Course outline
Acquired skills
These are the main competences for which this degree will qualify you:
- Acquiring social and ethical commitments, behaving respectfully towards difference and plurality, being adaptive, flexible and creative in the face of new situations.
- Actively understanding and critically interpreting the basic tenets of philosophical ideas and theories from historical and thematic viewpoints, and applying them to the analysis of contemporary situations.
- Gathering significant data from a range of sources to tackle and propose solutions to problems from a philosophical perspective, while remaining open to other, associated disciplines.
- Identifying and assessing the correctness and strength of reasoning processes, detecting any fallacies and drawing up and defending persuasive arguments in clear, precise language.
- Reading comprehensively, giving spoken expositions, debating, critically assessing and drawing up short, well-structured, argument-based speeches on issues concerned with philosophical topics.
- Using different registers (academic, expositional and colloquial) in their own language, using philosophical terminology and understanding of philosophical discourse in at least two EU languages.
- Using information technology to collect and share data: Word processing, e-mail, the Internet, bibliographical databases.
- Working individually and in teams to solve problems and taking responsibility in decision-making to carry out projects that enable ways of life to be integrated based on respect for fundamental rights: Equality, gender.