Philosophy Degree

Degree Philosopher
Level Under Graduate
Duration Eight (8) semesters
Number of credits 128
Class Schedule Day
Modality On-Campus Learning
SNIES Code 1537
National Accreditation 2004: CNA (Consejo Nacional de Acreditación - National Accreditation Council) for 6 years

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Objectives

Los objetivos principales del programa de Pregrado en Filosofía son:

  • Developing critical awareness of students for understanding and argumentation in matters of their interest.
  • Promoting among professors and students venues for confrontation of different philosophical perspectives.
  • Enabling the development of their own path for reflection upon concrete problems.
  • Providing a complementary preparation in areas other than philosophical reflection.

Study Plan

The Program has a minimum duration of eight semesters, during which students must complete a total of 123 credits organized as follows:

Systematic Area (12 credits)

It provides the methodological tools to access texts and philosophical problems. It is made u of the following courses:

  • Introduction to Philosophy
  • Logics I
  • Logics II
  • Linguistics

Philosophy Education Area (60 credits)

Historical education on philosophy: it aims at understanding problems and proposals by the main representatives of ancient, modern, and contemporary philosophical tradition, providing a global vision of Western philosophical thinking throughout its history. It is composed of the following courses:

On Ancient Philosophy

Plato

Aristotle

On Modern Philosophy

Descartes

Empiricism

Kant

Hegel

On Contemporary Philosophy

Nietzsche

Heidegger

Analytical Philosophy

Complementary philosophy education: through courses and seminars, it promotes further knowledge and research on trends, schools of thought and philosophical problems with special focus on current discussions in different areas: ethics, aesthetics, theories of knowledge and language. It is composed of the following courses:

  • 4 elective courses on Philosophy *
  • 5 elective seminars on Philosophy **
  • Degree Paper

Area of Complementary Education (48 credits)

Ancient language: It allows students to understand the languages in which philosophical thinking was originated, enabling direct access to its sources. It comprises:

4 levels of Greek or Latin

Basic Year on Social Sciences

It allows students to learn theoretical and methodological problems that are common to social sciences, as well as core subjects in the study of man and society. Students must take three courses in the basic year in the following areas: classical thinkers, political economy, contemporary theory, philosophy and history of sciences, Colombian issues.

Uniandes Basic Cycle (CBU) and Elective Courses

Elective Courses: They introduce and educate students in problems and broad issues of knowledge, promoting interdisciplinary studies and laying the groundwork for a subsequent option of double program with another degree course. They include:

  • 3 CBU courses type A (1 in each of the 3 areas: science and technology, arts and humanities, and social sciences)
  • 3 CBU courses type B (maximum 2 in the same area)
  • 3 additional elective courses (Students can choose three subjects from all the courses offered by the University)

* List of some elective courses on philosophy that the Department has offered in recent years: Contemporary Aesthetics, Philosophy of Sciences, Political Philosophy of Empiricism, Medieval Philosophy, Philosophy of Religion, Philosophy and Literature; Pre-Socratics, Foucault, Wittgenstein, Rawls, W. Benjamin, Derrida, Philosophy and War, Philosophy and Art, Sartre: The Relation with the Other.

** List of some elective seminars on philosophy that the Department has offered in recent years: Gadamer's Aesthetics Elster: Alchemies of the Mind, Freud-Marcuse, Sartre: Freedom, Nussbaum: Reason and Emotions, Seminar on Marx, Seminar on Nietzsche, Seminar on Rorty, Putnam: Values, Facts, Seminar on Hermeneutics and listening, Seminar on the sublime, Seminar on Philosophy of Science, Seminar on Philosophy of the Renaissance, Seminar on Latin American Philosophy, Seminar: Naturalism.

Area of Complementary Education (48 credits)

Ancient language: It allows students to understand the languages in which philosophical thinking was originated, enabling direct access to its sources. It comprises:

4 levels of Greek or Latin

Basic Year on Social Sciences

It allows students to learn theoretical and methodological problems that are common to social sciences, as well as core subjects in the study of man and society. Students must take three courses in the basic year in the following areas: classical thinkers, political economy, contemporary theory, philosophy and history of sciences, Colombian issues.

Uniandes Basic Cycle (CBU) and Elective Courses

Elective Courses: They introduce and educate students in problems and broad issues of knowledge, promoting interdisciplinary studies and laying the groundwork for a subsequent option of double program with another degree course. They include:

  • 3 CBU courses type A (1 in each of the 3 areas: science and technology, arts and humanities, and social sciences)
  • 3 CBU courses type B (maximum 2 in the same area)
  • 3 additional elective courses (Students can choose three subjects from all the courses offered by the University)

* List of some elective courses on philosophy that the Department has offered in recent years: Contemporary Aesthetics, Philosophy of Sciences, Political Philosophy of Empiricism, Medieval Philosophy, Philosophy of Religion, Philosophy and Literature; Pre-Socratics, Foucault, Wittgenstein, Rawls, W. Benjamin, Derrida, Philosophy and War, Philosophy and Art, Sartre: The Relation with the Other.

** List of some elective seminars on philosophy that the Department has offered in recent years: Gadamer's Aesthetics Elster: Alchemies of the Mind, Freud-Marcuse, Sartre: Freedom, Nussbaum: Reason and Emotions, Seminar on Marx, Seminar on Nietzsche, Seminar on Rorty, Putnam: Values, Facts, Seminar on Hermeneutics and listening, Seminar on the sublime, Seminar on Philosophy of Science, Seminar on Philosophy of the Renaissance, Seminar on Latin American Philosophy, Seminar: Naturalism.

Research or Concentration Areas

The Philosophy Department has research groups on different areas such as: logics, epistemology and philosophy of science; law, justice and democracy; politics and culture; aesthetics and politics; philosophy of war and hermeneutics.

Model Program

 

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First Semester

0

FILO-1000BLogic I

3

FILO-1010Introduction to Philosophy

3

FILO-1100BPlato

3

Second Semester

FILO-1120BDescartes

3

FILO-2000Logica 2

3

Total Credit Hours:9

Third Semester

FILO-1110BAristoteles

3

LITE-XXXX6Lengua Clásica I (Latín o Griego)

3

FILO-1130BEmpirismo

3

FILO-2530Filosofia del Lenguaje

3

Total Credit Hours:18

Fourth Semester

DERE-1300Constitución y Democracia

3

LITE-XXXX7Lengua Clásica II

3

FILO-2100BKant

3

FILO-2110Hegel

3

Total Credit Hours:15

Fifth Semester

LITE-XXXX8Lengua Clásica III

3

FILO-2120BMarx

3

FILO-2130BNietzsche

3

Total Credit Hours:15

Sixth Semester

LITE-XXXX9Idioma Antiguo IV

3

FILO-3100Heidegger

6

Total Credit Hours:15

Seventh Semester

-CLE

FILO-3110Filosofía analítica

3

Total Credit Hours:15

Eighth Semester

-CLE

FILO-3010Codigo de Monografia

4

LENG-3999Requisito Dominio de Lengua Extranjera

0

Total Credit Hours:12

Alumni Profile

Graduates from the degree course on Philosophy of the Universidad de los Andes will be able to practice in areas such as:

  • Research, based on their philosophical education.
  • Teaching, in an academic context, at basic and higher education level (undergraduate and graduate)
  • Journalism in the editorial field.
  • Similarly, many of our alumnae continue their philosophical education in Master's degrees and Doctorates in national and international universities, as well as other areas related to philosophy.
  • Likewise, the skills learned in the basic philosophical education are useful and applicable to specific work in areas such as business, computers and technology, government, law and medicine.

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