GL
Jun 4, 2020
Intellectual Humility: Theory is an important course for any leader or person who wishes to increase their awareness in a changing world and to understand the importance of awareness and knowledge.
CT
Jul 1, 2020
This really motivated me to consciously practice intellectual humility. I would definetely recommend this course to whoever may want to open their mind and get a bigger picture of the world.
By vishakha j
•May 24, 2020
Good course
By kerry a
•May 24, 2020
loved it
By Oky T S
•Dec 11, 2016
Superb !
By Shaik L
•Sep 5, 2020
Good
By Jake C
•Jun 2, 2023
I am not a philosopher, nor do I plan to become one. The same can be said of my relationship to psychology. However, this course was quite helpful in surveying a specific topic related to these fields. It gave me a chance to get back into an academic setting, see how it feels, and consider if a Master's degree is a pathway I am ready to commit to. On the downside, there were some broken links to supplementary readings, and a supplementary piece or two that was behind a paywall. Also, as is not unique, the discussion forums are littered with copy and paste material from students clearly doing the minimum and making no attempt to engage with others. Overall, this was a positive course experience, and I am interested in taking another course once I have found a suitable topic. Also, I very much enjoyed the video lectures of the University of Edinburgh faculty who participated.
By Sebastian K
•Mar 15, 2017
The course gives a good basic insight to the topic of intellectual humility although in the beginning it fails a little in telling why intellectual humility is so important. (roughly the message was: "you get along better with other people and yourself")
As the question "what is (intellectual) humility" is more a philosophical question than a practical experience this course cannot provide you with a tool that helps you to be more humble within a few days, to improve your humility and to measure someone elses humility but the course helps you asking yourself the right questions. ("Is social status important to me? Can I accept different opinions?...)
It was my first coursera experience and I am satisfied with it. However, the videos are a bit oldfahsioned in style - if it was intended to give the videos an antique look - well done ;-)
By Carey N
•Feb 2, 2019
This was a somewhat difficult and challenging course for me. I felt it was more technical than I expected. I really liked it a lot. This is my first Coursera course so the four stars is more to leave room for future courses that I take that might exceed this one. This was a great course and I would highly recommend it.
By Robert S
•Apr 22, 2020
This course was a wonderful change of pace. I really enjoyed taking a look at humanity in a different perspective. It arms you will another way to look at individuals and yourself to understand if you can justify their take on information in regards to looking at subjects with an epistemic view.
By Georgios K
•Mar 25, 2017
A very good short course on an important intellectual trait, the intellectual humility. The videos were very informative, and the lecturers did not require a prior knowledge on philosophy or psychology. I managed to complete the course even though I did not have more than 2-3 hours per week.
By Miguel S M
•Dec 23, 2016
Very interesting subject and well structured course, with good exposition of the subject. Looking forward into Part 2! Knocked one star off (would be half if I could) just because there is some discontinuity between the three sections/speakers and still a couple of rough edges to smooth out.
By Brooke S
•Sep 26, 2024
This is a well-produced course, and the speakers are engaging. The reading material is useful, as are the occasional quizzes to check for comprehension. I would like to see more diversity in the speakers. The all-male, all-white representation is alienating.
By Stu M
•May 25, 2020
Topic and course are quite interesting. Lectures are clear and easy to follow, but don't have much spark, so not a five stars.
By In-Ho K
•Sep 4, 2022
This course met my expectations. I expected to learn more about the intellectual humility.
By Henrique d M
•Jun 26, 2017
It is a great course. Looking forward to the next two modules.
By Amy J V A
•Aug 7, 2017
first on-line course - enjoyed myself
By D S
•Jan 31, 2018
Hmmm ... the concept was great, and it really is an important aspect of intellectual pursuits in an age of fake news and internet facts (both comments are sarcastic), there must be honest deliberation on such issues. But as a course, it seems lacking in the mature "punch" needed to convey the right concpets to the learner, gets lost sometimes in the mundane aspects. But overall, worth while, just not a spectacular course experience.
By David F
•Dec 22, 2016
Some interesting ideas but not entirely convinced by the concept of 'humility' in this context. Is it really any more than simple openness to new ideas and the possibility of being wrong. That is not really 'humble'/ Smacks at times of academic pretension. You need to follow carefully what is being said - not a course to do while doing something else!
By Jason A
•Jun 30, 2020
I enjoyed exploring the content behind the course, but the material was a little dense for someone without any type of philosophy background. I was familiar with some of the content due to my psychology education.
By Terry C
•Jun 6, 2017
Interesting topic. Reasonable lectures, but poor study aides. Interesting fora and discussion groups.
By Katherine J
•Mar 12, 2017
Great Course, but much too fast paced
By Joy S
•Feb 19, 2017
rather hard to understand
By Chris S
•Aug 12, 2021
Very dense material
By Steven G
•Dec 15, 2016
Not so inspiring
By Tanja M
•May 1, 2025
Despite interesting subject, I've quit after around half an hour. In those half an hour we haven't defined what so called Intellectual Humility is, but we managed to introduced more than 5 new terms and acronym. Either I'm not up to such intellectual debate or or the course really fails to explain wording. Considering the course was meant for the beginners and that we want to spread the knowledge, I'm wondering why so complicated terms are used when it could be explained in less sophisticated manner.
By Philip M
•Dec 22, 2016
I do not feel that this course is ready for publication and is overlong for the material presented.