Morning sessions at the market: The cost of the truth
LECTURE & DISCUSSION

Morning sessions at the market: The cost of the truth

12
June
20 25
Location :
Place d’Armes à Monaco
PHILOSOPHY ALL AUDIENCES
PMR
Morning sessions at the market: The cost of the truth
Free access

Introduction

The morning sessions held during PhiloMonaco Week are organised by The Monaco Philosophical Encounters, in collaboration with Monaco Info and Monaco City Hall.

Presented each morning by Marc Crépon, philosopher and Théo Schumer, journalist, these morning sessions provide an opportunity for reflection, debate and discussion, based on questions posed by members of the public to the guest speakers of PhiloMonaco Week.

We don't know if "everything has a price" or if "everything must be paid for", but we agree that the things we care about most are "priceless". Cost, price and value are not the same thing. The price and cost of a packet of screws are the same because their "value" is insignificant, whereas the price of a gold bar follows its market value, which fluctuates, and the value of the Mona Lisa cannot be expressed in terms of price or cost. So, what about the "cost of truth"? Is the value of truth linked to values, ethics, epistemology, aesthetics or politics? Is it impossible to put a "price" on truth? Or is it simply "what it costs" to obtain and protect it? If there are "revealed truths" to which religious faith gives price and value, truths in the realm of knowledge or morality do not just fall from the sky: they require intellectual effort to conquer and protect from falsehood, opinions, hearsay, prejudices, conspiracy theories or illusions; moral strength to shield them from lies, sacrifice and denial; and political power capable of opposing the truths imposed by tyrants, dogmatists and fanatics. But must we defend the truth "at any cost", without compromise or concession, even if it means sacrificing peace, harmony, security, and social or political stability?

Go to the event's website

Informations

Opening hours : 10h00
Date : Thursday 12 June 2025

Around the event

LECTURE & DISCUSSION
Truth in art

Truth in art

10
Jun
20 25
Presented by Raphael Zagury-Orly, philosopherWith Paul Audi, philosopher Didier Ottinger, curator, expert in modern and contemporary paintingThe meeting will begin with a screening of Grosse fatigue, a 13-minute colour video with sound created by Camille Henrot in 2013 and acquired the same year by the Nouveau Musée National de Monaco.If truth has to do with knowledge, it is, in its basic sense, the agreement between a thought, a judgement or a theory and reality (or a segment of reality, given reality is infinite) and is therefore opposed to falsehood and sometimes with morality, as truth-telling opposed to lying, then its relationship with art is enigmatic in both cases. How can art capture a part of reality, even momentarily – as science does – and how can it (not) lie? Yet, things are not so simple in reality because art, whether plastic, visual, graphic or sound, allows us to see or hear something of the world, if not what cannot be heard or seen in the world. It is generally objected that this is some type of illusion since the ‘meaning’ we attribute to art is a matter of subjectivity and the interpretation that each person gives or makes of a work of art, which, at best, would allow us to say that art produces and brings a multiplicity of truths into coexistence. But this view is also tenuous because, if we accept it, we would not understand how a work of art could continue to produce meaning, question, disturb, delight and please, even as it endures through the centuries and as the regimes of subjectivity, sensibility and intellect have changed a thousand times over the centuries. Therefore, the truth of art cannot be that of the 'individual' who produces or receives it, but a truth of the world and of humanity that 'contains' even what humanity, with its tools of knowledge, sensation and 'feeling', cannot say about the world or about itself.In collaboration with the Centre Pompidou and the Nouveau Musée National de Monaco.
Proposed by : Rencontres Philosophiques de Monaco
Location : Théâtre Princesse Grace
PHILOSOPHY
All Audiences
Reduced mobility access
LECTURE & DISCUSSION
Morning sessions at the market: honest eduction

Morning sessions at the market: honest eduction

11
Jun
20 25
Presented by Marc Crépon, philosopher And Théo Schumer, journalistWith daily guest speakers and Jean-Philippe Vinci, Director of Education, Youth and SportIn collaboration with Monaco Info and Monaco City HallThe morning sessions held during PhiloMonaco Week are organised by The Monaco Philosophical Encounters, in collaboration with Monaco Info and Monaco City HallPresented each morning by Marc Crépon, philosopher and Théo Schumer, journalist, these morning sessions provide an opportunity for reflection, debate and discussion, based on questions posed by members of the public to the guest speakers of PhiloMonaco Week."Teaching the truth" is an unusual concept. It could even be considered a misguided one, despite its appeal to those with rigid beliefs, if it meant that educators, parents, teachers, and professors were to impose and instil their own truths upon those who are still learning.There is nothing worse, as the proverb says, than giving children and students a fish rather than teaching them how to fish. After all, no one would ever become a mountaineer if they were willing to be flown directly to the mountain top by helicopter. Educating people about the truth therefore seems to be something of a contradiction in terms, as teaching falsehoods and lies is hardly education. Education is sufficient if it imparts knowledge, or at least the means to distinguish knowledge from opinion, prejudice and preconceived ideas – in other words, critical thinking.
Proposed by : Rencontres Philosophiques de Monaco
Location : Place d’Armes à Monaco
PHILOSOPHY
All Audiences
Reduced mobility access
LECTURE & DISCUSSION
Morning sessions at the market: honest eduction

Morning sessions at the market: honest eduction

11
Jun
20 25
Presented by Marc Crépon, philosopher And Théo Schumer, journalistWith daily guest speakers and Jean-Philippe Vinci, Director of Education, Youth and SportIn collaboration with Monaco Info and Monaco City HallThe morning sessions held during PhiloMonaco Week are organised by The Monaco Philosophical Encounters, in collaboration with Monaco Info and Monaco City HallPresented each morning by Marc Crépon, philosopher and Théo Schumer, journalist, these morning sessions provide an opportunity for reflection, debate and discussion, based on questions posed by members of the public to the guest speakers of PhiloMonaco Week."Teaching the truth" is an unusual concept. It could even be considered a misguided one, despite its appeal to those with rigid beliefs, if it meant that educators, parents, teachers, and professors were to impose and instil their own truths upon those who are still learning.There is nothing worse, as the proverb says, than giving children and students a fish rather than teaching them how to fish. After all, no one would ever become a mountaineer if they were willing to be flown directly to the mountain top by helicopter. Educating people about the truth therefore seems to be something of a contradiction in terms, as teaching falsehoods and lies is hardly education. Education is sufficient if it imparts knowledge, or at least the means to distinguish knowledge from opinion, prejudice and preconceived ideas – in other words, critical thinking.
Proposed by : Rencontres Philosophiques de Monaco
Location : Place d’Armes à Monaco
PHILOSOPHY
All Audiences
Reduced mobility access