Lesson 1
Lesson 1
Lesson 1
DURATION: 1 WEEK
PREFERRED DELIVERY: Video/ Recorded Lecture/Printed Module
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
By the end of this module, students will have completed the following objectives:
1. Define the philosophy.
2. Identify the different branches of philosophy.
3. Recognize the significance of philosophy.
TO DO LIST
Reading
o Course Content and Lecture in Module 1 (page 1-7)
Take Activity 1
COURSE CONTENT
There was a time in the history of education, where being educated meant having gone through just a handful of
subjects, among which are music, mathematics, rhetoric, and philosophy, with philosophy occupying a certain preimminence.
That time was Medieval Europe, a faraway place in the faraway past. Many changes had occurred since. At present, being
educated means having gone through the ever-growing literature of an ever narrowing discipline, and philosophy is longer
considered preimminent - in fact, far from it. While some students expect to glean exotic knowledge about the nature of the
subject, others are disgusted at the thought of its endless debates (Demetrio, 1997). Taking a course in philosophy is indeed
a little bit different from taking other courses from the languages, mathematics or the natural and social sciences.
The aim of this chapter is to discuss briefly, meaningful aspects and issues of philosophy.
Definition of Philosophy
When humanity began trying to explain the nature and origin of the universe through reasoning and observation, instead of
through poetry and mythology, it is said that humanity was taking the first step in the development of philosophy.
Etymologically, the word "philosophy" comes from two Greek words, philo, meaning "to love," and sophia, meaning "wisdom."
Thus, philosophy originally meant, "love of wisdom," and in a broad sense, wisdom is still the goal of philosophy. This "love of
wisdom is something in which all human nature in some measure at least participates and which predisposes all toward
sympathy for the philosopher s enterprises (Scott, et al., 1993). With this meaning, we realize that there is nothing disgust ing with
philosophy. It is not about rummaging through musty manuscripts of great dead men (though this is a part of
"philosophizing"). Rather, philosophy emphasizes our living desire to understand the world that surrounds us and the world within
us (Demetrio, 1997).
DIRECTION: Answer the questions below. Write your answers legibly on the space provided.
2. How can you apply the four main branches of philosophy in your own chosen field?
Metaphysics
Epistemology
Logic