Ancient Philosophy - 1st semester

Objectives

a) to acquire a basic knowledge of the most important figures in ancient philosophical thought and of some of their texts.
b) to acquire a basic understanding of the specificity of ancient philosophy as a foundational moment in and the beginning of the philosophical tradition.
c) to acquire the ability to identify the most significant philosophical problems in ancient thought.
d) to acquire a basic knowledge of the main lines of development of ancient philosophy.
e) to acquire a basic ability to place concepts, methodological strategies and doctrinal positions in the historical context to which they belong.
f) to acquire a basic understanding of ancient philosophical terminology and its role in the genesis of philosophical terminology.
g) to acquire a basic ability to read and interpret some key texts of ancient philosophy.
h) to recognize the importance of the study of ancient philosophy for the understanding of current philosophical issues.

General characterization

Code

711031059

Credits

6

Responsible teacher

António de Castro Caeiro

Hours

Weekly - 4

Total - Available soon

Teaching language

Portuguese

Prerequisites

Not applicable

Bibliography

Cushman, R. E. (2007). Therapeia: Platos conception of philosophy. New Brunswick: Transaction Books.

Gauss, H. (1980). Platos conception of philosophy. Ann Arbor, Mich.: Univ. Microfilms Internat.

Schwartz, M. (2013). Der philosophische \"bios\" bei Platon: zur Einheit von philosophischem und gutem Leben. Freiburg im Breisgau: K. Alber.


Teaching method

The expository method best suits the aim of presenting the fundamental concepts and nuclear theoretical frameworks as long as critical analysis is strongly promoted and the keys for the systematization and interpretation of the texts are provided. It results in a more detailed study and a critical discussion and interpretation of the significant texts in the ancient philosophical tradition, while providing the keys for a theoretical analysis of philosophical problems and leading to a debate about alternative views and objections.
In class teaching

Evaluation method

Exam: 100 ‰

Subject matter

The concept of philosophy in Plato
Phaedo, Phaedrus, Alcibiades, Republic, Banquet
1) Insolation of terms such as philosophein, philosophers, philosophers in the Platonic corpus.
2) Insolation terms as eros, erastes, eromenos.
3) Understanding the fundamental motivation of the platonic philosophy as a radical experience of oneself.
4) Causality and motivation.
5) The archetypal situation leading to philosophizing: afections, transitivity, sense and meaning.


Programs

Programs where the course is taught: