THEORETICAL PHILOSOPHY
cod. 1005447

Academic year 2018/19
1° year of course - Second semester
Professor
Academic discipline
Filosofia teoretica (M-FIL/01)
Field
Storia della filosofia e istituzioni di filosofia
Type of training activity
Basic
36 hours
of face-to-face activities
6 credits
hub: PARMA
course unit
in ITALIAN

Learning objectives

In-depth knowledge and understanding of theoretical philosophy, its relation to historical contexts, and its application to contemporary
debates. Ability to discuss in an argumentative form the subject-matters proposed in the lessons and to critically compare the interpretations of
the assigned texts. Development of communicative and learning skills, and of the ability to make autonomous judgments on philosophical matters.

Prerequisites

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Course unit content

John Dewey's Social Ontology. The course will deal with some aspects of John Dewey's social ontology and philosophy of society. habit, custom, institutions; nature, life, and society;power, domination, hegemony, and social freedom.

Full programme

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Bibliography

J. Dewey, Esperienza e natura, Mursia, Milano, 1990 (cap. 1-5)
Dewey, Natura e condotta dell'uomo, la Nuova Italia, Firenze, 1968 (prefazioni, introduzione e parte prima)
J. Dewey, Rifare la filosofia, Donzelli, Roma, 2008
J. Dewey, Filosofia politica e sociale, Rosenberg & Sellier, Torino, 2016 (cap. 1-6)
J. Dewey, Individualismo vecchio e nuovo, Diabasis, Parma, 2013

For students not attending the lessons: Il pragmatismo, a cura di R.M. Calcaterra, G. Maddalena, e G. Marchetti, Carocci, Roma, 2015

Teaching methods

teacher up-front lesson
Guided discussion
Seminar

Assessment methods and criteria

The exam will include a short written exercise (a book review of max. 4000 characters) on "Individualism old and new (10 % of the final grade), and
will be taken in the form of an interview regarding the texts included in the program (90 % of the final grade)


The final evaluation (on a scale of 0-30) will be determined on the basis of four factors: 1) Expressive accuracy; 2) argumentative capacity and independence of judgment; 3) Ability to read, understand, and critically analyze philosophical texts; 4) Ability to identify theoretical links between different concepts and philosophical positions.
The exam is considered passed if it reaches the minimum grade of 18/30. The final mark will be determined according to the following parameters:
30 e Lode: Cum Laude; Outstanding expressive skills, brilliant ability to argue a thesis in a convincing way and to identify its weaknesses, terrific understanding and critical analysis of the texts assigned and the main concepts involved
30: Excellent; accurate and very well articulated expression skills, excellent understanding of the texts assigned and the concepts and topics involved
27-29: Very Good; correct and orderly expression skills, adequate capacity for argumentation and critical analysis of texts and concepts
24-26: Good: Good but not always correct expression skills, satisfactory ability to argue a philosophical thesis and to analyze texts and concepts, knowledge of texts not always complete
21-23: Discreet: not always appropriate expression skills, discreet argumentative ability, sometimes unsatisfactory understanding of texts and concepts
18-21: Sufficient: expressive skills often not adequate, unsatisfactory argumentative capacity, acceptable but often superficial knowledge and understanding of texts and concepts
0-18: Insufficient: Serious expressive gaps, inability to philosophically argue a thesis, inadequate knowledge and understanding of texts and concepts

Other information

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