Filosofia della cultura

CICLO DI SEMINARI

Spinoza as Moral Philosopher

STEVEN NADLER

Eventi

Dal 14 al 18 marzo 2022, il Professor Steven Nadler terrà per la Cattedra Rotelli dell’Università Vita-Salute San Raffaele un ciclo di lezioni sul tema “Spinoza as Moral Philosopher”. L’evento si terrà in modalità mista, in presenza e online sulla piattaforma Microsoft Teams. Tutte le lezioni si terranno in inglese. L’evento sarà aperto a tutti. Per coloro che non sono studenti o personale docente dell’Università San Raffaele, è necessario registrarsi. Per registrarsi, inviare una e-mail a cattedrarotelli@unisr.it. Prima dell’evento, a tutti gli iscritti verranno inviate le istruzioni per la partecipazione.

Calendario completo delle Lezioni per la Cattedra Rotelli:

14 Marzo, 16.00 – 18.30 (CET)
Lecture 1: “The Free Person”
Discussant: Massimo Reichlin (CeSEP, IRCECP)

Abstract: Spinoza’s contributions to ethics/moral philosophy are all too often underestimated, even ignored, despite the fact that his magnum opus is titled Ethics. In this first lecture, we will review some fundamental elements of Spinoza’s moral philosophy, including his account of virtue and especially “the free person”, the moral ideal of an individual who is guided in action by reason alone, not the passions. We will consider the life of such a paragon of virtue, which Spinoza calls the “model of human nature”, and the various ways in which s/he will act in the world.

15 Marzo, 16.00 – 18.30 (CET)
Lecture 2: Good and Bad

Discussant: Giacomo Petrarca (Diaporein)

Abstract: In this lecture, we will examine Spinoza’s account of value terms such as ‘good’ and ‘bad’. According to a prevalent subjectivist interpretation of Spinoza, something’s being good is nothing but a matter of opinion, an expression of desire, a form of “prejudice”, even a confusion in the minds of the untutored. As we shall see, however, for Spinoza the qualities good and bad are, in fact, if not absolute and intrinsic properties of things in the world, nonetheless objective and (in a sense) mind-independent, albeit relational, features of them. What makes something good in the most basic sense is that it is the cause of joy, or an improvement in an individual’s condition. Correlatively, something is bad if it is the cause of sadness, or a deterioration in an individual. And what makes something good in the truest and fullest sense of the term is that it so improves an individual as to bring that person closer to the ideal condition of human nature—that is, it moves them closer to being a free person.

16 Marzo, 16.00 – 18.30 (CET)
Lecture 3: Moral Motivation
Discussant: Roberto Mordacci (CeSEP, IRCECP)

Abstract: Is the motive for one’s actions morally relevant? If you do something good, does it matter why you do it? Spinoza argues that all agents are egoistically motivated: they are driven by a fundamental drive to “persevere” what he calls “conatus” and thus do only what they believe to be in their own self-interest. It would seem, then, that motivation must be irrelevant to the moral evaluation of action; that is, whether an action is good or bad would apparently not be determined by the motive behind the action, since all actions would appear to have the same ultimate motive. However, motivation turns out for Spinoza to be, in fact, crucial to determining the moral value of an agent’s action, since actions done from reason and knowledge benefit a person (and thus are “good”), whereas the same actions done from irrational passion tend not to benefit a person (and thus are “bad”).

17 Marzo, 16.00 – 18.30 (CET)
Lecture 4: Homo Homini Lupus
Discussant: Stefano Pinzan (CeSEP, IRCECP)

Abstract: In his treatise De Cive (1642), Thomas Hobbes combines a pair of ancient Latin proverbs into a single aphorism: Homo homini Deus, & Homo homini Lupus. The original saying “Lupus est homo homini, non homo, quom qualis sit non novit” (“Man is a wolf, not a man, to one whom he does not know”) appears in Plautus’ play Asinaria. Seneca, on the other hand, in his Epistulae morales ad Lucilium took the more sanquine view: “Homo sacra res homini” (“Man is a sacred thing to a man”). Hobbes notes that “both sayings are true”; it all depends on the context. Spinoza, by contrast, made use only of Seneca’s adage, ignoring the darker one that appears in Plautus and Hobbes. In Part Four of the Ethics, Spinoza explains how human beings are of great benefit to one another, at least to the extent they “agree in nature”, and concludes that “what we have just shown is also confirmed by daily experience, which provides so much and such clear evidence that this saying is in almost everyone’s mouth: man is a God to man.” In this lecture, we will see that Spinoza should not have been so quick to drop the gloomier vision of things. On Spinoza’s own terms, a human being may be not only a “God” to other human beings, but a wolf as well.

18 Marzo, 16.00 – 18.30 (CET)
Lecture 5: Spinoza vs. Aristotle on Friendship
Discussant: Giuseppe Girgenti (CRISI)

Abstract: Spinoza and Aristotle agree on the importance of friendship as a mutually beneficial relationship in a good life. They also agree, in part, on what friendship involves, as well as on some of the particular advantages that friendship brings to the virtuous person and on the reasons why the virtuous person will naturally seek out true friends. However, they differ substantially in their analyses of the motivation for true friendship. A comparison of their respective accounts illuminates not only the egoism in Spinoza’s account of friendship, and human behavior generally, but also the distinct ways in which friendship can enhance a life and secure a more lasting foundation for happiness.

Seminari in preparazione alla Cattedra Rotelli

1 Marzo, 14.00-16.00 (online)
Dott. Giacomo Petrarca (Diaporein): “’Benedictus und maledictus’. Lo Spinoza di Steven Nadler tra il cherem e il Tractatus theologico-politicus”

4 Marzo, 14.00-16.00 (online e in presenza)
Dott. Alfredo Gatto (CRISI, ICONE): “Steven Nadler e la teodicea nella modernità”

7 Marzo, 16.00-18.00 (online e in presenza)
Prof. Massimo Reichlin (CeSEP, IRCECP): “L’etica di Spinoza: la lettura di Nadler in La via alla felicità.”

Prof. Steven Nadler
Steven Nadler è Vilas Research Professor e William H. Hay II Professor di filosofia presso la University of Wisconsin-Madison, dove al momento dirige l’Institute for Research in the Humanities. Oltre all’incarico presso la University of Wisconsin-Madison, Nadler è stato visiting professor presso numerose università, quali: Stanford University, the University of Chicago, École des hautes études en sciences sociales a Parigi, École normale supérieure-Paris, e the University of Amsterdam. Inoltre, nel 2015 è stato Scholar-in-Residence presso l’American Academy a Roma. Nadler è conosciuto per le sue ricerche sulla filosofia della prima età moderna, in particolare per i suoi studi su Cartesio, Spinoza e Leibniz, ma anche per il suo lavoro sulla filosofia ebraica medievale e pre-moderna. Steven Nadler è autore di numerosi volumi, tra cui Spinoza: A Life (Cambridge, 1999; second edition, 2018) [trad. it: Baruch Spinoza e l’Olanda del Seicento, Einaudi]; The Best of All Possible Worlds: A Story of Philosophers, God, and Evil (Farrar, Straus, & Giroux, 2008; paperback, Princeton 2010) [trad. it. Il migliore dei mondi possibili. Una storia di filosofi, di Dio e del Male, Einaudi]; The Cambridge History of Jewish Philosophy: From Antiquity through the Seventeenth Century (2009), co-edited with Tamar Rudavsky; A Book Forged in Hell: Spinoza’s Scandalous Treatise and the Birth of the Secular Age (Princeton, 2011) [trad. it. Un libro forgiato all’inferno. Lo scandaloso Trattato di Spinoza e la nascita della secolarizzazione, Einaudi] e The Philosopher, the Priest, and the Painter: A Portrait of Descartes (Princeton, 2013) [trad. it. Il filosofo, il sacerdote e il pittore. Un ritratto di Descartes. Einaudi]. Heretics: The Wondrous (and Dangerous) Beginnings of Modern Philosophy (Princeton University Press), un libro illustrato (pubblicato con Ben Nadler), è stato pubblicato nel 2017. I suoi libri più recenti sono Menasseh ben Israel: Rabbi of Amsterdam (“Jewish Lives”, Yale, 2018) e Think Least of Death: Spinoza on How to Live and How to Die (Princeton, 2020). Nel 2020, Nadler è stato eletto membro dell’American Academy of Arts and Sciences.