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Tag Archives: science

Nietzsche and the School of Husserl

09 Friday Dec 2016

Posted by Danilo Manca in convegni, suggerimenti eventi

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Danilo Manca, Descartes, Didier Franck, Fabrizio Arcuri, Giulio Randazzo, Husserl, Lorenzo Biagini, Lorenzo Serini, Luigi Filieri, Marta Vero, naturalism, Nietzsche, Peter Poellner, Phenomenology, scepticism, science

Nell’ambito delle attività svolte con i contributi per le attività studentesche autogestite dell’Università di Pisa (att. 1272 su “storia dell’idealismo e modelli di razionalità”) venerdì 16 dicembre presso Aula Magna di Palazzo Boileau (via S. Maria, 85), avrà luogo la giornata di studi su:

NIETZSCHE AND THE SCHOOL OF HUSSERLnietzsche_husserl
organized by ZETESIS
Supervision: Prof. Giuliano Campioni

Programme:

ore 9.00: Welcome
Marta Vero, Coordinator of Zetesis Research Group

Chair: Luigi Filieri (Università di Pisa – Zetesis)

9.15: Dr. Danilo Manca (Università di Pisa – Zetesis)
Like Spiders in their web. Nietzsche and Husserl on the naturalness of consciousness
 
10.15: Prof. Didier Franck (Université Paris Ouest – Nanterre)
Morphologie de la volonté de puissance et constitution transcendentale

11.15 Break

11.30: Giulio Randazzo (Independent Researcher)
Scepsi, apparenza e fenomeno. Tra metodo e evento in Nietzsche e Husserl

12.30: Lorenzo Serini (University of Warwick)
Nietzsche and Husserl on scepticism
 
13.30: Lunch

Chair: Dr. Danilo Manca (Università di Pisa – Zetesis)

15.00: Prof. Peter Poellner (University of Warwick)
Nietzsche between science and phenomenology
 
16.00: Fabrizio Arcuri (Università di Pisa – Zetesis)
Razionalità e soggetto. Nietzsche lettore e critico di Descartes

17.00: Lorenzo Biagini (Università di Pisa – Zetesis)
Husserl interprete di Descartes
 
18.00: Conclusion

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Extended Deadline CFP: “Like a novel”: Crossing Perspectives between Knowing, Story and Digression

22 Sunday May 2016

Posted by Stella Ammaturo in CFA-CFP

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Alessandra Sarchi, Alessandro Cinquegrani, cfp, Davide Bondì, Emmanuelle Danblon, encyclopaedia, fictional way of knowing, History, Knowledge, Matteo Bensi, Matteo Marcheschi, novel, Paolo Rossi, rhetoric, science

CALL FOR PAPER

Like a novel:
crossing perspectives between knowing,
story and digression

New deadline: 15th July 2016.

Editors: Matteo Bensi (matteobensi@gmail.com)
Matteo Marcheschi (marcheschimatteo@gmail.com)

How is it configured and what is nowadays the relationship among novel, story and knowing? What are the conditions, the access paths and starting points of scientific, historical and philosophical research? Which are those of the novel? How are novel and philosophy intertwined, not outwardly but theoretically,? And what about romance and history, novel and epistemological reflection?

The purpose of this issue is to investigate the ways of addressing the problem of the relationship between narration, truth and fiction in the novel, in historical research, in philosophy and in science.

Other questions are the following: What would be the differences between a novel and a scientific paper? What kind of narrative models are available to the historian or to the scientist? What is the cognitive effect for the researcher and for the narrator stemming from the choice of one or the other model?

The problem to be solved is still to find a way to the universal, to a temporary synthesis, hard to get to without recasting the relationship and the interaction between the true, the false and the fiction (Ginzburg, Mazzarella). The path of scientific research is not very different from that of the novelist, littered as it is of false and fake, fragments, traces and spies (Ginzburg); all these elements are all seemingly insignificant details, but they are often able to open new scenarios and perspicuous representations (Wittgenstein), they set generalizations that do not lose the concreteness of their starting point. The universal element to explore appears more similar to the part for the whole than to the whole for one of its parts.

Against such background, the third issue of Odradek aims to question the possibility that the study of the novel, of its means and its techniques, could provide an easy way to answer the questions posed above: if the meta-narration – the auto-reflection of novel itself on its knowing status – it is not only a characteristic of postmodern narrative, but a constitutive element of the novel tout court (Shklovkij, Bachtin), then the possibility of an inquiry on the “novel” as a “a way of knowing” is open.

This call encourages papers focusing on the question of the poetic origin of the novel by adopting a multidisciplinary perspective: at issue will be not only a historical reconstruction of the genesis of the novel, but an investigation into its theoretical value, into the contribution novel gives, can give and has given to philosophical, artistic, historical and scientific knowledge.

Influenced by the Nietzschen genealogical critique of the truth, the 20th century thought has questioned the possibility of a form of human knowledge characterized by clarity and certainty. The boundaries between subject and object, observer and observed object, cause and effect have become blurred. This leads to reaffirm the value of the cognitive processes by analyzing the detriment of their outcome. The 20th-century novel sees the affirmation of metaphors and rhetoric at the expense of rigorous logical argumentation.

In light of this, 20th-century epistemology reflected on the constitutive role of metaphors in scientific thought (T.S. Kuhn) and on that of autobiographical stories in the biological constitution of living (Gould; Bocchi-Ceruti); history, even without coming to the radical conclusions of Metahistory (H. White), has tried to stage the image of its gears, by emphasizing the traits of a study made of detours, blocked roads, prejudices and errors (Ginzburg and Prosperi); fiction revealed its genetic processes, combining and messing up, in the manner of Borges and Calvino.

Moreover, by recognizing themselves in the dizzying analogy of truth and fiction (Diderot), the different fields of knowledge had to deal with what really owns the novel: the power to create knowledge avoiding the coarse mesh of true and false, by ranking instead in terms of what is neither true nor false but plausible (Halliwell).

In this perspective, the novel ceases to be placed on the ground of absolute otherness in comparison to higher knowledge, patching up a wound that the history of philosophy has always sought to heal and, at the same time, to reproduce. Thus, one can bring forward the hypothesis that narration and philosophical inquiry are getting closer when knowledge has made itself rhetorical and logological knowing (Cassin). Such knowing would be human because of its restless, always reversible and temporary, provincial (local) and atmospheric way of being (Ortega y Gasset; Mazzoni), able to catch a glimpse of the universal in the particular (Auerbach).

We feel the philosophical necessity, on the basis of studies of Perelman, Garin and Fumaroli among others, that history and philosophy, science and literature, focus on their possible poetic (Vico) and artisanal (Sennett) origins – plausible and always changing – by investigating their proximity to the novel as a form of knowledge.

Starting from the perhaps fictional nature of human knowledge, we propose to investigate the encyclopaedic character of this knowledge.

In the manner of Sterne’s Tristram Shandy, human knowledge is made of rewritings – translations and betrayals (Kundera) – and narrations that accompany the main story, subverting the order of what is a priority and what is not. Details become a fruitful path of research, now dead end. Nevertheless, they provide a clear picture of a knowledge always referring to something else, .for proximity and morphological distance (Goethe, Wittgenstein). The final result is that the detail, the individual, the fictional, are the only point of view suitable for generalisation.

The topics of the issue may include, but are not limited to:

  1. The origins of the novel: the fictional way of knowing
  2. Novel and History: debts, contamination and epistemological proximity
  3. Fiction and science: a cognitive proximity
  4. Novel and rhetoric: proximity and theoretical distances
  5. Novel and fiction: the work questioning the genre, the genre shining through the work
  6. Knowledge, novel and encyclopaedia
  7. Concept-interpretation and representation (mimesis), the representation-interpretation (mimesis) of the concept
  8. Like a novel: the whole emerging from the detail; or the possibility of telling the general by starting from the particular

 

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CFP – Odradek “Like a novel: crossing perspectives between knowing, story and digression”

25 Friday Mar 2016

Posted by Stella Ammaturo in CFA-CFP

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

Alessandra Sarchi, Alessandro Cinquegrani, cfp, Davide Bondì, Emmanuelle Danblon, encyclopaedia, fictional way of knowing, History, Knowledge, Matteo Bensi, Matteo Marcheschi, novel, Paolo Rossi, rhetoric, science

CALL FOR PAPER

Like a novel:
crossing perspectives between knowing,
story and digression

Editors: Matteo Bensi (matteobensi@gmail.com) Matteo Marcheschi (marcheschimatteo@gmail.com)

How is it configured and what is nowadays the relationship among novel, story and knowing? What are the conditions, the access roads and starting points of scientific, historical and philosophical research? Which are those of the novel?How are intertwined, not outwardly but theoretically, novel and philosophy? And what about romance and history,novel and epistemological reflection?

The purpose of this issue is to investigate the ways of addressing the problem of the relationship between narration, truth and fiction in the novel, in historical research, in philosophy and in science.

Other questions are the following: What would be the differences between a novel and a scientific paper? What kind of narrative models are available to the historian or to the scientist? What is the cognitive effect for the researcher and for the narrator stemming from the choice of one or the other model?

The problem to be solved is still to find a way to the universal, to a temporary synthesis, hard to get to without recasting the relationship and the interaction between the true, the false and the fiction (Ginzburg, Mazzarella).The path of the scientific research is not very different from that of the novelist, littered as it is of false and fake, fragments, traces and spies (Ginzburg);all this elements are all seemingly insignificant details, but they are often able to open new scenarios and perspicuous representations (Wittgenstein) letting set generalizations that do not lose the concreteness of their starting point. The universal element to explore appears as more similar to the part for the whole than to the whole for one of its parts.

In the background of all this, the third issue of Odradek aims to question the possibility that the study of the novel, of its means and its techniques, could provide an easy way to answer the questions posed above: if the meta-narration – the auto-reflection of novel itself on its knowing status – it is not only a characteristic of postmodern narrative, but a constitutive element of the novel tout court (Shklovkij, Bachtin), then the possibility of an inquiry on the “novel” as a “a way of knowing” is open.

This call encourages papers focusing on the question of the poetic origin of the novel, by adopting a multidisciplinary perspective: at issue will be not only a historical reconstruction of the genesis of the novel, but an investigation into its theoretical value, into the contribution novel gives, can give and has given to the philosophical, artistic, historical and scientificknowledge.

Influenced by Nietzschen genealogical critique of the truth, the 20th thought has questioned the possibility of a form of human knowledge characterized by clarity and certainty.The boundaries between subject and object, observer and observed object, cause and effect have become hazy. This leads to reaffirm the value of the cognitive processes by going to the detriment of their outcome. The 20th century novel sees the affirmation of the metaphor and rhetoric at the expense of rigorous logical argumentation.

In light of this, the 20th century epistemology reflected on the constitutive role of metaphor in scientific thought (T.S. Kuhn) and on that of the autobiographical story in the biological constitution of living (Gould; Bocchi-Ceruti);history, even without coming to the radical conclusions of Metahistory (H. White), has tried to stage the image of its gears, by emphasizing the traits of a study made of detours, blocked roads, prejudices and errors (Ginzburg and Prosperi);fiction revealed its genetic processes, combining and messing up, in the manner of Borges and Calvino.

Moreover, by recognizing themselves in the dizzying analogy of truth and fiction (Diderot), he different fields of knowledge had to deal with what really owns the novel: the power to create a knowledge avoiding the coarse mesh of true and false, by ranking instead in terms of what is neither true nor false but plausible (Halliwell).

In this perspective, the novel ceases to be placed on the ground of absolute otherness comparing to higher knowledge, sewing up a wound that the history of philosophy has always sought to heal and, at the same time, to reproduce. Thus, one can advance the hypothesis that narration and philosophical inquiry are getting closer when knowledge has made itself rhetorical and logological knowing (Cassin). Such a knowing would be human because of restless, always reversible and temporary, provincial (local) and atmospheric (Ortega y Gasset; Mazzoni), able to catch a glimpse of the universal in the particular (Auerbach).

We feel the philosophical necessity, on the basis of studies of Perelman, Garin and Fumaroli among others, that history and philosophy, science and literature, focus on their possible poetic (Vico) and artisanal (Sennett) origins – plausible and always changing – by investigating their proximity to the novel as a form of knowledge.
From this, from the perhaps fictional nature of human knowledge, we propose to investigate the encyclopaedic character of this knowledge.

In the manner of Sterne’s Tristram Shandy, human knowledge is made of rewritings – translations and betrayals (Kundera) – and narrations that accompany the main story, subverting the order of what is a priority and what is not. The detail now becomes fruitful path of research, now dead end. Nevertheless, it gives the clear picture of a knowledge always referring to something else, for proximity and morphological distance (Goethe, Wittgenstein). It finally results that the detail, the individual, the fictional, are the only point of view suitable for a generalisation.

The topics of the issue may include, but are not limited to:

1. The origins of the novel: the fictional way of knowing

2. Novel and History: debts, contamination and epistemological proximity

3. Fiction and science: a cognitive proximity

4. Novel and rhetoric: proximity and theoretical distances

5. Novel and fiction: the work questioning the genre, the genre shining through the work

6. Knowledge, novel and encyclopaedia

7. Concept-interpretation and representation (mimesis), the representation-interpretation (mimesis) of the concept

8. Like a novel: the whole emerging from the detail; or the possibility oftelling the general by starting from the particular

Invited Keynote Authors:
Davide Bondì, Università degli studi di Milano
Alessandro Cinquegrani, Università Cà Foscari di Venezia
Emmanuelle Danblon, Université Libre de Bruxelles
Paolo Rossi, Università di Pisa
Alessandra Sarchi

 

Full papers of accepted abstracts cannot be longer than 40 000 characters (footnote and references included). They should be submitted by 15th June 2016 and prepared for blind peer review.

The full paper must be submitted online via OJS – Open Journal System:

zetesis.cfs.unipi.it/Rivista

Authors can find submission guidelines at the following link:

zetesis.cfs.unipi.it/Rivista/index.php/odradek/about/submissions#onlineSubmissions

All papers will be reviewed according to our peer review process policy:

zetesis.cfs.unipi.it/Rivista/index.php/odradek/about/editorialPolicies#peerReviewProcess

Languages: English, French, German, Italian

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Volume: “Hegel e la fenomenologia trascendentale”

29 Monday Jun 2015

Posted by Danilo Manca in Senza categoria

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abitudine, adorno, ante-predicativo, conoscenza, corpo vivo, dialettica fenomenologica, epistemologica, epistemology, essenza, etica dell'autonomia, Eugen Fink, fatto, habit, hegel, Husserl, imagination, immaginazione, intelligibilità della filosofia, Kant, Leben, life-world, loneliness, Merleau-Ponty, mito del dato, Myth of the Given, negatività, negativity, negazione, ontologia, passive synthesis, percezione, phenomenological dialectics, philosophy as rigorous science, ragion pratica, Sartre, science, Sellars, solipsism, solipsismo, solitudine, Synthesis

Con grande piacere annunciamo l’uscita del volume “Hegel e la fenomenologia trascendentale”, a cura di Danilo Manca, Elisa Magrì e Alfredo Ferrarin, per Edizioni ETS, Pisa 2015, nella collana Zetetica della Fondazione “Silvestro Marcucci”.

Per ordinarlo e/o leggere la prefazione, l’indice e una breve biografia degli autori clicca qui

copertina_zeteticaIl volume è il risultato di molteplici ricerche che hanno come fulcro il dialogo tra gli studiosi di Hegel e di Husserl dell’Università di Pisa e quelli dell’Università di Padova e come fondamentale tappa di ispirazione il convegno organizzato da Zetesis lo scorso anno su “Hegel and the Phenomenological Movement”, di cui vi sarà la pubblicazione degli atti in inglese.

Tema del volume è il rapporto tra la filosofica classica tedesca (in particolare Hegel e, in alcuni saggi, Kant) e il movimento fenomenologico novecentesco (con particolare attenzione al filone trascendentale). L’argomento è ancora poco studiato, ma in anni recenti sta destando notevole interesse.

L’obiettivo è mostrare come indagini comparate, pur rispettose delle reciproche differenze, possano illuminare aspetti delle rispettive esperienze filosofiche.

Indice degli interventi:

Prefazione di Alfredo Ferrarin

Unità e Conoscenza. Notazione sulle epistemologie di Husserl e Kant
Andrea Altobrando

Sintesi e Dato. Husserl, Sellars e l’altro lato del “Mito”
Daniele De Santis

La forma dell’oggetto. Hegel e Husserl sui presupposti della percezione
Luigi Filieri

L’auto-riferimento del corpo vivo. Sull’abitudine in Hegel e Merleau-Ponty
Elisa Magrì

Hegel e Husserl sull’immaginazione
Alfredo Ferrarin

Hegel e la filosofia come scienza rigorosa
Luca Illetterati

Hegel e Husserl sull’intelligibilità della filosofia
Danilo Manca

Fatto ed essenza. Idee per un confronto ontologico tra Hegel e Husserl
Federico Orsini

Hegel e Husserl: due descrizioni ante-predicative della negazione
Michela Bordignon

Hegel contro Husserl. Sul tentativo adorniano di una critica alle Ricerche Logiche
Giovanni Zanotti

L’idea di una dialettica fenomenologica. Per un confrontro tra Fink e Hegel
Stéphane Finetti

Etica dell’autonomia. L’idea della ragione pratica in Hegel e Husserl
Guido Frilli

Solitudine e solipsismo: sulla critica sartriana a Husserl e Hegel
Ilaria D’Angelo

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  • ADMISSION
  • Una testimonianza per il futuro dopo la tragedia del coronavirus
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    • Classical German Philosophy and Phenomenology
    • Philosophies of Image and Imagination
    • The Philosophy of Nature
    • The quarrel between philosophy and poetry
    • The quarrel between the ancients and moderns
    • Theories of Emotions
    • Utopia, the Political Myth, and Rebellion
  • CONFERENCES
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