For more details on the courses, please refer to the Course Catalog
Code | Course Title | Credit | Learning Time | Division | Degree | Grade | Note | Language | Availability |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
PHL3044 | German Language Lesson for German Philosophical Text Reading | 3 | 6 | Major | Bachelor | 3-4 | - | No | |
The aim of this course is to learn the grammar of german language to acquire the ability to read the original german philosophical text. | |||||||||
PHL3045 | Philosophy of Future Political Economy | 3 | 6 | Major | Bachelor | - | No | ||
The course sheds light on the future situation where the rapid changes caused by the development of advanced technology and the Fourth Industrial Revolution from a philosophical perspective related to the political economy, critically reflects the problems, and seeks the desirable vision of the future society. In particular, it will illuminate economic development since the late 20th century as the political economy of signs and then the risk-based economy and explain the internal structure of social crises that occurred in the process. This course examines the sharing economy in relation to human culture and explores the conditions for the future economy to develop into a human community. | |||||||||
PHL3046 | Phenomenology | 3 | 6 | Major | Bachelor | - | No | ||
Phenomenology was founded by Husserl in the early 20th century and developed in various ways by Scheler, Heidegger, Sartre, Merleau-Ponty, and Levinas. Hermeneutics, existential philosophy, and modern French philosophy were formed by directly or indirectly accepting phenomenology. This course will intensively explore Husserl's transcendental phenomenology and Heidegger's existential phenomenology, while also partially examining Merleau-Ponty's phenomenology of perception and the body. | |||||||||
PHL4005 | Philosophy of Language | 3 | 6 | Major | Bachelor/Master | Philosophy | Korean | Yes | |
Language is the most important factor which is shaping our thought and life. The main goal of this course is to understand the nature of this important factor from a philosophical point of view. In particular, this course deals with how particular linguistic expressions come to have their meanings, and also how we can grasp the linguistic meaning of an expression. For this purpose, this course discusses representative theories of meaning. In addition, this course also investigate the relation between thought and reality. |