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Ignorance, Power, and Politics: Perspectives from Feminist and Political Epistemology

This course provides a comprehensive introduction to the philosophy of ignorance, one of the fastest growing subdisciplines of philosophy. In the course, we discuss and learn about the significance of ignorance in politics and in connection to issues of social power. We will utilise especially political and feminist epistemology, though all perspectives are welcome. This course prepares the participants with a foundation to do philosophical research on these topics.

Course description

The course is structured into four parts:

1) The first part of the course provides an overview of current classificatory debates on ignorance in traditional, social, political, and feminist epistemology.

2) The second part of the course investigates normative dimensions of ignorance: When is ignorance repressive? Are there potential positive, liberating forms of ignorance?

3) The third part of the course addresses questions regarding ignorance, culpability, and responsibility: when are we culpable for our ignorance, and when are we not?

4) The fourth part of the course applies the previous three parts to specific cases of science scepticism and ignorance in social media environments.

Key questions:

– What is ignorance?

– What are the social and political dimensions of ignorance?

– Is ignorance always oppressive? If so, why? and if not, when not?

– Does ignorance have positive aspects/functions? Can ignorance fulfil liberating goals?

– When is an agent culpably ignorant of their actions, meaning when is ignorance itself blameworthy?  

– How can we identify and combat complex cases of ignorance in science scepticism and social media deception?

Continue reading below for hour division and more.

About this course

Course level

  • Master / Advanced

Credits

  • 2 ECTS

Contact hours

  • 32.5

Language

  • English

Tuition fee

  • €525 - €995

Additional Information

  • Learning objectives

    At the end of the course, students will be able to:

    • Understand key concepts in social epistemology, esp. political and feminist conceptions of ignorance (such as "white ignorance”, “epistemic echo chambers” or “science scepticism”) and can apply them to related contemporary issues for example in the media or your own life.
    • Synthesise and combine philosophical traditions, for example analytic, feminist, and continental philosophy, especially in the field of ignorance studies.
    • Analyse diverse, professional-level philosophical research articles, and identify, contextualise, and evaluate their core arguments. You are able to identify the most charitable reading of the article (when appropriate).
    • Clarify their own thinking about challenging philosophical topics by writing (research diary) and discussing in the classroom setting.
  • Forms of tuition and hour distribution

    The contact time is split between lectures by the course convenors and in-class discussion. Students will additionally be expected to complete readings from the syllabus before coming to class. The course is awarded with 2 ECTS in total, which means that students are required to spend 56 hours working on the course. 

    These 56 hours are divided up as follows: 

    • We will assign 5 short texts which students are required to read before the course. Students should calculate approximately 1 hour for each text in order to get a thorough grip of the text's arguments and make notes for their research diary. This leads to 10 hours of reading time before the course. 
    • We seek to hold the course in a time span of 5 days, with contact meetings of 6,5 hours each day (including breaks). We will divide this time in 2 hours of lectures by the instructors of the course and 5 hours of guided group discussion and presentations. 
    • Additionally, students should spend 5-10 hours on their research diaries and 5 hours for preparing their presentations.
  • Forms of assessment

    • Research diary, presentation and attendance.

    Students will not hand in essays or take a final exam, but will be required to keep a "research diary" in which they discuss what they have learned, the questions that interest them, what they do not understand, what they think about the readings and course content, and connections they make between the readings, real-world issues and events, and their own experiences. 

    We stress that students should try their best to connect issues discussed in the course to their own lives as material to cover in the research diary. This research diary serves as 40% of the students' grades, and is evaluated on the level of its engagement with the course material. 

    At the end of the summer school, students will get the chance to present and discuss the content of their research diaries. 

    In the presentation, students should raise the most interesting questions, connections, and applications that they raised in their research diary, and how they might develop their thoughts in possible future research projects. 

    The presentation of the research diary comprises 30% of the students’ grades. 

    Students are expected to actively participate in in-class discussion. Participation and attendance comprise 30% of the students' grades. Though students are expected to attend all meetings, a minimum of 80% attendance is a requirement to pass the course.

  • Syllabus

    Here you can download the preliminary course syllabus.  

    *Please note that it is a preliminary syllabus and that it might be subject to some change before the course starts.  

  • Course coordinators

    Solmu Anttila (MSc, MPhil) is a PhD candidate in Philosophy at the Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam. Their doctoral project examines the foundations of political epistemology. Their doctoral project examines the fundamentals of the emerging field of normative political epistemology. The core of the thesis is a reintroduction of the fundamental concepts of political theory to political epistemology, which serve as resources to construct a systematic political theory of knowledge from an analytic standpoint. These political-epistemic concepts, like epistemic power, epistemic exclusion, and epistemic resources provide a novel, explicitly structural perspective into normative ethical concepts already familiar in political epistemology like epistemic injustice, epistemic resistance, and epistemic responsibility.

    Sonja Riegler (BA BA MA) is a PhD candidate in Philosophy at the University of Vienna (supervised by Martin Kusch). Her doctoral project puts forward a novel theory of ignorance in social and political contexts. By drawing on Craigean “function-first” epistemology, and insights from feminist epistemology, she seeks to formulate a “functionalist approach” to ignorance that is able to specify different societal functions, mechanisms, causes and effects of ignorance. During her master's degree, Sonja Riegler was employed as a teaching assistant in philosophy at the University of Vienna. Teaching students of philosophy has been an extremely enjoyable and challenging experience and will function as a solid foundation for further teaching assignments. Moreover, Sonja Riegler is chair of UPsalon, an initiative that aims to create a space for underrepresented philosophers to connect.

Team VU Amsterdam Summer School

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Skype: by appointment via amsterdamsummerschool@vu.nl

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  • Yota
  • Programme Coordinator
  • Esther
  • International Officer

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