Module Details |
The information contained in this module specification was correct at the time of publication but may be subject to change, either during the session because of unforeseen circumstances, or following review of the module at the end of the session. Queries about the module should be directed to the member of staff with responsibility for the module. |
Title | PHILOSOPHY OF RELIGION | ||
Code | PHIL215 | ||
Coordinator |
Dr D Hill Philosophy Djhill@liverpool.ac.uk |
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Year | CATS Level | Semester | CATS Value |
Session 2024-25 | Level Two | Second Semester | 15 |
Aims |
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To introduce the current state of discussion concerning the concept of God. To introduce the major arguments for, and the major arguments against, the existence of God. To enable students to clarify and develop their own views on whether God exists and, if so, what God is like. |
Learning Outcomes |
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(LO1) Students will be able to engage with key debates and arguments in the philosophy of religion, primarily in the Western tradition. |
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(LO2) Students will be able to reflect on methodological issues that arise in the philosophy of religion, such as the relationship between faith and reason. |
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(LO3) Students will be able to assess challenges to the coherence of the concept of God. |
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(LO4) Students will be able to discuss and evaluate arguments for the existence of God. |
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(LO5) Students will be able to reflect critically on the significance and implications of the problem of evil for religious thought. |
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(S1) Students will enhance their abilities in reading and understanding texts and in comprehending abstract material. |
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(S2) Students will develop their skills in thinking critically, analysing problems and reconstructing and evaluating arguments. |
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(S3) Students will enhance their ability to identify the issues that underlie debates. |
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(S4) Students will develop confidence in considering previously unfamiliar ideas and approaches, and their ability to identify presuppositions and to reflect critically upon them. |
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(S5) Students will enhance their ability to marshal arguments and present them orally and in writing. |
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(S6) Students will develop their ability to work independently. |
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(S7) Students will develop their ability to sift through information, assessing the relevance and importance of the information to what is at issue. |
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(S8) Students will develop their problem-solving skills. |
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(S9) Students will enhance their capacity to participate, in a dispassionate and respectful manner, in debates about controversial and profound matters. |
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(S10) Students will develop their willingness critically to evaluate and reflect upon arguments, beliefs, proposals and values, both their own and those of others. |
Syllabus |
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Representative material includes: |
Teaching and Learning Strategies |
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Teaching Method 1 - Lecture Teaching Method 2 - Seminar Delivery models: (b) fully online delivery and assessment: Lectures on-line; seminars on-line (c) standard on campus delivery with minimal social distancing: Lectures on-campus; seminars on-campus |
Teaching Schedule |
Lectures | Seminars | Tutorials | Lab Practicals | Fieldwork Placement | Other | TOTAL | |
Study Hours |
11 |
11 |
22 | ||||
Timetable (if known) | |||||||
Private Study | 128 | ||||||
TOTAL HOURS | 150 |
Assessment |
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EXAM | Duration | Timing (Semester) |
% of final mark |
Resit/resubmission opportunity |
Penalty for late submission |
Notes |
Seen Exam There is a resit opportunity. This is an anonymous assessment. | 24 | 65 | ||||
CONTINUOUS | Duration | Timing (Semester) |
% of final mark |
Resit/resubmission opportunity |
Penalty for late submission |
Notes |
Presentation This is not an anonymous assessment. There is a resit opportunity. | 0 | 10 | ||||
Seminar Reading Analysis There is a resit opportunity. No late submission. This is an anonymous assessment. | 0 | 25 |
Recommended Texts |
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Reading lists are managed at readinglists.liverpool.ac.uk. Click here to access the reading lists for this module. |