Studying at the University of Verona
Here you can find information on the organisational aspects of the Programme, lecture timetables, learning activities and useful contact details for your time at the University, from enrolment to graduation.
Study Plan
This information is intended exclusively for students already enrolled in this course.If you are a new student interested in enrolling, you can find information about the course of study on the course page:
Laurea in Scienze dell'educazione - Enrollment from 2025/2026The Study Plan includes all modules, teaching and learning activities that each student will need to undertake during their time at the University.
Please select your Study Plan based on your enrollment year.
1° Year
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1 module among the following
2° Year activated in the A.Y. 2019/2020
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1 module among the following
3° Year activated in the A.Y. 2020/2021
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1 module among the following
1 module among the following
1 module among the following
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1 module among the following
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1 module among the following
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1 module among the following
1 module among the following
1 module among the following
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Legend | Type of training activity (TTA)
TAF (Type of Educational Activity) All courses and activities are classified into different types of educational activities, indicated by a letter.
History of Philosophy (2018/2019)
Teaching code
4S00761
Teacher
Coordinator
Credits
9
Language
Italian
Scientific Disciplinary Sector (SSD)
M-FIL/06 - HISTORY OF PHILOSOPHY
Period
Sem. 2A, Sem. 2B
Learning outcomes
Conoscere e comprendere le indispensabili nozioni di base che consentano di inquadrare e di comprendere criticamente le problematiche odierne delle scienze storiche e sociali. Accostare il pensiero dei classici al fine di mostrare la linea di sviluppo e di approfondimento dei fondamentali nuclei speculativi propri della riflessione filosofica occidentale, pur nel mutare delle condizioni storiche. Utilizzare le conoscenze acquisite per comprendere più a fondo il tema della dialettica tra cittadinanza attiva e dipendenza politica dalla patria, studiato dapprima in Platone e poi nell'ambito della filosofia classica tedesca. Sviluppare la capacità di lettura e di comprensione dei testi filosofici, alimentando negli studenti il desiderio di dialogare con alcuni tra i protagonisti della storia del pensiero filosofico, affinando nel contempo l'attitudine a mettere in relazione le conoscenze acquisite con la propria esperienza personale.
Program
-Course Content: Active Citizenship and Political Dependence on One’s Country. Sophocles, Plato and Kant.
The course will consist of two modules, equal in learning load and relevance for the final assessment:
1) General part: the course aims to offer a general introduction to the most important schools, figures and theories of Western thought with a special focus on methodological issues (canon, tradition, interdisciplinarity), terminology and text interpretation. The period covered runs from the Presocratics to Freud (for further details regarding the schools and authors included cf. the chapters of the textbook listed at 1) in “Mandatory Reading”).
2) Thematic part: the course aims to deal with the dialectic of active citizenship and political dependence on one’s country in ancient and modern thought, with special attention given to the Enlightenment in both its European and more specifically local (German) dimension, and its development in the face of the French Revolution (classical German philosophy). Moreover, a number of antinomic pairs, such as “obedience-disobedience”, “patriotism-cosmopolitism” and “human being-citizen”, will be the object of particular interest, as they can be considered alternative conceptual tools to that of “active citizenship-political dependence on one’s country”.
These two modules will not be given as separate and independent parts of the course, but will be addressed alternately in chronological order.
Teaching Methods:
The course will consist of both lectures and discussions guided by the professor with a view to enabling students to attain basic notions in the field of the history of philosophy as well as reasoning and speaking/explanatory skills. The plurality of teaching methods is conceived of as a way of helping students, who will be offered as wide a range of learning paths as possible.
Mandatory Reading:
1) U. Curi, Il coraggio di pensare, vol. 1 (Dagli arcaici al Medioevo), Loescher, Torino 2018, Sezione 1-Sezione 6, Sezione 8, Sezione 10; vol. 2A (Dal pensiero umanistico a Leibniz), Loescher, Torino 2018, Sezione 1-Sezione 3 (chapters 1-3), Sezione 4 (chapters 2, 4-5), Sezione 5 (chapters 2-4); vol. 2B (Dai libertini a Hegel), Loescher, Torino 2018, Sezione 6 (chapters 2-4), Sezione 7-Sezione 9; vol. 3A (Dalla critica del pensiero dialettico alla filosofia analitica), Loescher, Torino 2018, Sezione 1-Sezione 3 (chapters 2-6) (an alternative handbook can be discussed with the professor);
2) Learning materials distributed in class and/or published on e-learning;*
3) Sofocle, Antigone, ed. by D. Susanetti, Carocci, Roma 2012 (or other edition);
4) One of the following texts: Platone, Apologia di Socrate, ed. by G. Reale, Bompiani, Milano 2000 (or other edition), or Platone, Critone, ed. by G. Reale, Bompiani, Milano 2000 (or other edition);**
5) I. Kant, Risposta alla domanda: che cos’è l’illuminismo?, ed. by M. Bensi, Postfazione by A. M. Iacono, ETS, Pisa 2013, or in I. Kant, Scritti sul criticismo, ed. by G. De Flaviis, Laterza, Roma-Bari 1991, pp. 5-12, or in Che cos’è l’illuminismo? I testi e la genealogia del concetto, ed. by A. Tagliapietra, transl. by S. Manzoni and E. Tetamo, Mondadori, Milano 2010 (20001), pp. 16-41.
*This applies to attending students only.
**Non-attending students must study both texts.
Learning Materials:
Additional learning materials, which will form part of the mandatory reading, will be distributed during the class and/or published on e-learning.
Author | Title | Publishing house | Year | ISBN | Notes |
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Sofocle | Antigone | Carocci | 2012 | ||
Platone | Apologia di Socrate ( a c. di G. Reale) | Milano Bompiani | 2000 | ||
A. Tagliapietra (a cura di) | Che cos'è l'illuminismo? I testi e la genealogia del concetto | Bruno Mondadori | 2010 | pp. 16-41. | |
Platone | Critone | Bompiani | 2000 | ||
U. Curi | Il coraggio di pensare | Loescher | 2018 | voll. 1, 2A, 2B, 3A. |
Examination Methods
Oral exam.
The exam aims to assess the attainment of the learning objectives for both the general and the thematic part, which will be addressed according the following twofold structure: 1) General part: students will have to demonstrate possession of basic facts and notions, showing ability to explain them in a systematic manner and use an appropriate terminology; 2) Thematic part: students will have to prove comprehension of the meaning of the dialectic “active citizenship-political dependence on one’s country” and the conceptual alternatives “obedience-disobedience”, “patriotism-cosmopolitism”, “human being-citizen” against the background of the particular cases studied; furthermore, they will have to read and comment on one (or more) passages taken from one of the texts indicated in “Mandatory Reading” and prove acquisition of a robust methodology for analysis and interpretation.
Each part of the exam has equal weighting, i.e., a half of the final mark.
Non-attending students must study both Dialogues by Plato indicated in 4) of the “Mandatory Reading” instead of the learning materials indicated at 2) in “Mandatory Reading”. Non-attending students are requested to contact the professor in order to receive possible suggestions for additional readings.