In general terms, the ability to compare and contrast approaches and analyses regarding the nature of human experience and its various contexts and realities.
The ability to review and interpret literature on the history of philosophy, the use of resources in formal logic, the construction and assessment of discursive arguments, and the development of cognitive experiments; the ability to order data and information from a variety of sources.
The ability to extrapolate in the examination of general human considerations (existence, truth, time, causality, free will, the relationship between mind and body, the postulation of deity, knowledge, rationality, meaning, duty, goodness, or beauty) and specific issues in the degree course (language, science, technology, societal issues, politics, law, education, religion, literature and the arts, mathematics and applied ethics).
Number of ECTS credits: 240
Branch of knowledge: Arts and Humanities
Faculty or school: Faculty of Philosophy