Course title | History of Philosophy III: Modern Philosophy |
---|---|
Course code | KPF/B007 |
Organizational form of instruction | Lecture |
Level of course | Bachelor |
Year of study | not specified |
Semester | Winter |
Number of ECTS credits | 5 |
Language of instruction | Czech |
Status of course | Compulsory |
Form of instruction | Face-to-face |
Work placements | This is not an internship |
Recommended optional programme components | None |
Lecturer(s) |
---|
|
Course content |
1. Basis of modern philosophy: the intellectual situation of the late 16th and early 17th century. Basic characteristics of modern philosophy, its main periods. 2 to 3 Rene Descartes. 4. Descartes contemporaries and followers: Thomas Hobbes, Marin Mersenne, Pierre Gassendi, Antoine Arnauld and Okasionalists. 5 to 6 Philosophers: Baruch Spinoza, John Locke, Isaac Newton, Nicolas Malebranche, Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz, George Berkeley. 7 to 8 Enlightenment: Pierre Bayle, French Enlightenment, David Hume. 9 to10 Immanuel Kant. 11 to 12 German Idealism, its propagators and oponents: Fichte, Schelling, Hegel, Jacobi, Schiller, Schopenhauer, Feurbach, Kierkegaard, Marx. 13 to 14 Positivism and Utilitarianism, Jeremy Bentham, Auguste Comte, John Stuart Mill. Prospect for the rest of the 19th century.
|
Learning activities and teaching methods |
unspecified
|
Learning outcomes |
This is a survey course of a period of the history of philosophy, which follows two previous courses (ancient, medieval+renaissance), which brought the topic up to the first quarter of the 17th century. The main figures and topics of modern philosophy (up to the last quarter of the 19th century) will be discussed.
After having passed the course, students will be able to continue studying modern philosophy and, eventually, to teach it on a high-school level. |
Prerequisites |
None
|
Assessment methods and criteria |
unspecified
A written test. It contains about 25 questions. The maximum score is 40 points. To obtain grade 1, the minimum is 27 points; to obtain grade 2, 20 points; to obtain grade 3, 13 points. |
Recommended literature |
|
Study plans that include the course |
Faculty | Study plan (Version) | Category of Branch/Specialization | Recommended semester | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Faculty: Faculty of Arts | Study plan (Version): Human Studies focused Aesthetics (A14) | Category: Philosophy, theology | 2 | Recommended year of study:2, Recommended semester: Winter |
Faculty: Faculty of Education | Study plan (Version): Social Sciences (A14) | Category: Philosophy, theology | 2 | Recommended year of study:2, Recommended semester: Winter |
Faculty: Faculty of Arts | Study plan (Version): Philosophy (A14) | Category: Philosophy, theology | 2 | Recommended year of study:2, Recommended semester: Winter |
Faculty: Faculty of Arts | Study plan (Version): Social Sciences (Two-Subject Combination) (A14) | Category: Philosophy, theology | 2 | Recommended year of study:2, Recommended semester: Winter |
Faculty: Faculty of Education | Study plan (Version): Social Sciences (A14) | Category: Philosophy, theology | 2 | Recommended year of study:2, Recommended semester: Winter |
Faculty: Faculty of Education | Study plan (Version): Social Sciences (A14) | Category: Philosophy, theology | 2 | Recommended year of study:2, Recommended semester: Winter |
Faculty: Faculty of Arts | Study plan (Version): Social Sciences (Two-Subject Combination) (A14) | Category: Philosophy, theology | 2 | Recommended year of study:2, Recommended semester: Winter |
Faculty: Faculty of Arts | Study plan (Version): Social Sciences (Two-Subject Combination) (A14) | Category: Philosophy, theology | 2 | Recommended year of study:2, Recommended semester: Winter |