Intention, Action, Speech: How to Understand Someone Else
Syllabus, Bachelor's level, 5FT155
- Code
- 5FT155
- Education cycle
- First cycle
- Main field(s) of study and in-depth level
- Theoretical Philosophy G2F
- Grading system
- Pass with distinction (VG), Pass (G), Fail (U)
- Finalised by
- The Department Board, 25 August 2021
- Responsible department
- Department of Philosophy
General provisions
The course is intended primarily for the second and third cycle, but is open for students on the first cycle (C level). The higher the level of studies, the more demanding the course requirements.
Entry requirements
60 credits in Practical Philosophy or Theoretical Philosophy
Learning outcomes
Upon completion of the course, the student should be able to:
- describe and analyze the relationships between thought, language and principles of action according to the philosophical positions studied
- compare and contrast strengths and weaknesses in the arguments for these relationships
- apply the basic ideas so as to be able to formulate potential connections between ethics, political theory, aesthetics, epistemology and the philosophy of language
- compare, contrast, evaluate and exemplify the strengths and weakness of the different approaches discussed.
Content
Through a careful reading of three of the last century's most canonical works dealing with the role and nature of thought and thinking in human affairs -- Elizabeth Anscombe's Intentions, Hannah Arendt's The Human Condition and Iris Murdoch's The Sovereignty of the Good -- we will discuss and analyse questions having to do with the relation between the private and the public, the individual and the collective and the ethical and the political.
Instruction
Lectures and seminars.
Assessment
Two short reaction papers (500-1000 words) and a longer final paper (5000 words). A student's active participation and good performance in class may be a positive factor in the overall evaluation of the student's work for the course.
If there are special reasons for doing so, an examiner may make an exception from the method of assessment indicated and allow a student to be assessed by another method. An example of special reasons might be a certificate regarding special pedagogical support from the University's disability coordinator.