Saint-Louis University - Bruxelles
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ESPO1163 - Philosophy



Credits : 5

Lecturer :
Mode of delivery :
Face-to-face , second term, 30 hours of theory.

Timetable :
Second term
Tuesday from 10:45 to 12:45

Language of instruction :
French

Learning outcomes :
This course is an introduction to philosophy and will address the following question: « What shall we do? An enquiry on the principles of good action ». The aim of the course is to provide clear insights into the history of philosophy through the examination of this question.
The course also aims at introducing the students to critical thinking and to the reading and analysis of philosophical texts.



Prerequisites :
None

Co-requisites :
None

Course contents :
We will question the principles that guide human action and more specifically moral action. Are there moral facts? Can values be objective? On the contrary, are they necessarily relative to a culture, a time or an individual? Can one want evil? Are we always responsible for what we do? These are the questions which will be addresses in this introductory course to philosophy.





Planned learning activities and teaching methods :
Lecture course and text reading (reading booklet)
Students will only be provided with the course structure and will learn to take notes. They will have to read a number of texts in relation with the course contained in the reading booklet.

Chapitre 1. Introduction. What is philosophy ?
Chapitre 2. Where is the good? (I): Do moral values actually exist? (Platon)
Chapitre 3. Where is the good? (II): Shall we follow our desires? (D. Hume)
Chapitre 4. Where is the good? (III): Is it only intention that counts? (E. Kant)
Chapitre 5. Where is the good? (III): Does the end justify the means? (J. Bentham, J.S. Mill)
Chapitre 6. Where is the good? (IV): Putting oneself in someone else's place (A. Smith)
Chapitre 7. Relativism (I). “What holds true on one side of the Pyrenees may be false on the other” (Pascal, Pensées, 60-294) (F. Nietzsche)
Chapitre 8. Relativism (II). Do I have to do what is good for me? (Ph. Foot)
Chapitre 9. Paasions (I). Is it possible to want what is evil? (Platon, Aristote)
Chapitre 10. Passions (II). Do I have to resist my passions? JP. Sartre)
Chapitre 11. Passions (III). How to resist my passions? (R. Descartes)
Chapitre 12. Passions (III). Am I the master in my own house? (S. Freud)
Chapitre 13. Conclusions.





Assessment methods and criteria :
Written examination which will consist in questions about the course and mandatory readings.

Recommended or required reading :
A reading booklet will be available at the reprography.