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This 30-hour course introduces students to major concepts and problems in philosophy. It covers topics such as ethics, political philosophy, social philosophy, ideology, power, culture, metaphysics, epistemology, methodology of science, existentialism, aesthetics, and hermeneutics. The course examines different ethical theories, political doctrines, notions of freedom and justice, and distinctions between natural sciences and other fields. It also explores concepts like truth, justification, and the mind-body problem.
This 30-hour course introduces students to major concepts and problems in philosophy. It covers topics such as ethics, political philosophy, social philosophy, ideology, power, culture, metaphysics, epistemology, methodology of science, existentialism, aesthetics, and hermeneutics. The course examines different ethical theories, political doctrines, notions of freedom and justice, and distinctions between natural sciences and other fields. It also explores concepts like truth, justification, and the mind-body problem.
This 30-hour course introduces students to major concepts and problems in philosophy. It covers topics such as ethics, political philosophy, social philosophy, ideology, power, culture, metaphysics, epistemology, methodology of science, existentialism, aesthetics, and hermeneutics. The course examines different ethical theories, political doctrines, notions of freedom and justice, and distinctions between natural sciences and other fields. It also explores concepts like truth, justification, and the mind-body problem.
Introduction to Philosophy: Major Concepts and Problems
Lecturer: Andrzej Karalus, PhD
30 hours
1. Introduction to philosophy: main divisions, concepts and methods.
2. Practical philosophy: Ethics. Difference between morality and ethics. Deontologism and utilitarism. 3. Ethical theories: virtue ethics, 'love thy neighbour' ethics, ethics of natural rights, ethics of the social contract. Theory of the development of moral competences by L. Kohlberg. 4. Introduction to the political and social philosophy. Doctrines in political philosophy: conservatism, liberalism, anarchism, socialism, feminism. Political philosophy, social philosophy and economics. 5. Political philosophy: freedom (Locke, Mill, Berlin). Freedom, autonomy., individualism and community. Negative and positive notions of freedom. 6. Political philosophy: justice. Justice in the liberal theory. Justice and fairness (impartiality). Concept of distributive justice: Rawls, Dworkin, Nozick. 7. Political philosophy: equality. Equality in liberalism. Equity and equality in leftist theories. The concept of "equal justice under law" and its critique. Equity, equality and justice. Brotherhood and fraternity. Ideal of fraternity and justice. Society and individual. Dispute between liberals and communitarians. 8. The concept of ideology and power. "Relations of power". Violence, power and authority. Legitimation of power and authority. Politics, culture and economics: intersections. The case of women and minority discrimination. 9. Concept of culture. Basic theories of culture. Culture, personality, society. The problem of cultural relativity. Psychology of stereotypes and prejudices. The philosophical import of multicultiralism and cosmopolitanism. 10. Psychonalysis: main tenets and concepts. How individual and subjectivity is created? The logic of human desire according to Lacan. 11. Metaphysics and epistemology: basic concepts. What is truth? What are the major theories of truth? What is justification? What exists? The body-mind problem. 12.Methodology of science: social sciences and natural sciences. Difference between natural sciences, formal sciences, social sciences and humanities. How do we explain things in science? How to distinguish science from pseudiscience, religion, magic and „folk metaphysics”? 13. Metaphysics tailored for human beings: existentialism, personalism, buddhism. Schopenhauer and metaphysics of will. 14. Aesthetics: the reflection on beauty, sublime, ugliness and other categories. The beauty of nature and the beauty in arts. Aesthetic experience and aesthetic judgment, How are we to read works of art? 15. Hermeneutics: art of understanding. How do we interpret texts, cultures and ourselves? Subject, world, being and time in the existential thought.
Dialogues on Fundamental Questions of Science and Philosophy: The Commonwealth and International Library: Dialogues on Fundamental Questions of Science and Philosophy