FIS 1/2021

For an Archaeology of Conspiracy Theories.

The Ethics of Belief from the Middle Ages to Fake News [ArCoTh]

FIS00001721
CUP: D53C23004130001
PI: Pasquale Porro
Host Institution: University of Milan
Duration: 60 months (end: October 2029)
The current pandemic has highlighted and exacerbated the spread of uncontrolled beliefs, ranging from the acceptance of theses devoid of any evidence to the elaboration of complex conspiracy theories…
MAGGIORI INFORMAZIONI

Unità di ricerca:

The current pandemic has highlighted and exacerbated the spread of uncontrolled beliefs, ranging from the acceptance of theses devoid of any evidence to the elaboration of complex conspiracy theories. However, this is not new: for example, the crisis caused by the Black Death that swept through Europe in the mid-14th century led to particularly violent acts of persecution against Jewish communities, accused of being behind the spread of the disease. The Middle Ages thus provide a far-reaching historical precedent for looking at what is happening in our time from a different perspective, i.e. starting from the question: is it rationally acceptable and morally legitimate to believe in something in the absence of sufficient cognitive foundations for doing so? It was precisely in the Middle Ages that sophisticated discussions took place on the epistemic and moral status of beliefs, their truth-value, and the role that the volitional component assumes in appropriating and upholding them. The project intends to address this cluster of issues, and to show that it is worthwhile to relate medieval discussions to modern and contemporary ones. It comprises four research axes:

A. Certitudo/Fides. An archaeology of the opposition between epistemic evidentialism and doxastic voluntarism;

B. Ratio/Voluntas. Intellect and will in the explanation of moral agency;

C. Scientia/Opinio. The historical redefinition of the boundaries between science and opinion.

D. Consuetudo/Renovatio. The role of custom and fear of novelty in the formation of beliefs and conspiracy theories.

ArCoTh is, to its core, interdisciplinary and cross-chronological. Its basic methodological assumption is that one should not seek a linear continuity between past and present. Rather, only an accurate, philological examination of the differences and discontinuities between one and the other can offer fresh and less obvious perspectives for interpreting current phenomena.

Start date: 1 November 2024

Pasquale Porro

pasquale.porro@unimi.it

The current pandemic has highlighted and exacerbated the spread of uncontrolled beliefs, ranging from the acceptance of theses devoid of any evidence to the elaboration of complex conspiracy theories. However, this is not new: for example, the crisis caused by the Black Death that swept through Europe in the mid-14th century led to particularly violent acts of persecution against Jewish communities, accused of being behind the spread of the disease. The Middle Ages thus provide a far-reaching historical precedent for looking at what is happening in our time from a different perspective, i.e. starting from the question: is it rationally acceptable and morally legitimate to believe in something in the absence of sufficient cognitive foundations for doing so? It was precisely in the Middle Ages that sophisticated discussions took place on the epistemic and moral status of beliefs, their truth-value, and the role that the volitional component assumes in appropriating and upholding them. The project intends to address this cluster of issues, and to show that it is worthwhile to relate medieval discussions to modern and contemporary ones. It comprises four research axes:

A. Certitudo/Fides. An archaeology of the opposition between epistemic evidentialism and doxastic voluntarism;

B. Ratio/Voluntas. Intellect and will in the explanation of moral agency;

C. Scientia/Opinio. The historical redefinition of the boundaries between science and opinion.

D. Consuetudo/Renovatio. The role of custom and fear of novelty in the formation of beliefs and conspiracy theories.

ArCoTh is, to its core, interdisciplinary and cross-chronological. Its basic methodological assumption is that one should not seek a linear continuity between past and present. Rather, only an accurate, philological examination of the differences and discontinuities between one and the other can offer fresh and less obvious perspectives for interpreting current phenomena.

Start date: 1 November 2024

Federico Canaccini

f.canaccini@lumsa.it

Maria Evelina Malgieri

mariaevelina.malgieri@unito.it

PUBBLICAZIONI LEGATE AL PROGETTO

How does God’s Knowledge Differ from Tiresias’ Oracles? Revisiting Boethius’ Consolation of Philosophy, Book V

Pasquale Porro

FIS 1/2021

Come muore un filosofo. Sigieri di Brabante e Dante in una luce diversa

Pasquale Porro

FIS 1/2021

EVENTI LEGATI AL PROGETTO

FIS 1/2021

For an Archaeology of Conspiracy Theories

The Ethics of Belief from the Middle Ages to Fake News [ArCoTh], EGSAMP International Summer School, Morimondo (MI)

September 03-08, 2025

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SCOPRI DI PIù

MEMBRI DEL TEAM ASSEGNATI AL PROGETTO

POTREBBE INTERESSARTI ANCHE

SPECIES • Between Fixism and Evolutionism: The Origin of Species in Medieval Thought

Horizon Europe (HORIZON)

It is commonly believed that the debate on the nature of living species and their possible evolution has no real history prior to the 18th century.

Believing without Evidence?

The Ethics of Belief and Doxastic Control from Augustine to Fake News [BELIEVIDENCE]

We live in a world with ever greater levels of uncontrolled news. This is partly due, of course, to access to unprecedented levels of information…