Study programme 2019-2020 | Français | ||
Philosophie sociale et politique | |||
Learning Activity |
Code | Lecturer(s) | Associate Lecturer(s) | Subsitute Lecturer(s) et other(s) | Establishment |
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P-CERT-061 |
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Language of instruction | Language of assessment | HT(*) | HTPE(*) | HTPS(*) | HR(*) | HD(*) | Term |
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Français | Français | 30 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | Q1 |
Organisational online arrangements for the end of Q3 2019-2020 assessments (Covid-19) |
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Description of the modifications to the Q3 2019-2020 online assessment procedures (Covid-19) |
The entire course may be subject to exam questions. As a reminder, the Professor insists throughout the course, in vivo or via podcasts, on the important points in each part. The exam consists of 4 questions which will cross the different theories, concepts or authors worked during the year. The time granted to students is 3 hours to connect to the exam, but 2 hours to answer once it has started. |
Content of Learning Activity
The question of democracy will serve as a guideline for the course. It will be necessary to examine the problems, which are inseparable from the question of democracy, mentioned in the references to the final competencies of the Philosophy and Citizenship course, such as those of power and counter-powers, justice, laws and norms or the relationship between man and his environment (natural, cultural and social). Teaching method
The EU consists of 2 parts consisting of 7 sessions of 2 hours each. The two parts will take the form of a lecture (which does not prevent interactions). During each session, sequences representing texts of the authors will be analyzed. Part One: History of Social and Political Philosophy
The first part of the course will consist in presenting the systems of thought of the main currents and authors of social and political philosophy (eg Plato, Hobbes, Machiavelli, Rousseau, Hegel, Marx, Foucault, Deleuze, etc.). Without ever leaving aside the historical and cultural contexts in which these theories and concepts are emerging, they will nevertheless be studied as so many ways of thinking about current events, that is to say as so many deviations / criticisms of the perceived / dominant presentation of contemporary political issues. Part Two: Problems of Social and Political Philosophy
The second part of the course will consist of the presentation of philosophical problems (eg, what is democracy, what is a social environment, etc.) or major controversies that have animated the the political and social philosophy (for example, the controversy over the status of social identities between Pierre Bourdieu and Jacques Rancière, the controversy initiated by Alain Badiou on the relations between democracy and capitalism, etc.) in relation to the themes developed in the benchmark for the Philosophy and Citizenship course. The aim here is not to decide for one point or another but to highlight the specificity, coherence and intelligence of each approach.
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Required Learning Resources/Tools
For the part two : Pierre Bourdieu, Contre-feux, Raison d'agir, Paris, 1998. Pierre Bourdieu, Contre-feux 2, Raison d'agir, Paris, 2001. Jacques Rancière, La haine de la démocratie, La Fabrique, Paris, 2005.
Recommended Learning Resources/Tools
Not applicable
Other Recommended Reading
Not applicable
Mode of delivery
Type of Teaching Activity/Activities
Evaluations
The assessment methods of the Learning Activity (AA) are specified in the course description of the corresponding Educational Component (UE)