

Morning sessions at the market: The cost of the truth


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?
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Morning sessions at the market: honest eduction

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