Hiroshima University Syllabus

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Japanese
Academic Year 2026Year School/Graduate School School of Education
Lecture Code CC245305 Subject Classification Specialized Education
Subject Name 応用倫理学研究
Subject Name
(Katakana)
オウヨウリンリガクケンキュウ
Subject Name in
English
Research on Applied Ethics
Instructor KIRIHARA TAKAHIRO
Instructor
(Katakana)
キリハラ タカヒロ
Campus Higashi-Hiroshima Semester/Term 3rd-Year,  First Semester,  1Term
Days, Periods, and Classrooms (1T) Fri5-8:EDU L108
Lesson Style Lecture Lesson Style
(More Details)
Face-to-face
Mainly lectures, Uses handouts
 
Credits 2.0 Class Hours/Week 4 Language of Instruction J : Japanese
Course Level 3 : Undergraduate High-Intermediate
Course Area(Area) 23 : Arts and Humanities
Course Area(Discipline) 02 : Ethics
Eligible Students
Keywords Junior high school social studies, High school Civics, Applied ethics
 
Special Subject for Teacher Education   Special Subject  
Class Status
within Educational
Program
(Applicable only to targeted subjects for undergraduate students)
After completing the basic courses, we provide research on teaching materials related to ethics so that students can acquire basic knowledge, understanding, abilities and skills related to ethics as one of the areas of subject content development courses. 
Criterion referenced
Evaluation
(Applicable only to targeted subjects for undergraduate students)
Secondary School Social Studies/Geography/History/Civic Education
(Abilities and Skills)
・To be able to collect, understand, analyze, and evaluate data and materials about studies related to social science.
(Comprehensive Abilities)
・To be able to summarize the outcome of research, studies, education practice and social activities, and to deliver presentations. 
Class Objectives
/Class Outline
As students progress through specialized courses at universities, the contact points between social science fields such as law, politics, economics, and sociology and the humanities, including philosophy and ethics, tend to become weaker. However, at the high school social studies level, "ethics" is co-existent with "politics and economics," and "public" includes the content of both "ethics" and "politics and economics." By constantly facing the problems of the social sciences when studying ethics, students are expected to grasp a more reliable clue to solving problems.

In this case, the field of ethics is expected to play the role of a basic theory of "social cognition" in a broad sense. This is because ethics aims not only to observe human actions and their motivations (values ​​and norms) from a third-person perspective, but also to critically examine values ​​and norms as first- or second-person parties and to construct these themselves. "Social cognition" is closely linked to "social practice," and in this case, the ethical perspective plays an important role.

Therefore, in this class, we set the goal of exploring the "logic of social cognition" through the study of ethics. We will focus on a few topics and aim to grasp the overall picture of social cognition assumed in social studies, history, and civics. 
Class Schedule lesson1: Guidance: Social Recognition from an Ethical Perspective ① From the Perspective of Human Dependence on Technology
lesson2: Social Recognition from an Ethical Perspective ② (continued)
lesson3: The Difference Between Social Recognition and Natural Recognition ① Overview of the Positivism Debate (Adorno vs. Popper)
lesson4: The Difference Between Social Recognition and Natural Recognition ② (continued)
lesson5: Economic Ethics ① Philosophical Foundations
lesson6: Economic Ethics ② (continued)
lesson7: Ethics of Intellectual Property ① Philosophical Foundations
lesson8: Ethics of Intellectual Property ② (continued)
lesson9: Ethics of Historical Reconciliation ① Focusing on the Issue of "Evacuation and Deportation of Germans"
lesson10:  Ethics of Historical Reconciliation ② (continued)
Lecture 11: The Ethics of "Re-education" ①: Comparative Thought on Postwar Education in Japan and Germany
Lecture 12: The Ethics of "Re-education" ② (continued)
Lecture 13: The Ethics of "Re-education" ③: Philosophical Commitment (Focusing on the Frankfurt School)
Lecture 14: The Ethics of "Re-education" ④ (continued)
lesson15: Summary and Review

Final exams will be held. Students will write short reports for each topic. 
Text/Reference
Books,etc.
We will share materials in advance. 
PC or AV used in
Class,etc.
Handouts, Visual Materials
(More Details) In each class, students will review materials related to each topic and the contents of the instructor's own published papers. After that, students will have a Q&A and discussion session and then write a short report. Materials to be used in each class will be shared in advance. Please read the materials in advance and actively participate in the discussion. 
Learning techniques to be incorporated Discussions
Suggestions on
Preparation and
Review
Please read through the materials shared in advance and actively participate in the discussion.
 
Requirements "Subjects related to subjects: Social Studies (""Philosophy, Ethics, and Religion""), Civic Education (""Philosophy, Ethics, Religion, and Psychology"")

I'm going to conduct a questionnaire about contents (Please write down questions or opinions also on it.).


 
Grading Method Small reports, written test, etc. will be comprehensively evaluated.
 
Practical Experience  
Summary of Practical Experience and Class Contents based on it  
Message We welcome students who are interested in ethics research and ethics education. 
Other   
Please fill in the class improvement questionnaire which is carried out on all classes.
Instructors will reflect on your feedback and utilize the information for improving their teaching. 
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