- Docente: Sebastiano Moruzzi
- Credits: 6
- Language: Italian
- Teaching Mode: Traditional lectures
- Campus: Bologna
- Corso: First cycle degree programme (L) in Philosophy (cod. 0957)
Learning outcomes
The Philosophy Laboratory is focused on building the fundamental
skills needed in the philosophical work: critical thinking, careful
reading, and essay writing. We will use a masterpiece of the
philosophical tradition for training the students in exercising and
developing these skills.
Course contents
Class hours
Reading and discussion of Saul
Kripke's Naming and necessity (1972/1980).
We will go through one the XX century philosophical works that has
most influenced contemporary philosophy.
In Naming and Necessity Saul Kripke presents a novel
philosophical view on the nature of reference, on relationship
between a posteriori and a priori knowledge and necessity, on the
identity relation and the idea that things bear some properties
essentially.
We will examine the following points:
- reference of proper names and natural kind terms
- critique to the descriptivist theory of proper names (Frege,
Russell, Strawson and Searle)
- names as rigid designators and the causal theory of proper names
- epistemic and metaphysical necessity
- sharo distinction between epistemic and metaphysical necessity
- existence of necessary truths that are knowable a posteriori
only (vs Kant, Carnap)
- essentialism
- things bear some properties essentially (while they bear others
properties accidentally)
- mind/body problem: against identification between mental states and physical states.
Scott Soames has written of Nome e necessità:
In the philosophy of language, Naming and Necessity is among the most important works ever, ranking with the classical work of Frege in the late nineteenth century, and of Russell, Tarski and Wittgenstein in the first half of the twentieth century . . . Naming and Necessity played a large role in the implicit, but widespread, rejection of the view—so popular among ordinary language philosophers—that philosophy is nothing more than the analysis of language (Philosophical Analysis in the Twentieth Century: Volume 2: The Age of Meaning, Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2003, p.336).
Readings/Bibliography
Main text:
[1] Saul Kripke (1999) Nome e necessità, Torino: Bollati
Boringhieri, transl. by M. Santambrogio of Naming and
necessity, Oxford : Blackwell, 1980, enlarged and revised
edition of 1972. 'Naming and Necessity' in Davidson, Donald and
Harman, Gilbert, eds., Semantics of Natural Language.
Dordrecht: Reidel: 253-355, 763-769.
Students are advised to read also (one is sufficient):
[2] Borghini, Andrea (a cura di), Il genio incompreso. la
filosofia di Saul Kripke, Roma, 2010.
[3] Noonan, Harold. Kripke and Naming and Necessity, Abington (UK): Routledge, 2013.
[4] Burgess, Saul Kripke: Puzzles and Mysteries. Cambridge: Polity, 2013During the the laboratory further readings will be suggested.
Teaching methods
The Philosophy Labatory is articulated into three phases:
Phase 1: Naming and necessity will be presented with
its main thesis and arguments and will be explained in relation to
the philosophical context in which Kripke worked.
Phase 2: the book will be divided into parts that will be
the object, together with some critical literature, of
presentations of the students; the teacher will supervise the
students in preparing the presentations.
Phase 3: each student will have to write a short essay, the
essay will consist in a critical discussion of some the topics of
the Naming and Necessity.
Assessment methods
The assessment will be 50% based on the presentation and 50% based
on the essay writing. It is required substantial understanding of
the themes of Naming and necessity together with the
capacity of critical discussion of these themes. The asessment will
be especially sensitive to the clarity of the presentation and of
the essay and to the ability to extract argumentative structure of
the text.
Attendance is mandatory.
Teaching tools
- Presentations with pc and projector
- Moodle online webplatform
- Online materials with AMS
Campus
Office hours
See the website of Sebastiano Moruzzi