20710014 - HISTORY OF PHILOSOPHY

Curriculum

teacher profile | teaching materials

Mutuazione: 20710014 STORIA DELLA FILOSOFIA in Filosofia L-5 FAILLA MARIANNINA

Programme

PROGRAM MODULE A:
The course aims to analyze the concepts of nature and subject in the philosophies of Leibniz and Kant keeping in mind some guiding notions declined in different ways in the two philosophies: body/mind, sensitivity/intellect, quantity/quality, discrete/continuous, mechanism/teleology.
PROGRAM MODULE B:
The course aims to examine the concepts of nature and subject in the philosophies of Kant and Husserl, comparing the notions of nature and natural attitude, transcendental deduction and "epoché", pure form, eidos and variation.



Core Documentation

G. W. Leibniz, Monadology, Saggiatore, Milan.
I. Kant, Critic of Pure Reason, Bompiani, Milan (in particular Transcendental Aesthetics and Transcendental Analytics up to § 27).
E. Husserl, The fundamental problems of phenomenology. Lessons on the natural concept of the world, Quodlibet, Macerata.
Massimo Mugnai, Introduction to the philosophy of Leibniz, Einaudi, Turin.
Luigi Scaravelli, Kantian Studies, La Nuova Italia, Florence (in particular chapters I-II-III of Kant and Modern Physics+Lectures on the "Critique of Pure Reason").
Vincenzo Costa, Husserl, Carocci, Rome.


Type of delivery of the course

The course consists of frontal teaching, based on reading the primary sources and comparison with the original editions (French and German)- Discussions with students and debates on the topics covered. A seminar about a text to choose from among the classical works in the program. The seminar includes the writing of papers that will be discussed in the seminar room.

Attendance

Frequency is optional, but participation is recommended to acquire the basic methodological tools for reading and understanding the text

Type of evaluation

The verification of learning occurs through an oral interview. The examination involves the preparation of a 3000-word written paper on the classic thinker's subject of the seminar activity.

teacher profile | teaching materials

Mutuazione: 20710014 STORIA DELLA FILOSOFIA in Filosofia L-5 FAILLA MARIANNINA

Programme

PROGRAM MODULE A:
The course aims to analyze the concepts of nature and subject in the philosophies of Leibniz and Kant keeping in mind some guiding notions declined in different ways in the two philosophies: body/mind, sensitivity/intellect, quantity/quality, discrete/continuous, mechanism/teleology.
PROGRAM MODULE B:
The course aims to examine the concepts of nature and subject in the philosophies of Kant and Husserl, comparing the notions of nature and natural attitude, transcendental deduction and "epoché", pure form, eidos and variation.



Core Documentation

G. W. Leibniz, Monadology, Saggiatore, Milan.
I. Kant, Critic of Pure Reason, Bompiani, Milan (in particular Transcendental Aesthetics and Transcendental Analytics up to § 27).
E. Husserl, The fundamental problems of phenomenology. Lessons on the natural concept of the world, Quodlibet, Macerata.
Massimo Mugnai, Introduction to the philosophy of Leibniz, Einaudi, Turin.
Luigi Scaravelli, Kantian Studies, La Nuova Italia, Florence (in particular chapters I-II-III of Kant and Modern Physics+Lectures on the "Critique of Pure Reason").
Vincenzo Costa, Husserl, Carocci, Rome.


Type of delivery of the course

The course consists of frontal teaching, based on reading the primary sources and comparison with the original editions (French and German)- Discussions with students and debates on the topics covered. A seminar about a text to choose from among the classical works in the program. The seminar includes the writing of papers that will be discussed in the seminar room.

Attendance

Frequency is optional, but participation is recommended to acquire the basic methodological tools for reading and understanding the text

Type of evaluation

The verification of learning occurs through an oral interview. The examination involves the preparation of a 3000-word written paper on the classic thinker's subject of the seminar activity.

teacher profile | teaching materials

Mutuazione: 20710014 STORIA DELLA FILOSOFIA in Filosofia L-5 FAILLA MARIANNINA

Programme

PROGRAM MODULE A:
The course aims to analyze the concepts of nature and subject in the philosophies of Leibniz and Kant keeping in mind some guiding notions declined in different ways in the two philosophies: body/mind, sensitivity/intellect, quantity/quality, discrete/continuous, mechanism/teleology.
PROGRAM MODULE B:
The course aims to examine the concepts of nature and subject in the philosophies of Kant and Husserl, comparing the notions of nature and natural attitude, transcendental deduction and "epoché", pure form, eidos and variation.



Core Documentation

G. W. Leibniz, Monadology, Saggiatore, Milan.
I. Kant, Critic of Pure Reason, Bompiani, Milan (in particular Transcendental Aesthetics and Transcendental Analytics up to § 27).
E. Husserl, The fundamental problems of phenomenology. Lessons on the natural concept of the world, Quodlibet, Macerata.
Massimo Mugnai, Introduction to the philosophy of Leibniz, Einaudi, Turin.
Luigi Scaravelli, Kantian Studies, La Nuova Italia, Florence (in particular chapters I-II-III of Kant and Modern Physics+Lectures on the "Critique of Pure Reason").
Vincenzo Costa, Husserl, Carocci, Rome.


Type of delivery of the course

The course consists of frontal teaching, based on reading the primary sources and comparison with the original editions (French and German)- Discussions with students and debates on the topics covered. A seminar about a text to choose from among the classical works in the program. The seminar includes the writing of papers that will be discussed in the seminar room.

Attendance

Frequency is optional, but participation is recommended to acquire the basic methodological tools for reading and understanding the text

Type of evaluation

The verification of learning occurs through an oral interview. The examination involves the preparation of a 3000-word written paper on the classic thinker's subject of the seminar activity.