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(in Polish) Przedmioty obowiązkowe, filozofia, studia niestacjonarne, pierwszego stopnia (course group defined by Faculty of Philosophy)

Faculty: Faculty of Philosophy Courses displayed below are part of group defined by this faculty, but this faculty is not necessarily the one that organizes these courses. Read Help for more information on this subject.
Course group: (in Polish) Przedmioty obowiązkowe, filozofia, studia niestacjonarne, pierwszego stopnia
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2024Z - Winter semester 2024/25
2024L - Summer semester 2024/25
2024 - Academic year 2024/25
2025Z - Winter semester 2025/26
2025L - Summer semester 2025/26
2025 - Academic year 2025/26
(there could be semester, trimester or one-year classes)
Actions
2024Z 2024L 2024 2025Z 2025L 2025
3800-NZ-EP n/a n/a n/a n/a
Classes
Academic year 2024/25
  • Classes - 36 hours
  • Lecture - 36 hours
Academic year 2025/26
  • Classes - 36 hours
  • Lecture - 36 hours
Groups

Brief description

Epistemology is a part of philosophy dealing with problems of cognition and knowledge. In the field of epistemology there are discussed questions about the sources of our beliefs, the object of perception, ways of justifying beliefs, the structure of justification, the possibility of acquiring any knowledge (the problem of skepticism), the limits of knowledge, the nature of knowledge and truth. The lectures will be devoted to discussing the most important epistemological problems. The series of lectures will be supplemented with materials for individual reading, posted on the internet platform, and with source texts for analyzing.

Course page
3800-NZ-ET n/a n/a n/a n/a
Classes
Academic year 2024/25
  • Classes - 36 hours
  • Lecture - 36 hours
Academic year 2025/26
  • Classes - 36 hours
  • Lecture - 36 hours
Groups

Brief description

The aim of this lecture is to present the most important classical and contemporary problems of moral philosophy. We will focus on the main issues of academic ethics as well as its role in the contemporary moral thinking. We will discuss the main metaethical theories, basic terms and methods of ethics, the most significant historical and contemporary normative theories, and selected problems of applied ethics.

Course page
3800-NZ-HFA n/a n/a n/a n/a
Classes
Academic year 2024/25
  • Classes - 36 hours
  • Lecture - 36 hours
Academic year 2025/26
  • Classes - 36 hours
  • Lecture - 36 hours
Groups

Brief description

The aim of the course is to familiarize students with the most important problems and methods of analytic philosophy.

Course page
3800-NZ-HFNA n/a n/a n/a n/a
Classes
Academic year 2024/25
  • Classes - 36 hours
  • Lecture - 36 hours
Academic year 2025/26
  • Classes - 36 hours
  • Lecture - 36 hours
Groups

Brief description

The course is devoted to the main problems and currents of the contemporary continental philosophy. The course begins with the discussion of Nietzsche’s philosophy and ends with the presentation of Agamben and Negri’s thought, i.e. the most significant standpoints in the present-day continental thought.

Course page
3800-NZ-HF1 n/a n/a n/a n/a
Classes
Academic year 2024/25
  • Classes - 36 hours
  • Lecture - 36 hours
Academic year 2025/26
  • Classes - 36 hours
  • Lecture - 36 hours
Groups

Brief description

This course will present main tenets of European philosophical thought from the 7th century B.C.E. to the 14th century C.E. Presentation of ancient philosophy will include: Pre-Socratics, Sophists, Socrates and his followers, Plato and Aristotle, Hellenistic schools, Middle Platonism, Neoplatonism, and Patristic philosophy. Mediaeval philosophy will include: Early Mediaeval Neoplatonism, 11th century early Scholasticism, 11th/12th century universals dispute, 12th century Chartres Renaissance, , 12th century Mysticism, 13th century doctrinal movements, 14th century movements, Mysticism (Johannes Eckhart).

Course page
3800-NZ-HF2 n/a n/a n/a n/a
Classes
Academic year 2024/25
  • Classes - 36 hours
  • Lecture - 36 hours
Academic year 2025/26
  • Classes - 36 hours
  • Lecture - 36 hours
Groups

Brief description

The first part of this course will contain presentation and analysis of main currents of European philosophy from the Renaissance, through continental rationalism, British empiricism, French Enlightenment, to Classical German Philosophy. The topic of second part of the course will be the history of modern philosophy from Kant to the positivism (Kant, Fichte, Schelling, Hegel, Schopenhauer, Kierkegaard, Marx and Marxism, Comte and positivism).

Course page
3800-NZ-WF n/a n/a n/a n/a
Classes
Academic year 2024/25
  • Seminar - 36 hours
Academic year 2025/26
  • Seminar - 36 hours
Groups

Brief description

The aim of the course is the introduction to the basic problems of philosophy. Will be considered the various conceptions of philosophical subject, the methods and styles of the philosophical thinking, the question of the relations between philosophy and sciences, religion, ideology and art. The analyses will be focused on the greatest classical philosophical systems and the most important contemporary directions in the philosophy, such as: phenomenology, hermeneutics, deconstruction, structuralism, psychoanalysis, thomism and postmodernism.

Course page
3800-TIK-DON-ZK
IT
n/a n/a n/a n/a
Classes
Summer semester 2024/25
  • Classes - 30 hours
Summer semester 2025/26
  • Classes - 30 hours
Groups

Brief description

The aim of the course is to introduce the students to the basics of modern information technology, especially the internet.

Course page
3800-NZ-L1 n/a n/a n/a n/a
Classes
Academic year 2024/25
  • Classes - 36 hours
  • Lecture - 36 hours
Academic year 2025/26
  • Classes - 36 hours
  • Lecture - 36 hours
Groups

Brief description

The course offers an introduction to modern logic, with its distinctive methods and applications to some philosophical problems. One of our objectives is to improve the students’ skills in rational reasoning by showing that language has various, often complex, functions; to this end, we concentrate on teaching how to construct definitions and classifications, how to distinguish sound from unsound arguments.

Course page
3800-NZ-SL n/a n/a n/a n/a
Classes
Academic year 2024/25
  • Classes - 36 hours
  • Lecture - 36 hours
Academic year 2025/26
  • Classes - 36 hours
  • Lecture - 36 hours
Groups

Brief description

The aim of the course is to present the basic problems of logical semiotics and general methodology which are the necessary tools of any philosophical work.

The course focusses on the following areas: signs and their kinds, semantic functions of language expressions, categorial grammar, pragmatic phenomena, definitions, systematisation, argumentation.

Course page
3800-NZ-ONT n/a n/a n/a n/a
Classes
Academic year 2024/25
  • Classes - 36 hours
  • Lecture - 36 hours
Academic year 2025/26
  • Classes - 36 hours
  • Lecture - 36 hours
Groups

Brief description

The lecture cycle should serve as a systematic introduction to ontology. Fundamental ontological problems will sequentially be focused on, and namely, that of: objects, features, relations, space, time, existence, whole-part relation, things, state of affairs, change, causality, body-mind relation and God.

Exercises will be devoted to critical analysis of chosen ontological problem solutions.

Course page
3800-NZ-FPNP n/a n/a n/a n/a
Classes
Academic year 2024/25
  • Classes - 36 hours
  • Lecture - 36 hours
Academic year 2025/26
  • Classes - 36 hours
  • Lecture - 36 hours
Groups

Brief description

The course is an introduction to the basic philosophical problems related to the main detailed sciences: physics, mathematics and biology. It is divided into a lecture and an exercise part, where the exercises will be conducted mainly in the conversion convention.

Course page
3800-POWI-DON-ZK n/a n/a n/a n/a
Classes
Winter semester 2024/25
  • Lecture - 4 hours
Winter semester 2025/26
  • Lecture - 4 hours
Groups

Brief description

The subject of the course is to present and discuss key issues related to copyright, related rights, trade law and the legal protection of intellectual property.

Course page
ul. Banacha 2
02-097 Warszawa
tel: +48 22 55 44 214 https://www.mimuw.edu.pl/
contact accessibility statement site map USOSweb 7.1.2.0-a1f734a9b (2025-06-25)