L'Italo-Americano

italoamericano-digital-6-25-2015

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L'Italo-Americano THURSDAY, JUNE 25, 2015 www.italoamericano.org 8 The Paradoxes of Time: Remo Bodei's Fascinating Departmental Lecture at UCLA "Despite recurring proclama- tions, it is [...] certain that phi- losophy, like art, is by no means "dead." On the contrary, it is revived in every season because it corresponds to the needs of meaning that are constantly - and often unknowingly - refor- mulated. To these questions, m ute or explicit, philos ophy seeks answers, measuring and exploring the drift, the confor- mation and the faults of those symbolic continents on which our common thinking and feeling rest." (Remo Bodei, La filosofia del Novecento, Donzelli, Roma, 1997, p.188) The Department of Italian at the University of California, Los A ngeles proudly hos ted a thought-provoking lecture on the paradoxes and perceptions of time by one of its own faculty members , acclaimed Italian philosopher, Remo Bodei, on June 8. Bodei is recognized and respected throughout Europe, but needless to say, his significant contribution to the field of phi- losophy spans geographical bor- ders. He continues to share his knowledge and wisdom at con- NINA BJEKOVIC ferences and lectures all over the globe. Throughout the course of his career, he has published a myri- ad of articles, books, and transla- tions of the major literary works of H egel, K arl Ros enkranz, F ranz Ros enzw eig, Theodor Adorno, Siegfried Kracauer, and Michel Foucault. Initially, his philosophical interests focused primarily on classic German phi- losophy, idealism and the late nineteenth century, but they later shifted to the utopian thought of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, as well as contempo- rary political philosophy. His most recent research is centered on topics that concern all of us, such as the themes of passion, reason, delusion, oblivion, and time. Some of his most notable publications include Geometria delle passioni, Il dottor Freud e i nervi dell'anima, and Invito alla filosofia. His books are translat- ed into several languages, and he has received numerous accolades and awards for his work, includ- ing the Pr em io Naz ionale Letterario Pisa, which he was awarded in 1992. Many of his works are centered on the quest for happiness and the limits that confine existence and knowledge within the political, domestic and individual sectors. He has also written extensively on the human senses and the passions, and he is actively developing the theories of memory. Bodei has taught at some of the world's most prestigious institutions, including New York University, the University of Cambridge, the U nivers ity of P is a, and the University of California, Los Angeles. The lecture illuminated his most recent subjects of interest, as it called into question the inherently complex nature of time that, once excavated, gives rise to a multitude of paradoxes, which threaten to challenge the prevalent perception of time that we have adopted, and invite us to consider the possibility that it may not be the only plausible and valid one. Our image of time, as Bodei explained, is that of an infinite straight line, on which the present appears as an indivisible and non-extended point, advancing at a constant velocity, while irreversibly sepa- rating itself from the past and leaving it behind as it moves toward the future. Subsequently, Bodei attempted to subvert the absolute validity attributed to this common image of time by drawing on the ideas of philoso- phers the likes of S aint Augustine, Freud, Leibniz and Newton, and asking the unimag- inable question "Who can assure us, in the first place, that time passes in an irreversible fash- ion?" Amongst several stimulat- ing concepts of the lecture, was the idea that we never cease to live in the present: we live in the past only in the present of memo- ry, and we live in the future only in the present of expectation. The tridimens ional pres ent time, which is measured by the soul, is thus elastic, since it shrinks and concentrates into a single point through attention, but expands backw ards through remem- brance, and in turn, extends for- ward through anticipation. In light of this, the sense of the past can be modified in the present: that which has already happened cannot be erased, but its weight may be altered through forgive- ness, which allows the person who has caused the harm and the person who has endured it, to start anew. Equivalently, the future, and its uncertain nature, may be conditioned by confi- dence and faith. The scope of Bodei's lecture was not to assert the falsity of the common idea of time, but rather to illuminate the problem of deeming it the only valid image of time, instead of viewing it as one of the multiple forms through w hich human experience and knowledge may be thought of. The lecture also provokes us to think about which one of the three dimensions of the present we most frequently find ourselves in. In keeping with the spirit of philosophy and the concept of a tridimensional present, I leave you with a ques- tion: does time really pass irre- versibly or do we? Acclaimed Italian philosopher Remo Bodei

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