Classica…Mente – Atti dell’associazione di filosofia, lettere e arti - Year 3
ISSN :
Language: Italian
Publisher: Paolo Loffredo Editore Srl
Description
Classica…Mente. Atti dell’associazione di filosofia, lettere e arti - Year 3
This volume is a particular one, that will remind everyone an historical moment of change, which happened fast with the beginning of the long quarantine. It will remind us all how we suddenly changed in our way of life and how it will still change, while we will be facing the economical crisis economists are talking about. Meanwhile, confident and optimistic, we can think about a different economy, not a dramatic one, foreseeing a buying spree at the moment of the (we hope soon) reopening. Still, we can reflect on the paradoxical situation born about science and its consideration. We are, indeed, used to trusting exact sciences, such as mathematics, statistics, algorithms. At the moment we are instead seeing the loss of the “great minds of finances”, swept up by the unimaginable economical collapse. Moreover, this volume will also focus on the impotence of medicine.
Classica ... Mente is an association founded on 8 October 2017. It focuses on philosophy, letters and the arts. The humanistic approach does not exclude interest in the sciences, because they also belong to the humanistic sector, coinciding with the latter the expression of human thought that is also expressed in science and technology.
Classica ... Mente proposes the diffusion and enhancement of culture, in the most intense and intense meaning that this term has intended and intends to express, notwithstanding the last expirations of meaning due to the application of this lemma to the different social, anthropological, historical, political meanings: think of the locutions, right culture and left culture.
The very claim of wanting to make culture and want to spread culture can certainly seem presumptuous and immense compared to what was the original meaning of this word and that we wanted to take up again. Often, in fact, compared to what the term culture intended to express and convey, everyone felt intimidated in the humble consideration of the amount of information, of high thoughts of sublime men, of Stoic actions, of complexity of philosophical entanglements or of analysis of concepts, sometimes difficult to decode.
But above all, the claim to spread culture through a limited number of people might seem anachronistic and not relevant to the reality of our time, accustomed to more relaxed extensions and a consequent concept of culture as everyday life, fashions, trends. It might seem a useless and nostalgic effort, and above all far from the globalization of culture itself, far from the high numbers of popularization on which a newspaper can count, or from the quantity of listeners that the radio can reach or from the millions of viewers that a TV program can bring or, even worse, distant light years from the numbers reached by social networks, inexorable filters of good and bad culture.