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.
Academic calendar
The academic calendar shows the deadlines and scheduled events that are relevant to students, teaching and technical-administrative staff of the University. Public holidays and University closures are also indicated. The academic year normally begins on 1 October each year and ends on 30 September of the following year.
Course calendar
The Academic Calendar sets out the degree programme lecture and exam timetables, as well as the relevant university closure dates..
Period | From | To |
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Sem. 1A | Sep 27, 2021 | Nov 6, 2021 |
Sem. 1B | Nov 15, 2021 | Jan 12, 2022 |
Sem. 2A | Feb 14, 2022 | Mar 26, 2022 |
Sem. 2B | Apr 4, 2022 | Jun 4, 2022 |
Session | From | To |
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Sessione Invernale | Jan 10, 2022 | Feb 12, 2022 |
Sessione estiva | Jun 6, 2022 | Jul 23, 2022 |
Sessione autunnale | Aug 29, 2022 | Sep 24, 2022 |
Session | From | To |
---|---|---|
Sessione estiva | Jul 11, 2022 | Jul 16, 2022 |
Sessione autunnale | Nov 7, 2022 | Nov 12, 2022 |
Period | From | To |
---|---|---|
FESTIVITA' OGNISSANTI | Nov 1, 2021 | Nov 1, 2021 |
Vacanze di Natale | Dec 25, 2021 | Jan 6, 2022 |
VACANZE DI PASQUA | Apr 15, 2022 | Apr 19, 2022 |
Festa della Liberazione | Apr 25, 2022 | Apr 25, 2022 |
FESTA DEL LAVORO | May 1, 2022 | May 1, 2022 |
Festività Santo Patrono di Verona | May 21, 2022 | May 21, 2022 |
Exam calendar
Exam dates and rounds are managed by the relevant Humanistic Studies Teaching and Student Services Unit.
To view all the exam sessions available, please use the Exam dashboard on ESSE3.
If you forgot your login details or have problems logging in, please contact the relevant IT HelpDesk, or check the login details recovery web page.
Academic staff

Mastrocinque Attilio
Study Plan
The 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 enrolment year.
Modules | Credits | TAF | SSD |
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2° Year activated in the A.Y. 2022/2023
Modules | Credits | TAF | SSD |
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Modules | Credits | TAF | SSD |
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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 Classical German Philosophy (2021/2022)
Teaching code
4S007344
Credits
6
Language
Italian
Scientific Disciplinary Sector (SSD)
M-FIL/06 - HISTORY OF PHILOSOPHY
The teaching is organized as follows:
Lezione
Esercitazione
Learning outcomes
The course aims to foster a fruitful dialogue with the classics of German philosophy, focusing on a topic of crucial interest and enduring relevance. The learning objectives (whose attainment will be carefully checked and tested during the exam) comprise an ability to read and understand texts: students will be exposed to dialogue with some of the protagonists of German philosophical thought in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. They will sharpen their awareness of key terminology and, at the same time, increase their disposition to connect acquired knowledge with personal experience. The anticipated learning objectives are as follows:
Knowledge:
1) Knowledge and understanding of classical German philosophy and its major exponents;
2) Knowledge and understanding of some of the most important texts of classical German philosophy; 3) Knowledge and understanding of the German philosophical lexicon developed between the eighteenth and the nineteenth centuries.
Skills:
1) Applying acquired knowledge and understanding to the reading of and commentary on philosophical texts belonging to the classical German tradition, possibly in the original or at least with some reference to it; this should be demonstrated by the possession of an appropriate vocabulary and the ability to identify interpretative problems and suggest possible solutions;
2) Applying acquired knowledge and understanding to the translation of the key words of classical German philosophy, which are often intrinsically polysemous; 3) Making autonomous judgments and engaging in independent reasoning;
4) Developing communication skills in the following areas: participating in guided discussions, explaining ideas and defending these through argument, and possibly delivering short presentations in class;
5) Enacting autonomous learning skills through the development of an appropriate methodology of study and interpretation of texts;
6) Developing the ability to connect study outcomes with personal experience with regard to the specific subject of the course, wherein particular attention will be paid to ability to differentiate between historical circumstances and contexts.
Program
PREREQUISITES: Knowledge of early-modern and contemporary philosophy at B.A. level. The linguistic considerations of the classes do not presuppose knowledge of German nor of Ancient Greek and Latin; all necessary information for a full understanding of the concepts and key words arising during the course will be provided in the teaching.
COURSE CONTENT: Introspection, Research and Exercise. The Dimensions of “Care” in Classical German Philosophy.
The course aims to offer a brand new narrative of classical German philosophy both chronologically and theoretically: on the one hand, classical German philosophy will be extended backwards so as to include the late Enlightenment, on the other hand, it will be reconstructed using the notions of “spiritual exercise”, “art of living” and “care”. These notions have originally established themselves in the different, yet not unrelated contexts of contemporary philosophy (Heidegger, Foucault) and scholarship on Ancient thought (Pierre Hadot, Christoph Horn), but represent a valuable key also to eighteenth- and nineteenth-century German culture, which they help to describe in a different way than we are accustomed to. The conception of philosophy which follows from this novel picture is mainly practical and existential, and is based on self-knowledge and the clear insight on one’s role in the world as preconditions for any further intellectual endeavor, but most importantly for daily behavior. Philosophy’s task, to be shared by theology and literature, is therefore to guide the human being to discovering their own vocation and the best means to realize it, according to what Lessing and Kant identified as Socrates’ teaching, which was however immediately forgotten by his scholars and successors.
In order to do justice to the specific features of this theoretical and cultural project, often obscured by the epistemological character of both criticism and the subsequent idealistic theories, the course will consist of three parts:
1) Introduction to classical German philosophy e revision of its traditional image: periodization,
alternative historiographical categories, authors, ideas, literary genres;
2) Key words: care (“Sorge”), vocation (“Bestimmung”), mission, (“Sendung”), calling (“Beruf”/“Berufung”), aim (“Zweck”) or final aim (“Endzweck”), striving for perfection/perfecting (“Vervollkommnung”), meditation (“Betrachtung”) e comparison with equivalent ancient terms referring to exercise, practice and care:
3) Authors and texts: reading of and commentary on selected passages taken from philosophical, theological and literary works by authors such as Johann Joachim Spalding, Gotthold Ephraim Lessing, Immanuel Kant and Johann Gottlieb Fichte.
TEACHING METHODS: The modality of course delivery will depend on the University’s measures against COVID-19. The course will consist of two parts: 24 hours of lectures (=4 CFU) and 24 hours of exercises (=2 CFU). In the first part of the course, the professor will provide all relevant historical, theoretical and historiographical elements following a traditional explanatory method. In the second part of the course, the teaching mode will shift to seminars with discussions initially guided by the professor, papers given by students and/or team working. The ways in which professor and students, but most importantly students themselves will interact mutually, will be object of experimentation and will possibly be reassessed in the making, in the light of the attendees’ number, their potential suggestions and specific learning needs. The students’ active and concrete contribution will play a crucial role in the process of co-creating this common learning path. Non-attending students are requested to contact the professor in order to identify alternative and substitutive teaching/learning modes.
MANDATORY READING FOR BOTH ATTENDING AND NON-ATTENDING STUDENTS
1) Materiale didattico caricato attraverso la piattaforma e-learning;
2) L. A. Macor, Bestimmung des Menschen, in Tra filosofia della natura e antropologia filosofica. Parole-chiave nel percorso di Gian Franco Frigo, a cura di M. Dalla Valle, D. De Pretto, F. Grigenti e L. Illetterati, Padova University Press, Padova 2013, pp. 27-35;*
3) One of the following texts: J. J. Spalding, La vocazione dell’uomo, ed. by L. Balbiani and G. Landolfi Petrone, Bompiani, Milano 2011; I. Kant, La metafisica dei costumi, ed. by G. Vidari, revised by N. Merker, Laterza, Roma – Bari 1970 o 1983 o 2004 (only: Principi metafisici della dottrina della virtù) or Metafisica dei costumi, ed. by G. Landolfi Petrone, Bompiani, Milano 2006 (only: Dottrina della virtù); J. G. Fichte, La missione del dotto, ed. by E. Alessiato, Orthotes, Napoli – Salerno 2020.
* This article will be made available on e-learning.
LEARNING MATERIALS
Documents published on e-learning will include parts 1) and 2) of Mandatory reading as well as additional learning materials for the second part of the course.
Bibliography
Examination Methods
Oral exam for the first part of the course + exercises (or substitutive activity) for the second part of the course.
The final mark will be the weighted mean of the marks obtained in the two parts.
The oral exam (face to face or online depending on the University’s measures against COVID-19) will be the same for both attending and non-attending students, and this will be addressed as follows:
1) discussion of one or more topics/concepts and/or reading of and commenting on one text from among those belonging to parts 1) and 2) of the Mandatory Reading: students will have to demonstrate understanding of the new image of classical German philosophy and/or acquisition of a robust methodology for analysing texts and reflecting on their theoretical implications;
2) presentation and discussion of one of the three texts indicated in part 3) of the Mandatory Reading: students will have to demonstrate capacity to introduce the relevant work in a systematic manner and contextualize it within the classical German philosophy and its new image; in doing this, they will have to demonstrate mastery of the lexicon and theoretical maturity.
The exercises carried out in class will determine the relevant mark for attending students. The form of assessment for non-attending students will be clarified during the meeting aimed at identifying alternative and substitutive teaching/learning modes.
Type D and Type F activities
Una quota dei crediti corrispondenti all’attività formativa dell’intero biennio, determinata dal presente Regolamento in 12 (dodici) CFU, è riservata alla scelta autonoma da parte della/o studente. I crediti liberi a scelta della/o studente hanno lo scopo di offrire alla/o studente la possibilità di personalizzare il proprio percorso formativo permettendo di approfondire uno o più argomenti di particolare interesse legati al proprio percorso accademico. Questa scelta può essere orientata verso corsi/esami non seguiti/sostenuti in precedenza, verso altre attività (tirocinio, laboratori, tutorati, ulteriori competenze linguistiche, seminari/convegni – tutti preventivamente approvati dal Collegio Didattico di Filosofia).
Tra i 12 (dodici) crediti dovrà comunque essere presente almeno un’attività formativa erogata come esame universitario (con relativo voto in trentesimi), salvo nel caso in cui la/o studente decida di frequentare la Summer School Interdisciplinare di Dipartimento in Lingua Inglese “Human Sciences and Society” e di chiederne il riconoscimento, saturando così i 12 CFU in ambito D, oppure di estendere la durata della propria esperienza di Tirocinio curricolare e desideri vedersi riconosciuti i corrispondenti CFU in esubero (rispetto ai 6 previsti) in ambito D (senza che essi possano fare media), invece che fuori piano (vedasi la Nota 1 nelle Linee Guida Tirocinio Curricolare riportate nella relativa pagina web del CdS).
Tale riconoscimento in ambito D è possibile, da Regolamento di Ateneo, senza limitazioni (quindi per l’intero ammontare dei CFU previsti in questo ambito).
In conformità al dettato del D.M. 270/04 e alla luce delle raccomandazioni espresse dal D.M. 26 luglio 2007, capo 3 lettera n), la scelta, che non può essere predeterminata, deve comunque essere ispirata a coerenza col piano formativo della/o studente e sarà perciò soggetta a valutazione da parte del Collegio Didattico con riferimento all’adeguatezza delle motivazioni fornite dalla/o studente. Ciò vale, in special modo, per la richiesta di riconoscimento in ambito D dei CFU relativi al prolungamento dell’attività di Tirocinio: essa deve essere sostenuta da adeguate motivazioni che il Tutor accademico incaricato di seguire la/o studente tirocinante si riserva di esaminare e valutare congiuntamente alla Commissione Tirocini.
Si invitano inoltre le/gli studenti a rispettare le seguenti indicazioni per il completamento di tale ambito D:
- massimo 6 CFU relativi a competenze linguistiche (oltre a quelli previsti dal Piano di Studio);
- massimo 6 CFU di attività laboratoriale/esercitazioni;
- massimo 6 CFU di attività seminariale/convegni/cicli di incontri/formative in genere (sia accreditata dal Dipartimento di Scienze Umane che extrauniversitaria);
- non vengono valutate attività svolte in Erasmus che non siano state inserite nei Learning Agreement;
- vengono riconosciuti CFU in ambito D per attività formative universitarie organizzate da altri Dipartimenti dell’Ateneo di Verona o da altri Atenei solo per quelle attività che siano state oggetto (da parte del relativo Referente/Responsabile) di richiesta preventiva di accreditamento al Dipartimento di Scienze Umane e abbiano ricevuto l’approvazione di quest’ultimo.
In questa pagina lo studente potrà trovare delle guide operative, utili al completamento del proprio percorso universitario.
COMPETENZE TRASVERSALI
Scopri i percorsi formativi promossi dal Teaching and learning centre dell'Ateneo, destinati agli studenti iscritti ai corsi di laurea, volti alla promozione delle competenze trasversali:
https://talc.univr.it/it/competenze-trasversali
years | Modules | TAF | Teacher |
---|---|---|---|
1° 2° | What paradigms beyond the pandemic? | D |
Paola Dal Toso
(Coordinatore)
|
1° 2° | The contagion and the cure. The world after the virus | D |
Carlo Chiurco
(Coordinatore)
|
1° 2° | Summer School: Human Sciences and Society - (HSaS) | D |
Massimiliano Badino
(Coordinatore)
|
1° 2° | The ethics and aesthetics of the image | D |
Gianluca Solla
(Coordinatore)
|
years | Modules | TAF | Teacher |
---|---|---|---|
1° 2° | What paradigms beyond the pandemic? | D |
Paola Dal Toso
(Coordinatore)
|
1° 2° | The contagion and the cure. The world after the virus | D |
Carlo Chiurco
(Coordinatore)
|
1° 2° | Laboratorio “Calendario di Memoria Civile – Giornata della Memoria” | D |
Olivia Guaraldo
(Coordinatore)
|
1° 2° | Eros and Polis ”and“ In the name of Tiresias: Subjectivation, transit, sexuation | D |
Federico Leoni
(Coordinatore)
|
years | Modules | TAF | Teacher |
---|---|---|---|
1° 2° | Introduction to robotics for humanities students | D |
Paolo Fiorini
(Coordinatore)
|
years | Modules | TAF | Teacher |
---|---|---|---|
1° 2° | "Common world. 2022 Arendt Seminars | D |
Ilaria Possenti
(Coordinatore)
|
1° 2° | Restorative Justice | D |
Cristina Lonardi
(Coordinatore)
|
1° 2° | Group Psychology and the Analysis of the Ego, a hundred years later: social bond and new forms of subjectivation. | D |
Matteo Bonazzi
(Coordinatore)
|
1° 2° | The contagion and the cure. The world after the virus | D |
Carlo Chiurco
(Coordinatore)
|
1° 2° | Gnoseology and Metaphysics Workshop | D |
Davide Poggi
(Coordinatore)
|
1° 2° | Eros and Polis ”and“ In the name of Tiresias: Subjectivation, transit, sexuation | D |
Federico Leoni
(Coordinatore)
|
years | Modules | TAF | Teacher |
---|---|---|---|
1° 2° | "Common world. 2022 Arendt Seminars | D |
Ilaria Possenti
(Coordinatore)
|
1° 2° | Partecipated justice and reforms. The settlement of conflicts with people and for people | D |
Cristina Lonardi
(Coordinatore)
|
1° 2° | Gnoseology and Metaphysics Workshop | D |
Davide Poggi
(Coordinatore)
|
1° 2° | Eros and Polis ”and“ In the name of Tiresias: Subjectivation, transit, sexuation | D |
Federico Leoni
(Coordinatore)
|
Career prospects
Module/Programme news
News for students
There you will find information, resources and services useful during your time at the University (Student’s exam record, your study plan on ESSE3, Distance Learning courses, university email account, office forms, administrative procedures, etc.). You can log into MyUnivr with your GIA login details: only in this way will you be able to receive notification of all the notices from your teachers and your secretariat via email and soon also via the Univr app.
Competenze linguistiche
I crediti formativi universitari relativi alle "Ulteriori competenze linguistiche" (B1 informatizzato se seconda lingua; livello B2 completo se stessa lingua della triennale) possono essere acquisiti in una delle due seguenti modalità:
- iscrizione da parte della/o studente presso il Centro Linguistico di Ateneo (CLA ➔ https://cla.univr.it/it/test-e-certificazioni) per il sostenimento e il superamento delle prove + iscrizione, sempre da parte della/o studente, in apposita lista per la registrazione crediti e registrazione CFU (senza presenza) da parte dell’Università.
Oppure
- equipollenza di certificazioni linguistiche esterne: riconoscimento equipollenza di certificazioni linguistiche esterne (➔ https://cla.univr.it/it/servizi/riconoscimento-delle-certificazioni-linguistiche-esterne).
Gestione carriere
Linguistic training CLA
Internships
Graduation
Attachments
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List of theses and work experience proposals
theses proposals | Research area |
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Linguaggio e mito in Tolkien | ENGLISH LITERATURE - Critical Theory & Poetics |
Dialettica del negativo in Meister Eckhart | HISTORY OF PHILOSOPHY - MIDDLE AGES |
La felicità nel Medioevo | HISTORY OF PHILOSOPHY - MIDDLE AGES |
Le figure di Eva e Maria in Ildegarda di Bingen | HISTORY OF PHILOSOPHY - MIDDLE AGES |
IA. Una critica fenomenologica al concetto di Intelligenza Artificiale | The Human Mind and Its Complexity: Cognitive science, psychology, linguistics, philosophy of mind - Philosophy of science, epistemology and logic |
Practical information for students
Attachments
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