Code | В09007В |
Course unit | Philosophy and Philosophy of Law |
Nomber of credits ECTS | 5.0 |
Language of education | Ukrainian |
Learning outcomes of course unit | Remember: basic philosophical and legal notions, categories, and concepts; main branches of philosophy; key stages in the development of philosophy and philosophy of law; personalities in the history of philosophical and philosophical-legal knowledge. Understand: general principles and prerequisites for the emergence and development of philosophy; connection between philosophical and legal ideas; main problems of ontology, anthropology, and epistemology of law; specifics of legal culture of personality and society. Apply: demonstrate critical thinking skills in working with texts on philosophical and philosophical-legal issues; use basic philosophical and philosophical-legal categories to analyze contemporary socio-cultural processes and professional activities; formulate and cogently express one's own point of view on current socio-legal issues. Analyze: human life, social and legal phenomena from the perspective of universal human values; relevance of historical and philosophical, and legal ideas in the modern socio-cultural context; essence and content of law from the perspectives of personality, state, power, law, and society. Evaluate: impact of philosophical and philosophical-legal ideas on modern society; humanistic content of philosophical views and concepts of law. Create: meaningful maps of philosophical and legal ideas from different historical periods; strategies for personal self-realization in life and profession. |
Types of educational work | Lectures, practical classes |
Type of final control | |
Content of course unit | Humanistic content of philosophical and philosophical-legal knowledge. Evolution of philosophical and philosophical-legal ideas. Human and the world: problems of ontology. Legal ontology. Knowledge, cognition, and self-knowledge: epistemological issues. The problem of truth in law. Problems of philosophical anthropology. Nature of human and law. Legal axiology. Basic legal values. Human in society: problems of social philosophy. Legal consciousness as a problem of philosophy of law. Philosophical problems of law and power. Human and history: problems of the philosophy of history. Philosophical justification of human rights. The humanistic essence of law. Modern concepts of the theory of justice. Law in the context of cultural-civilizational strategies. |
Equipment (if applicable) | Not used |