2017-2018 / PHIL0009-1

History of Ancient philosophy

Duration

45h Th

Number of credits

 Bachelor in ancient languages and literatures : classics5 crédits 
 Bachelor in history of art and archaeology : musicology5 crédits 
 Bachelor in philosophy5 crédits 
 Master in philosophy (120 ECTS)5 crédits 
 Master in philosophy (60 ECTS)5 crédits 

Lecturer

Marc-Antoine Gavray

Language(s) of instruction

French language

Organisation and examination

Teaching in the first semester, review in January

Units courses prerequisite and corequisite

Prerequisite or corequisite units are presented within each program

Learning unit contents

Presentation of the main philosophical streams, from the Presocratics to Aristotle.

Learning outcomes of the learning unit

The course aims at giving the basic knowledge of both the particular concepts and way of thinking in ancient philosophy, and the influence it had on the history of philosophy until now.

Prerequisite knowledge and skills

References are made to the main Greek notions, but no knowledge of Ancient Greek is required.

Planned learning activities and teaching methods

This course introduces the doctrines of the main authors of this era. Each week is devoted to an author, a school or a particular topic. Issues that will be dealt with:
1) Ionians
2) Pythagoreans
3) Eleatics
4) Empedocles, Anaxagoras, and Democritus
5) Sophists
6) Socrates
7) Plato (dialectic, Ideas, recollection, philosophy of nature, ethics, politics)
8) Aristotle (theôria, praxis, poiêsis)
Every week, the first hour will give a comprehensive presentation of an author's thought. The next two hours will be dedicated to read texts and to deepen the topic of the first hour. Students will be invited to participate to this work.

Mode of delivery (face-to-face ; distance-learning)

This is a first term course:


  • Monday, 9-10 am, A1/3/22 (from 18.09.2016)
  • Monday, 4-6 pm, A1/3/22 (from 18.09.2016)

Recommended or required readings

Students will be provided with a collection of texts, documents, summaries and bibliography from the first lesson. A syllabus is available at the Espace ULg Opéra.
Complementary texts will be given according to the progress of the course.

Assessment methods and criteria

Oral exam in January.

Work placement(s)

Organizational remarks

Contacts

Marc-Antoine Gavray Department of Philosophy Place du 20 Août, 7, bat. A1 4000 Liège
Tel.+32 (0)4 366 92 00 e-mail: Marc-Antoine.Gavray@ulg.ac.be