FF:PG12A22 Philosophy I - Course Information
PG12A22 Philosophy I
Faculty of ArtsSpring 2009
- Extent and Intensity
- 2/0/0. 2 credit(s). Type of Completion: z (credit).
- Teacher(s)
- PhDr. Jiří Svoboda, CSc. (lecturer)
- Guaranteed by
- prof. PhDr. Milan Pol, CSc.
Department of Philosophy – Faculty of Arts
Contact Person: Ivana Klusáková - Timetable
- Tue 15:00–16:35 N21
- Course Enrolment Limitations
- The course is also offered to the students of the fields other than those the course is directly associated with.
The capacity limit for the course is 40 student(s).
Current registration and enrolment status: enrolled: 0/40, only registered: 0/40, only registered with preference (fields directly associated with the programme): 0/40 - fields of study / plans the course is directly associated with
- Course objectives
- Philosophy I Object of philosophy. Rise of philosophy. Philosophy and myth. Philosophy and science. Philosophy and religion. Philosophy and ideology. Fundamental philosophic disciplines, their objects and content: ontology, gnoseology, axiology, ethics, philosophy of history, social philosophy. The main types of European rationality.
- Syllabus
- Selected issues of the history of European philosophy: Antique philosophy (philosophers before Socrates, anthropological turn; Socrates and sophists, systemic philosophers; Plato, Aristotle, Hellenistic philosophy), Patristics and scholastics (St. Augustine, Thomas Aquinas, dispute over universals), Renaissance philosophy (natural philosophy, social philosophy; Machiavelli, religious reformation philosophy), Modern philosophy (rationalism; Descartes, Spinoza, Leibniz, empirism; Bacon, Locke, Hume), Enlightenment (Voltaire, Rousseau), German classical idealism (Kant, Fichte, Schelling, Hegel), Rise of marxism, Pozitivism (Comte, Mill, Spencer), Irrationalism, voluntarism, life philosophy (Schopenhauer, Kierkegaard, Nietzsche, Bergson), 20th-century philosophy (phenomenology, neopozitivism, existentialism, structuralism, postmodernism).
- Literature
- Assessment methods
- The course ends with receiving of credits for an essay (min. 5400 characters) on a philosophical work chosen from proposed list.
- Language of instruction
- Czech
- Further comments (probably available only in Czech)
- The course is taught annually.
- Enrolment Statistics (Spring 2009, recent)
- Permalink: https://is.muni.cz/course/phil/spring2009/PG12A22