The course of foreign language is obligatory for acquiring the degree. The students are obliged to attend six (6) half-yearly courses of the foreign language successfully. No grade corresponds to the foreign language but it will be written “succeeded” or “failed” in the analytical grade of each student.
The students who have the Certificate of Proficiency Cambridge or Michigan, are excused from the foreign language courses.
The students, who have the certificate of Lower or Advanced, are excused from the first four (4) half-yearly foreign language courses.
The students, who are holders of the above certificates, must bring the photocopy of the certificate certified by the issuing authority.
Furthermore, an exemption from the foreign language course is expected for the holders of the Greek for State Certificate of Proficiency (KPg) according to the relevant decisions of the Department of National Education and Religion.
The course forms an introduction to the use of information technology. It consists of two parts: The theory and the laboratory. In the framework of the theory, the necessary theoretical base is provided and makes the familiarity with basic issues of Informatics easier. More particularly, the theory includes some issues that relate with the representation of data, the material of electronic computer, the software, the data processing and the communications – networks of electronic computers. Moreover, there is a reference to the relationship between Informatics and Economy. The aim of the laboratory is the familiarization with basic applications as word processing, the software of the presentations, computer sheets and the tools of Internet.
Basic concepts of Political Economy. Supply, Demand and Market. The role of the government. Consumer behaviour theory. Organization and behaviour of enterprises. Supply, cost and production. Market forms. Perfect Competition. Monopoly. Monopolistic Competitions. Oligopoly. Purchases of factors of production. Natural and human capital. Risk.
Introduction. Sets. Real and complex numbers. The meaning of sequence and numerical number. Derivatives of functions of one variable. Differentiationtechniques. Derivativesofasuperiororder. Monotony – Convexity. Derivatives and economy (marginal sizes – elasticity). Reciprocal functions and their derivatives. Differential of the first and superior order. Derivatives of composite and implicit functions. Indefiniteintegral. Integration methods in Economy. Maximum and minimum of functions of one variable. Approximation of polynomial functions. Taylor’s type and series. Powerseries. Functions of a lot of variables. Partialderivative. Derivatives of a superior order. Derivative of composite and implicit functions of many variables. Total differential and differential of superior order. Taylor’stheorem. The meaning and estimation of double integrals. Elements of differential functions.
Meaning and properties. Probabilities. The concept of probability, probability of compound events, conditional probability, independent events, total probability type, Bayes rule.
Random distinguished variables. Examples of probability, random variable, distribution of random distinguished variable, solely distribution of random distinguished variables, median, first and third quadrant of random distinguished variable, mathematical expectation of random distinguished variables, mathematical expectation of a function of random distinguished variables, fluctuation of a random distinguished variable, fluctuation of a function of a random distinguished variable, composite moments of a pair of random distinguished variables, fluctuation of a function of random distinguished variables.
Partial distinguished distributions: Binomial distribution, Poisson distribution.
Random continuous variables: Distribution of a random continuous variable, characteristic measures of a random and a function of a random continuous variable, continuous multivariate distributions.
Partial continuous distributions: normal distribution, approximation of a distribution from the normal distribution, other continuous distributions.
Samples and distributions of sampling: random samples, distributions of sampling.
Estimation: Introduction, estimator (meaning and properties), finding estimators method, estimation with space (meaning and applications)
Check of hypothesis: Introduction, procedure of checking a statistic hypothesis, applications.
Analysis of a fluctuation: Introduction, analysis of a fluctuation as far as one factor is concerned.
Simple reciprocation: The problem, the linear model and the basic hypothesis, valuation of the linear model, coefficient of specification, table of fluctuation analysis, trusting space and check of a hypothesis which is coefficient of the example, provisions of a mean and of an isolated value of a dependent function.
Sociology as a science, theoretical approaches to the study of social relations and comparison thereof in terms of structure and action, social cohesion as well as stability and social change. Values, norms, socialization, roles. Family, groups, organizations, theoretical approaches to the study of the social transformations that occurred since the Industrial Revolution. Social stratification, social mobility, inequality.
The course in Private Law mainly aims at providing students with basic knowledge in matters regarding civil and commercial law institutions as well as at familiarizing them with the principles and foundations of our legal system. It includes five (5) sections. The object of the first one is the structure of private law and reference is made to its basic concepts and categories, to its sources and to its relation with custom and trade conventions. In the second section reference is made to the general principles of civil law (legal relationship, right, subjects of legal relationships, contract). The third section examines the basic concepts of the two main books of the Civil Code, that is Contract Law and Property Law (types of obligations and fulfillment thereof, principal contracts, contractual liability, tort, possession, seizing, ownership, collateral security). In the fourth section the general commercial transactions and the operation of commercial law from a financial point of view are outlined and a general outline of commercial companies (personal and capital) is presented, due to their obvious importance in all sectors of commercial activity. Finally, in the fifth section the main types of negotiable instruments are analyzed, emphasizing on the check and the bill of exchange, and reference is made to certain special topics of commercial law (industrial property, competition, modern forms of commercial contracts, capital market law).