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Ontology I

Code: FILO030     Acronym: ONT1

Instance: 2014/2015 - 1S

Active? Yes
Web Page: http://https://moodle.up.pt/course/view.php?id=143
Responsible unit: Department of Philosophy
Course/CS Responsible: Bachelor in Philosophy

Cycles of Study/Courses

Acronym No. of Students Study Plan Curricular Years Credits UCN Credits ECTS Contact hours Total Time
FILO 31 FILO - Study Plan 3 - 6 4
Mais informaçõesLast updated on 2014-10-06.

Fields changed: Teaching methods and learning activities, Componentes de Avaliação e Ocupação, Fórmula de cálculo da classificação final

Teaching language

Suitable for English-speaking students

Objectives

1. To determine the inaugural reasons of discipline and its major historical " models "
2. To identify in the history of philosophy, the paths for the statement of Metaphysics as Science
3. To determine the " programmatic ways" and to analyze the basic concepts and themes of ontology
4. To identify the philosophical questions of the definition and establishment of Metaphysics as a Science
5. To determine the epistemological models associated with the ontological paradigms studied

Learning outcomes and competences

1. To develop skills of analysis and textual criticism of the text of the philosophical tradition and of the issues discussed within Ontology
2. To develop critical and speculative competencies on the constitution of metaphysics as a science
3. To learn the basic technical vocabulary of Ontology and its correlation with the ontological paradigms examined
4. To understand the issues and philosophical problems inherent to the question of the definition of Metaphysics as a science, in the history of philosophy

 

 

Working method

Presencial

Pre-requirements (prior knowledge) and co-requirements (common knowledge)

prerequirements : research tools and philosophical knowledge grasped in previous years of the 1st circle of the course of Philosophy

simultaneous knowledge - to read and analyse requiered bibliography (primary sources and studies)

Program

I - INTRODUCTION TO ONTOLOGY
1. Birth of a new science ( Rudolf Golclenius / Jacob Lorhard )
2 . Issues and problems of the science ' ontology '

II - BE AND THINK
1. The Poem of Parmenides and the dichotomy Being - Non-Being
2 . The problem of possibility to say «Being», against the Parmenidean monism
3 . The impossibility of the criterion for truth and falsehood: the birth of the Sophist school. 4
 . The Plato's Sophist and the foundation of the discourse on non-being .
5 . The establishment of the supreme genera and the specificity of "being" .

III - SCIENCE Metaphysics – Aristotle
1. The ' metaphysics ' of Aristotle and the problem of the diversity of objects of this science
2 . Metaphysics as ousiologia
3 . Metaphysics as a science of first causes and principles
4 . Metaphysics as ' divine science ' or ' theology '
5 . The paths of the " Metaphysics " of Aristotle from the Ancient Schools to its reception in by the Arabs .

IV - The SCIENCE Metaphysics – AVICENA
1. The influence of Al - Farabi on Avicenna’s understanding of Metaphysics
2 . The Influence of the work ' Theology of Aristotle ' on Avicenna’s understanding of Metaphysics
3 . The Metaphysics of Avicenna within the work Kitab al Shifa (Book of Healing )
4 . The Metaphysics of Avicenna : discussion of the problem of the subject of this science ; its place among human knowledge .
5 . The object of the science Metaphysics: common notions of ' being ', ' thing ' and ' necessary' . The place of the demonstration of the existence of God within Metaphysics . The purpose of the science Metaphysics .
6 . Avicenna’s ontological paradigm. Emanation, Agent Intellect, Causality, Generation and corruption. The return of the soul to the One: the knowledge of the intellect by means of the sciences, the recognition of the innate ideas of ' one, thing necessary' through illumination. The union with the divine Intellect by means of Metaphysics. Prophecy, Metaphysics and Theology .

V - RECEPTION OF Aristotle’s Metaphysics IN THE WEST:
1. Translations of the works of Aristotle and Arabian commentaries.
2 . The incorporation of the Liber the Causis in the Aristotle’s Metaphysics '.
3 . Defining the object of metaphysics as a science : causality of the first mover and causality of the First Agent .
4 . Theology of Aristotle : Physics or Metaphysics ? The problem of the relationship between Physics , Metaphysics and Theology and debate on the first and proper/suitable object of human knowledge .

VI - Duns Scotus: The FOUNDATION OF METAPHYSICS as a Science
1. Duns Scotus and Avicenna: convergences and divergences .
2 . Duns Scotus and his criticism of the doctrine of ' analogia entis " by Thomas Aquinas and Henry of Ghent .
3 . The possibility of knowing God: the debate on the first and proper object of knowledge
4 . Scotus on the univocity of being and the foundation of metaphysics as ' scientia transcendens '.

Conclusion :
1. The foundation of metaphysics as the best science of the maximum intelligible
2 . The condition of possibility of the knowledge of being and the constitution of the science Metaphysics .
3 . The reception of this science in the late Scholastics and the refounding of Metaphysics as Science of being qua being by F. Suárez.

Mandatory literature

Kirk, G.S.; Raven, J.S.; Os filósofos pré-socráticos : história crítica com selecção de textos , Fundação Calouste Gulbenkian, 1994
Aristóteles; Metafísica, Loyola, 2002
Platão; Sofista, F.C.G., 2011
Avicena (ed. Marmura); The Metaphysics of the Healing, Brighma Yung Univ. Press, 2005
Duns Scot (ed. Boulnois); Sur la Connaissance de Dieu et Univocité de l'étant, PUF, 1988

Complementary Bibliography

Gutas, Dimitri; Avicenna and the Aristotelian tradition : introduction to reading Avicenna’s philosophical works , Brill, 1988
Gilson, E.; Jean Duns Scot : Introduction a ses positions fondamentales , Vrin, 1952
Parménides (ed. Néstor-Luis Cordero); Poema. Fragmentos y Tradición Textual, Ágora, 2007
NEF, Frédéric; Qu'est-ce que la métaphysique?, Gallimard, 2004
Lando, G.; Ontologia. Un'Introduzione, Carocci, 2010
Galuzzo, G.; Breve Storia dell'Ontologia, Carocci, 2011
Ferraris, M. (ed.); Storia dell'Ontologia, Bompiani, 2008
Meyer, M.; Por una historia de la ontología, Idea-Books, 2000
Pseudo-Aristóteles (ed. Catarina Belo); A Teologia de Aristóteles, INCM, 2010
Jaulin, A., et alt.; La philosophie d'Aristote., PUF, 2003
Jolivet, J.; La teologia degli Arabi, Jaca Books, 2001
GIlson, E.; BEing and some philosophers, Europe Printing (2aed), 1961
De Boni, L.A.; A Entrade de Aristóteles no Ocidente, EST, 2010
AA.VV; Aristotele. Perchè la metafísica, Vita e Pensiero, 1994
Narcy, M., Tordesillas, A.; La Métaphysique d'Aristote. Perspectives Contemporaines, Vrin, 2005
Mesquita, A.P.; Aristóteles. Obras Completas. IIntrodução Geral, INCM-CFUL, 2005

Teaching methods and learning activities

Explanation of themes and matters in a theoretical way, open to the discussion of the philosophical issues and arguments with the students.

Methodology based on the commentary of the texts proposed in the program, and the discussion of its arguments involved.

keywords

Humanities

Evaluation Type

Evaluation with final exam

Assessment Components

Designation Weight (%)
Exame 70,00
Participação presencial 10,00
Trabalho escrito 20,00
Total: 100,00

Amount of time allocated to each course unit

Designation Time (hours)
Estudo autónomo 66,00
Frequência das aulas 60,00
Trabalho de investigação 36,00
Total: 162,00

Eligibility for exams

According to the evaluation standards in force

Calculation formula of final grade

Evaluation is dived into tree parts:
Attendance + written work submited on Moodle = 30%
Final Exame = 70%

Examinations or Special Assignments

not available

Internship work/project

not available

Classification improvement

According to the evaluation standards in force
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