemporary Society”, Department of Human Sciences for Education. The speakers will provide the attendants short texts and/or video material to read before the lecture.

The lessons will be held in English.

1) 23rd February, 15:00-17:00
Prof. Vittorio Morfino
Freedom of thought in Spinoza

aula U1-11

My talk will focus on the text that in modernity constitutes a true bastion of freedom of thought, speech and research: the Theologico-Political Treatise and in particular its chapter 20. I will try to show the specific theoretical strategy through which Spinoza defends freedom of thought and speech: not from the point of view of the individual, for whom this freedom would be an inalienable right, but from the point of view of the state, which, by wanting to censor it, would end up making enemies of its citizens and losing legitimacy in front of them.

2) 23rd March, 15:00-17:00
Prof. Mario Vergani
Freedom of research without conditions and university institutional conditions

aula U1-11

The university enunciates its mission as unconditional freedom of research, but this is realised under certain conditions, institutional, pedagogical, legal, economic, political in the broadest sense, which bind its practice and make its exercise effective. Where are they given and how can they be perceived in one's own activity? In a complex society, it is more difficult than in the past to recognise these constraints and the conflicts arising from them - between the political realm and the research system, between the different forms of knowledge, both scientific and of the human and social sciences. The discussion will be conducted on the basis of some examples relating to the organisation and functioning of the university system in Italy and by comparing it with some relevant moments of contemporary philosophical reflection on the theme.

**3) 20th April 2023, 15:00-17:00 -
aula U7-09

Dr. Didier Contadini
Truth, truthfulness et similia: critical considerations on research ethics**

Freedom of research is a key issue for those working in higher education and in academia. Various ethical aspects are linked to freedom of research. I shall focus on two of them: the way research work is carried out and (self-)perceived; social context as a point of origin and point of
fallout of research. A crucial point is the question of the “truthfulness” inherent to research and its results, which I shall discuss by drawing on
Kant’s text on truthfulness and on Foucault’s discussion on parrhesia.
From here, I’ll approach the issue of FFP. I will then consider some striking historical cases that problematise the meaning, limits, and content of freedom of research. This will shed light on the oft-neglected role of socio-economic aspects. These aspects characterise the different ethical positions of researchers, who must currently come to terms with what has been called their “moral illiteracy”.

4) May 25th 2023, 15:00 – 17:00
aula U1-11
Dr. Stefano Pippa
Towards a neoliberal academia. Remarks on the neoliberalisation of education and research

The dominant representation of the role of education within liberal democracies, and the self-representation that the university still has of itself as a place of production of free knowledge, are increasingly belied by the progressive subsumption of the apparatus of knowledge production within the circuit of capitalist production. Various interpreters have described the new trend as a 'neo-liberalisation' of education at all levels, meaning an epochal change of status in the role and function of the apparatuses of knowledge and emphasising the risk that this transformation entails for the maintenance of the democratic ethos. The lecture will dwell on some of these theories (M. Nussbaum, W. Brown, C. Laval, P. Macherey and others), in order to focus on how the neo-liberal transformation of education, and of university in particular, represents a crucial terrain in the project of dismantling democracy that is proper to neo-liberal rationality.

1,5 CFU (12 hrs in total - 8 hrs lectures/seminars + 4 hrs students' work)

23/02/2023   3:00 pm - 5:00 pm   U1.11
23/03/2023   3:00 pm - 5:00 pm   U1.11
20/04/2023   3:00 pm - 5:00 pm U7.09
25/05/2023   3:00 pm - 5:00 pm U1.11

course registration on "Segreterie online": from 30/01/2023 to 19/02/2023

ISTRUZIONE DI QUALITÁ

Freedom of research and public use of reason: developing critical thinking
through four philosophical approaches

Prof. Mario Vergani
Prof. Vittorio Morfino
Dr. Stefano Pippa
Dr. Didier Contadini

English

The cycle of lectures is designed as an exercise of critical thinking, which
improves reflexive and argumentative abilities.

Which social and institutional conditions affect research practices? What
effects in the political sphere and in the context of public communication
does the exercise of different research practices have to deal with?

This year, the seminar will provide PhD students with some philosophical approaches to analyse in depth this classical subject with reference to some
issues of the current public debate. Each lecture will start with a brief presentation of some fundamental theses and models of analysis of the topic by the speakers, followed by a discussion.

The lectures are open to first, second, and third year doctoral students working in scientific, humanistic, and technological areas of research. The cycle of lectures is organized in the context of the PhD program “Education in the Contemporary Society”, Department of Human Sciences for Education. The speakers will provide the attendants short texts and/or video material to read before the lecture.

The lessons will be held in English.

1) 23rd February, 15:00-17:00
Prof. Vittorio Morfino
Freedom of thought in Spinoza

My talk will focus on the text that in modernity constitutes a true bastion of freedom of thought, speech and research: the Theologico-Political Treatise and in particular its chapter 20. I will try to show the specific theoretical strategy through which Spinoza defends freedom of thought and speech: not from the point of view of the individual, for whom this freedom would be an inalienable right, but from the point of view of the state, which, by wanting to censor it, would end up making enemies of its citizens and losing legitimacy in front of them.

2) 23rd March, 15:00-17:00
Prof. Mario Vergani
Freedom of research without conditions and university institutional conditions

The university enunciates its mission as unconditional freedom of research, but this is realised under certain conditions, institutional, pedagogical, legal, economic, political in the broadest sense, which bind its practice and make its exercise effective. Where are they given and how can they be perceived in one's own activity? In a complex society, it is more difficult than in the past to recognise these constraints and the conflicts arising from them - between the political realm and the research system, between the different forms of knowledge, both scientific and of the human and social sciences. The discussion will be conducted on the basis of some examples relating to the organisation and functioning of the university system in Italy and by comparing it with some relevant moments of contemporary philosophical reflection on the theme.

3) 20th April 2023, 15:00-17:00
Dr. Stefano Pippa
Towards a neoliberal academia. Remarks on the neoliberalisation of education and research

The dominant representation of the role of education within liberal democracies, and the self-representation that the university still has of itself as a place of production of free knowledge, are increasingly belied by the progressive subsumption of the apparatus of knowledge production within the circuit of capitalist production. Various interpreters have described the new trend as a 'neo-liberalisation' of education at all levels, meaning an epochal change of status in the role and function of the apparatuses of knowledge and emphasising the risk that this transformation entails for the maintenance of the democratic ethos. The lecture will dwell on some of these theories (M. Nussbaum, W. Brown, C. Laval, P. Macherey and others), in order to focus on how the neo-liberal transformation of education, and of university in particular, represents a crucial terrain in the project of dismantling democracy that is proper to neo-liberal rationality.

4) May 25th 2023, 15:00 – 17:00
Dr. Didier Contadini
Truth, truthfulness et similia: critical considerations on research ethics

Freedom of research is a key issue for those working in higher education and in academia. Various ethical aspects are linked to freedom of research. I shall focus on two of them: the way research work is carried out and (self-)perceived; social context as a point of origin and point of
fallout of research. A crucial point is the question of the “truthfulness” inherent to research and its results, which I shall discuss by drawing on
Kant’s text on truthfulness and on Foucault’s discussion on parrhesia.
From here, I’ll approach the issue of FFP. I will then consider some striking historical cases that problematise the meaning, limits, and content of freedom of research. This will shed light on the oft-neglected role of socio-economic aspects. These aspects characterise the different ethical positions of researchers, who must currently come to terms with what has been called their “moral illiteracy”.

1,5 CFU (12 hrs in total - 8 hrs lectures/seminars + 4 hrs students' work)

23/02/2023   3:00 pm - 5:00 pm   U1.11
23/03/2023   3:00 pm - 5:00 pm   U1.11
20/04/2023   3:00 pm - 5:00 pm U7.09
25/05/2023   3:00 pm - 5:00 pm U1.11

course registration on "Segreterie online": from 30/01/2023 to 19/02/2023

Staff

    Teacher

  • Didier Alessio Contadini
    Didier Alessio Contadini
  • Vittorio Morfino
  • Stefano Pippa
    Stefano Pippa
  • Mario Vergani

Enrolment methods

Manual enrolments