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Introduction Philosophical Problems

Code: 100292 ECTS Credits: 6
2024/2025
Degree Type Year
2500246 Philosophy FB 1

Contact

Name:
Oriol Farres Juste
Email:
oriol.farres@uab.cat

Teaching groups languages

You can view this information at the end of this document.


Prerequisites

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Objectives and Contextualisation

 

The course offers an introduction to philosophical practice: we will observe and analyze how philosophy raises questions and problems, how it describes them in philosophical language, and how it attempts to solve them through worldviews, theoretical frameworks, concepts and arguments, and also seeking collaboration from scientific, humanistic or artistic disciplines. Taking some of the great philosophical problems as examples, we will observe how philosophy works, how philosophers dialogue and debate in search of the best solutions. We will analyze philosophical practice as a critical gaze and suspicious attitude, and also as dialogue and conversation, and we will examine the different ways of writing philosophical texts.

 


Competences

  • Act with ethical responsibility and respect for fundamental rights and duties, diversity and democratic valurs.
  • Act within one's own area of knowledge, evaluating sex/gender-based inequalities.
  • Recognising and interpreting topics and problems of philosophy in its various disciplines.
  • Students must be capable of applying their knowledge to their work or vocation in a professional way and they should have building arguments and problem resolution skills within their area of study.
  • Students must be capable of communicating information, ideas, problems and solutions to both specialised and non-specialised audiences.
  • Students must develop the necessary learning skills to undertake further training with a high degree of autonomy.
  • Students must have and understand knowledge of an area of study built on the basis of general secondary education, and while it relies on some advanced textbooks it also includes some aspects coming from the forefront of its field of study.
  • Thinking in a critical and independent manner on the basis of the specific topics, debates and problems of philosophy, both historically and conceptually.

Learning Outcomes

  1. Arguing about several issues and philosophical problems for the purpose of different works and the assessment of the results.
  2. Assess the impact of the difficulties, prejudices and discriminations that actions or projects may involve, in the short or long term, in relation to certain persons or groups.
  3. Correctly drawing up a previously analysed non-regulatory text.
  4. Distinguishing the topics of philosophical relevance in current debates.
  5. Establishing relationships between science, philosophy, art, religion, politics, etc.
  6. Expressing both orally and in written form, the issues and basic problems of the philosophical tradition.
  7. Identify the principal sex-/gender-based inequalities and discriminations present in society.
  8. Indicating and summarising the common content of several manifestations of various fields of culture.
  9. Recognising, with a critical eye, philosophical referents of the past and present and assessing its importance.
  10. Relating several ideas of the current philosophical debates.
  11. Submitting works in accordance with both individual and small group demands and personal styles.
  12. Summarizing the main arguments of the analysed philosophical texts.
  13. Using suitable terminology when drawing up an academic text.

Content

 

 

The course will introduce some philosophical problems, which we will address by reading, analyzing and discussing three recent books that will serve as our guides. This will also allow us to reflect on the different genres of philosophical writing. The philosophical questions that we will address will be related to the organization of fair societies, coexistence and the fight against any form of oppression. We will also see how philosophy is raising and analyzing questions related to the environmental crisis.


 

 

1.

 

Reading: Silvia Federici (2004), Calibán y la bruja. Mujeres, cuerpo y acumulación originaria (Madrid: Traficantes de sueños, 2010), trad. Verónica Hendel y Leopoldo Sebastián Touza

 

Link: https://www.traficantes.net/sites/default/files/pdfs/Caliban%20y%20la%20bruja-TdS.pdf

 

 

 

2.

 

Reading: Alicia H. Puleo, Claves ecofeministas para rebeldes que aman a la Tierra y a los animales (Madrid: Plaza y Valdés, 2019)

 

 

 

3.

 

Reading: Jorge Riechmann, Simbioética. Homo sapiens en el entramado de la vida (Madrid: Plaza y Valdés, 2022)

 

 

 

 

 

 


Activities and Methodology

Title Hours ECTS Learning Outcomes
Type: Directed      
Sessions in the classroom 45 1.8 4, 5, 6, 9, 10
Type: Supervised      
Record a video 20 0.8 11, 3
Type: Autonomous      
Reading of compulsory texts 77.5 3.1 5, 9, 3, 10, 12

 
The classroom sessions will combine theoretical classes with classes dedicated to the analysis and discussion of texts, which the students will have previously read.
										
											
										
											As a supervised activity, the students will record a video about one of the topics worked on in class.

Annotation: Within the schedule set by the centre or degree programme, 15 minutes of one class will be reserved for students to evaluate their lecturers and their courses or modules through questionnaires.


Assessment

Continous Assessment Activities

Title Weighting Hours ECTS Learning Outcomes
Exam 1 33,3 2.5 0.1 1, 8, 4, 5, 6, 13, 7, 11, 9, 3, 10, 12, 2
Exam 2 33,3 2.5 0.1 1, 4, 6, 13, 11, 9, 3, 10, 12
Video 33,3 2.5 0.1 1, 4, 5, 6, 13, 12

 

 

The evaluation consists of three tests.

The first is an exam that will take place in the middle of the course, and the second is an exam that will take place at the end of the course. The dates will be announced during the first days of class. In the exams, it will be necessary to demonstrate a sufficient knowledge of the contents worked in the classes and of the compulsory readings, as well as capacity for analysis and critical reflection.

The third test is a team task. The task is to analyze and discuss a fragment of one of the course readings, and its oral presentation through a video. The task will be done in groups of 3/4 people. While working on the task, the students can attend tutorial sessions with the lecturer during the hours of attention in the office. The deadline for the video will be established between the first and second exam. The exact date will be announced on the first days of class.

Once each test has been evaluated, and the note posted on the campus virtual, the students who wish may go to the lecturer's office during the hours of attention, and ask for a review.

Students who have failed one, two or all three tests may apply for reevaluation and retrieve the tests they have suspended.

If a student has not performed some of the tests, they can go to reevaluation. But to be able to go to reevaluation, it will be necessary to have performed, at least, two of the three tests.

When a student has not performed none of the tests, or has only performed one of them, it will be considered "non-evaluable".

It will be necessary to pass the three tests to pass the course. The final grade will be the  average grade of the three tests.

Students are asked to use the email only for  urgent matters. The rest of doubts and problems will be solved during the class and office hours. No tutorials will be done by email.

If a student needs to communicate urgently with the lecturer, please do not use the campus virtual, but institutional email.

 

 

SINGLE ASSESSMENT
										
											
										
											It consists of three tests: a theoretical exam, a text commentary and the production of a video. It will be necessary to pass the three tests to pass the course. The final grade will be the  average grade of the three tests.

For the recovery, the same system will be applied as for the continuous evaluation. The review of the final grade follows the same procedure as for the continuous assessment.
 

 

 

In the event of a student committing any irregularity that may lead to a significant variation in the grade awarded to an assessment activity, the student will be given a zero for this activity,
regardless of any disciplinary process that may take place. In the event of several irregularities in assessment activities of the same subject, the student will be given a zero as the final grade for this subject.

 

In the event that tests or exams cannot be taken onsite, they will be adapted to an online format made available through the UAB’s virtual tools (original weighting will be maintained). Homework, activities and class participation will be carried out through forums, wikis and/or discussion on Teams, etc. Lecturers will ensure that students are able to access these virtual tools, or will offer them feasible alternatives.

 

 

 

 

 


Bibliography

 

Compulsory Readings

 

They are indicated in the content section

 

Further Reading

 

Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy

https://plato.stanford.edu/

 

Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy

https://www.iep.utm.edu/


Software

No specific software required. 

Language list

Name Group Language Semester Turn
(PAUL) Classroom practices 1 Spanish second semester morning-mixed
(TE) Theory 1 Spanish second semester morning-mixed