EPISTEMOLOGY
EPISTEMOLOGIA
A.Y. | Credits |
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2017/2018 | 12 |
Lecturer | Office hours for students | |
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Mario Alai |
Teaching in foreign languages |
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Course with optional materials in a foreign language
English
This course is entirely taught in Italian. Study materials can be provided in the foreign language and the final exam can be taken in the foreign language. |
Assigned to the Degree Course
Date | Time | Classroom / Location |
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Date | Time | Classroom / Location |
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Learning Objectives
What is knowledge? can we justify our beliefs, and how? It a reality independent form the subject exists, can we know it, and to what extent? What is the cognitive value of theoretical science? What have been the main contributions on these arguments by classical and contemporary philosophers? How can epistemic logics help us to solve the problems of our conceptions of knowledge? Which canons of rationality can we follow as guidance in our practical decisions?
While discussing these arguments the course will provide a brief general introduction to the philosophy of knowledge and rationality
This work will help students to improve their logico-analytic and dialectic abilities, their philosophical sensibility, and the mastership of concepts and contents from the history of philosophy they have acquired in their bachelor program.
There are no pre-requisites for this course, but because of the rather abstract and rigorous character of its topics, it is advisable to attend classes regularly and actively, since the very beginning. Those unable to attend classes can study on their own the texts listed in the section below for "NON FREQUENTANTI", but this will require careful work and a good attitude to autonomous learning, analysis and abstract thought.
In order to offer an opportunity of CLIL (content and language integrated learning), and also as a form of support for non Italian students, the teacher will propose to devote some classes to readings and comments in English. Non Italian students will also be allowed to use English (or French or Spanish) for all their required readings, questions and comments in the classroom, and the final exam.
Program
(A) The research in epistemology from the Classics to now: knowledge, its sources, its kinds. Plato and the rationalists. Aristotle. Modern empiricism. Kant. Idealism. Contemporary empiricism. Constructivism. Gnoseological realism. Scientific realism.
(B) Theory of knowldge: knowledge as true justified belief; the nature of belief, truth and justification; foundationalism and coherentism; Gettier's paradox and its possible solutions.
(C) The sceptical challenge and possible strategies for meeting it: reliabilism, internism vs. externism; contextualism; relevant alternatives; iterativity; epistemic closure; reflexive equilibrium; principle of charity; transcendentalism.
(D) Modelling lknowledge: formal approaches to the problems of knowledge and elements of modal and epistemic logics.
(E) Basic elements of decision theory and theory of social choices
Bridging Courses
There are no strict pre-requisites for this course, but the parts on philosophy of knowledge of a high school handbook of history of philosophy might provide a useful background
Learning Achievements (Dublin Descriptors)
Knowledge and understanding:
After the course students should be able to understand and explain philosophical texts of medium difficulty, discuss some of the classical problems in philosophy of knowledge, epistemology, metaphysics, epistemic logic, and theory of choices. They should be able to use the bibliographical tools and repertories available in this field, and know some of the state of the art questions on theory of knowledge and scientific realism.
Applying knowledge and understanding:
After the course students should be able to discuss and evaluate various claims and arguments both in the specialistic debate and in the general contemporary cultural debate.--
Making judgements:
After the course students should be able to make autonomous and original judgements about the arguments in the debate and the examples drawn from both ordinary and scientific knowledge. To this end discussions in the classroom will be encouraged. Originality and autonomous judgement will be part of the final evalution of the student's performance. ---
Communication skills:
After the course students should be able to explain and discuss the relevant topics with conceptual and linguistic exactness, and to offer efficacious and synthetic accounts of the subject matter. To this end, they should acquire an at least medium level lexical competence in philosophy of knoewledge. In order to achieve these results verbal interaction in the classroom and a careful reading and analysis of the relevant texts will be encouraged. ---
Learning skills:
After the course students should be acquainted with the subject matter and the method of research enough to be able to proceed on their own in gathering further knowledge from the literature in the field and in contiguous fields. To this end they should also improve their ability to read English texts in the field.
Teaching Material
The teaching material prepared by the lecturer in addition to recommended textbooks (such as for instance slides, lecture notes, exercises, bibliography) and communications from the lecturer specific to the course can be found inside the Moodle platform › blended.uniurb.it
Supporting Activities
Some complementary lectures will be given by two researchers, specialist respectively of theory of knowledge and epistemic logic. The materials available for the course, all communications from the teacher, and any other further actvities can be found on the web platform Moodle › https://blended.uniurb.it
Teaching, Attendance, Course Books and Assessment
- Teaching
Classroom lectures offering general frameworks, analyses of particular topics, and comments to the relevant literature. Before, during and after the lecture questions, comments and discussions by the students are encouraged. Of course personal study at home will be equally important. the students are expected to study the texts assigned each time, in order to be able to ask questions and discuss them at the next meeting.
- Attendance
Students should attend classes regularly and actively, since the very beginning. Because of the analytic and often abstract character of the subject matter, active participation in classroom discussion will be very useful. In order to do that, and in general to follow the lectures successfully, it is strongly advised to do every day the homework suggested as preparation for the following lecture
- Course books
(A) The research in epistemology from the Classics to now:
1. Platone, Teeteto 163-165, XVIII-XX; 184b-187b, XXIX-XXX; 200D-2001D, XXXVIII; 206c-210a, XLII-XLIV. ---
2. Platone, Menone (97d-98b, XXXIX). ---
3. Galileo, dal Saggiatore: il calore e le proprietà soggettive. ---
4. Cartesio, Meditazioni metafisiche I, II, IV (pp. 228-229). ---
5. Cartesio, Discorso sul metodo IV (pp. 154-159). ---
6. Berkeley, da: Trattato sui princìpi della conoscenza umana (pp. 450-453) ---
7. Berkeley, da: Dialoghi tra Hylas e Philonous I §§ 1-8 (pp. 453-461) ---
8. Kant, Critica della Ragion Pura, B xx, 59-60. ---
9. Duhem, passi da La teoria fisica, il suo oggetto e la sua struttura. ---
10. Carnap, Pseudoproblemi nella filosofia, § 9-10. ---
11. B. Russell, The Problems of Philosophy, capitoli 1, 2. ---
12. K. Popper, Logica della scoperta scientifica cap. I, §§ 1-6, cap. V. ---
13. W.V. Quine, “Due dogmi dell’empirismo”, § 6 (in Quine, Da un punto di vista logico, Raffaello Cortina, o in Filosofia del Linguaggio, a cura di Casalegno e altri, Raffaello Cortina). ---
14. W.V. Quine: “Posizioni e realtà”, in I modi del Paradosso, Il Saggiatore, 1975, pp. 304-312. ---
15. N. Goodman, Fatti, ipotesi e previsioni, Laterza, pp. 84-86, 92-93. ---
16. J.L. Austin, Senso e sensibilia, pp. 31-33, 42-43, 112-113. ---
17. T. Kuhn La struttura delle rivoluzioni scientifiche, Cap. 10 (139-41, 144-5, 147-50, 151, 153-156). ---
18. M. Alai, “Realismo, idealismo e agnosticismo. Una prospettiva epistemologica”, Hermeneutica (Nuova Serie) 2014, pp. 109-126. ---
(B) Theory of knowledge and (C) The sceptical challenge:
19. E. Gettier, “La credenza vera e giustificata è conoscenza?”, in vol. n. 22 or in A. Bottani, C. Penco (cur.) Significato e teorie del linguaggio, Franco Angeli 1991. ---
20. T. Piazza Che cos'è la conoscenza Carocci
21. R. Audi, Epistemologia, Quodlibet
22. C. Calabi, A. Coliva, A. Sereni, G. Volpe (eds.) Teorie della conoscenza, Cortina 2015. ---
23. N. Vassallo, Teoria della conoscenza, Laterza 2003. ---
24. A. Musgrave, Senso comune, scienza, scetticismo, Cortina Editore 1995. ---
25. A. Pagnini, Teoria della conoscenza, TEA, 1997 (anche in P. Rossi (cur.), La filosofia UTET, 1995, vol. III, pp. 109-185). ---
26. M. Alai, “Conoscenza, verità, giustificazione epistemica”, in La certezza della verità. Il sistema della logica aletica e il procedimento della giustificazione epistemica (Sensus Communis. International Yearbook for Studies on Alethic Logic, 18), ed. by A. Livi, Editrice Leonardo da Vinci, Roma 2013, pp. 31-46. ---
27. M. Alai, “Σ?ζειν τ? φαιν?μενα. Realistic and Antirealistic attitudes in Natural Science”, Isonomia 2008. ---
28. “Subjective and Objective Justification in the Solution of Gettier’s Problem”, in Selected Proceedings of the SILFS 2010 International Congress, edited by S.R. Arpaia, L&PS - Logic and Philosophy of Science, IX, 1, 2011, pp. 493-501, online: http://www2.units.it/episteme/L&PS_Vol9No1/L&PS_Vol9No1_2011_48_Alai.pdf. ---
29. M. Alai, “Regimenting Common Sense Concepts of Knowledge and Justification after Gettier”, in: The Epistemology of Ordinary Knowledge, ed. by M. Bianca, P. Piccari, Mimesis 2016. ---
(D) Modelling Knowledge:
30. H. van Ditmarsch, B. Kooi, One Hundred Prisoners and a Light Bulb, Springer .
31. J. Hintikka, Knowledge and Belief, King's College Publications
32. H. van Ditmarsch, W. van der Hoek, B. Kooi Dynamic Epistemic Logic, Springer
33. R.Fagin, Y. Moses, J. Y Halpern, M. Y Vardi, Reasoning About Knowledge
34. M. Frixione, S. Iaquinto, M. Vignolo Introduzione alle logiche modali Laterza 2016.
(E) Basic elements of decision theory and theory of social choices:
35. D.M. Resnik, Choices. An Introduction to Decision theory, 1987 (or in the Italian edition: Scelte. Introduzione alla teoria delle decisioni, Muzzio 1990).
Only a small part of this bibliography will be mandatory, and it will be indicated during classes. Therefore it is not advisable to buy anything without asking the teacher, except for volume n. 20. Some texts will be made available online (among them some parts from out-of-print books). An English edition can be used whenever existing. For any problem or question please contact the teacher.
- Assessment
There will be a mid-term partial exam consisting of 4 open questions, one of which may be substituted by a second-choice question. For the final examination students will choose between a written examination at the early pre-exam session and an oral examination at the regular exam sessions. The written exam will consist of 8 open questions, two of which can be substituted by second-choice questions. The mid-term exam will weight 1/3 in the final evaluation and the final exam will weight 2/3.
The written exams allow a comparative and more objective assessment of the students’ learning, while testing the capacities for reflection, writing and argumentation. However the option to choose instead the oral examination allows even the students less familiar with written examinations to seek a good final mark. Second-choice questions prevent the risk of picking just one of the few gaps in the student's knowledge.
Both the written and the oral exam are intended to ascertain not only what and how much the students have learned both about the basic concepts of the discipline and its most important historical developments, but also their comprehension, the acquisition of better attitudes to analysis, exposition, analytic argumentation, and of the capacity to discuss in a critical and possibly original way the topics of classes and assigned readings.
All of these criteria will have equal weight in the assessment, but the minimal basis, sufficient to pass the course, will be a sufficiently clear exposition of the basic concepts and contents. Each question of the written exam will be marked from 1 to 10, according to the described criteria. Then the average of the four questions will be expressed on a scale of 1 to 30, making sure that the best students can in any case receive satisfactory marks, and the different levels of performance are adequately distinguished. The curve helps to make up for the contingent factors which can affect the average performance of the students in one academic year with respect to students of other years, or of the students of this course with respect to other courses, thus seeking diachronically and synchronically uniform standards for all students.
In the oral examination two or three open questions will be asked, followed by further questions if needed to achieve a more precise and reliable evaluation. Each answer will be graded from 1 to 30 according to the above criteria and the considerations guiding the curvature of the written exam. The final grade will then be the average of partial grades. Active participation in class discussion will also weight in the assessment, contributing to the choice of the curve and to decide the grade in case of uncertainties between a higher or lower grade.
All and only all topics actually discusses in classes and the texts explicitly indicated during classes will be required for the exam. All the other texts can be used for a better and deeper understanding.
Foreign students will have an option to take the exam in English (or French, or Spanish).
- Disability and Specific Learning Disorders (SLD)
Students who have registered their disability certification or SLD certification with the Inclusion and Right to Study Office can request to use conceptual maps (for keywords) during exams.
To this end, it is necessary to send the maps, two weeks before the exam date, to the course instructor, who will verify their compliance with the university guidelines and may request modifications.
Additional Information for Non-Attending Students
- Teaching
THOSE UNABLE TO ATTEND CLASSES will study on their own (individually or with others) according to the directions of this vademecum and if possible with the help which can be given by the teacher during office hours or through e-mail, Skype, etc. The files of lecture notes will also be made available on the platform Moodle › https://blended.uniurb.it.
- Attendance
In order to make up for the impossibility of attending classes, a hard and careful study is required. One should already possess good skills of autonomous learning and some capacity to read and understand philosophical texts, at least at a basic level. Whenever possible, it is advisable to work with other students. Students should also test their own learning by trying to produce examples of each concept and idea they encounter. Lists of test questions or mock exams will also be supplied upon request.
- Course books
(A) Required readings:
1. A. Musgrave, Senso comune, scienza, scetticismo, Cortina Editore 1995. The book is out of print, but it can be found used online, or by inter-library loan. alternatively, it can be substituted by the excellent but more difficult book R. Audi, Epistemologia, Quodlibet (only 11 chapter chosen by the student)
2. T. Piazza Che cos'è la conoscenza Carocci. This book may be substituted by: N. Vassallo, Teoria della conoscenza, Laterza 2003.
3. D.M. Resnik, Scelte. Introduzione alla teoria delle decisioni, Muzzio 1990 chapters 1-3.
4. M. Frixione, S. Iaquinto, M. Vignolo Introduzione alle logiche modali Laterza 2016 chapters I, II, IV.
The books by Musgrave, Audi and Resnik can be studied in an English edition. the others can be substituted by text in English by agreement with the teacher.
(B) Further voluntary readings:
all the other readings suggested for students attending classes
- Assessment
Oral examination. Alternatively, subject to previous agreement with the teacher, it will be possible to take a written examination at the early pre-exam session. Both the oral and the written examination have the same aims and characters described for attending students. Students may ask the teacher to write a term paper on a topic relevant to the course. In this case the paper will have in the final evaluation the same weight as the other factors. Foreign students may ask to take the exam in English (or French, or Spanish)
- Disability and Specific Learning Disorders (SLD)
Students who have registered their disability certification or SLD certification with the Inclusion and Right to Study Office can request to use conceptual maps (for keywords) during exams.
To this end, it is necessary to send the maps, two weeks before the exam date, to the course instructor, who will verify their compliance with the university guidelines and may request modifications.
Notes
As a form of CLIL (Content and Language Integrated Learning) at least one article will be read and commented in English. Help to the understanding will be supplied if needed. Foreign students will be allowed to use English (or French, or Spanish) for questions and comments during classes, for all the required readings, and for the final examination.
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