Socrates Rene Descartes Syllabus for PHIL 251.501-509: Introduction to Philosophy

Dr. Stephen H. Daniel
Fall 2008
Monday & Wednesday: 3:00-3:50 (ZACH 102); Friday: various times & places

Friedrich Nietzsche Jean-Paul Sartre

Click here for a two-page printable version of the syllabus in a pdf or MS Word format.


In Introduction to Philosophy you will develop the critical-thinking skills needed to write and speak effectively about the nature of human existence, freedom, knowledge, reality, religious belief, ethics, and social justice. This means being able to identify issues, explain the reasoning behind philosophical positions and arguments, evaluate objections raised against those arguments, formulate replies to those objections, and indicate how the problem-solving strategies developed in various areas of philosophy relate to one another.

 

Course Structure: The course is aimed at enhancing your ability to write and speak about philosophical issues. The best way to achieve these ends is through practice. Accordingly, in Monday and Wednesday sessions you will be expected to have read assignments before class and to have written answers to questions about the reading that are posted on the course website. [You can send drafts of your answers to your TA (teaching assistant) for feedback before class.] In class Dr. Daniel will outline the issues at hand and you will share your written answers with others in small groups. After the group discussions, the class as a whole will address still unresolved questions raised in the groups.

 

Friday sessions are different. They focus on a question posted on the website that combines elements from the Monday and Wednesday classes. Your TA will identify the issues to be addressed in answering the question, and you will discuss (first in a small group, then with the whole class) what a good essay response to the question should contain. In the last 20 minutes of class, you will write a short essay (without relying on notes) that answers the question. If you miss a Friday class with a university-approved excuse, you must come write your essay during the office hours held by Dr. Daniel or one of the TAs before the following Friday.

 

During the semester you will have three brief (less than 10 minute) individual oral quizzes to demonstrate your verbal ability to discuss material recently covered in the course and. You can take your quizzes with Dr. Daniel or any of the TAs during their office hours. The first quiz must be completed no later than Oct. 2, the second no later than Oct. 30, and the third no later than Dec. 1. Time slots fill up quickly, so schedule your quizzes early.


All laptop computers and cell phones must be turned off and out of sight during class time.


Grades: [Revised 9/11/08: The semester grade is based on 12 Friday short essays (total 60 pts), three oral quizzes (total 45 pts), the mid-semester essay exam (30 pts), and the final essay exam (40 pts). To get an A for the course, you need a total of 155 points, a B 137 pts, a C 119 pts, and a D 101 pts.]

 

1.    identify precisely what the philosophical issue is and different positions or strategies adopted to address it

2.   explain the reasoning and arguments given to support those positions

3.   raise objections to each of those arguments

4.   formulate replies to those objections, indicating how defenders of the positions can reply to the objections

5.   relate the various topics of the essay to one another and other topics raised in the course

 

 


If on a rare occasion you miss your regularly scheduled Friday class, you can take part in another discussion led by any of the TAs. In such circumstances, notify the TA before the session begins about your attendance so that you can be added temporarily to a group. The times and locations of Friday sessions are as follows:

9:10, sec. 501, Michael Deem, Zachry 105D

9:10, sec. 504, David Wright, Zachry 128A

9:10, sec. 507, Marzena Plizga, Zachry 104A

10:20, sec. 502, Michael Deem, Zachry 128D

10:20, sec. 505, Marzena Plizga, Zachry 119A

10:20, sec. 508, David Wright, Zachry 105C

11:30, sec. 503, Michael Deem, Zachry 105A

11:30, sec. 506, David Wright, Engineering-Physics 215

12:40, sec. 509, Marzena Plizga, Zachry 227A

Students with disabilities are guaranteed a learning environment that provides for reasonable accommodation of their disabilities. If you believe you have a disability requiring an accommodation, please contact the Department of Student Life, Disability Services, Cain Hall B118, or call 845-1637.

Students are bound by the Aggie honor code not to lie, cheat, steal, or tolerate those who do. If you violate the code (e.g., by plagiarizing something from the Internet), you will fail the course; no second chances. For information on cheating and plagiarism, go to http://www.tamu.edu/aggiehonor/.

Course Instructor: Dr. Stephen H. Daniel

Office: Bolton 302 B
Office hours: Mon 4:15-6:15; Wed 5:30-6:30
Phone: 845-5619 (office), 846-4649 (home)
Email:  sdaniel@people.tamu.edu
Website: http://people.tamu.edu/%7Esdaniel/251sy08c.html


Graduate Teaching Assistants:


Michael Deemsecs. 501, 502, 503

Bolton 311; 845-0489

m-deem@people.tamu.edu

Office hrs: Mon & Wed 10-11:30

David Wrightsecs. 504, 506, 508

Bolton 303; 845-7780

d-wright@people.tamu.edu

Office hrs: Tues 8:30-9:30, Thurs 8:30-10:30

Marzena Plizgasecs. 505, 507, 509

Bolton 311; 845-0489

m-plizga@people.tamu.edu

Office hrs: Wednesday 12:30-2:30, 4:00-5:00
 


Textbook: The Philosopher’s Way by John Chaffee, 2nd edition (Prentice Hall, 2009). Prentice Hall has made our textbook available for a reduced cost of about $73 by bundling the book with “My Philosophy Kit” in a shrink-wrapped package with a special ISBN: 0-205-62964-4. You don’t need the Philosophy Kit for the course. Make sure you get the second edition of The Philosopher’s Way (cover: rocks balancing), not the first edition (cover: big head carvings). You can also buy the book as an e-textbook for $47.20 at http://www.coursesmart.com/9780136032168, but you won’t have the book to refer to again when your subscription expires after 180 days. Don't order the e-textbook if your eyes get tired reading for hours on a computer screen.

The pages below should be read before each class. The Reading Questions provide a guide for what to look for in the assignment. You are to write answers to each question (in a notebook or on a sheet of paper) so that you can show your answers to others in the small group discussions. You can also send drafts of your answers to your TA for feedback. The Friday short essays will be responses to questions that combine elements from topics raised in that week's readings and discussions.

 Class meeting

 Topic

 Assigned Reading

 Reading Questions

 Aug. 25

 Introduction

 

 

 Aug. 27

 Thinking Philosophically

 4-17

 Questions on thinking philosophically

 Aug. 29

 Friday discussion

 

 Weekly short essay question

 Sept. 1

 Socrates: method

 44-63

 Questions on Socratic method

 Sept. 3

 Socrates: trial & legacy

 63-87

 Questions on Socrates' trial and legacy

 Sept. 5

 Friday discussion

 

 Weekly short essay question

 Sept. 8

 Self: Plato & Descartes

 94-115

 Questions on the self: Plato & Descartes

 Sept. 10

 Self: Locke-Kant, materialism

 115-31, 141-46

 Questions on the self: Locke, Kant, materialism

 Sept. 12

 Friday discussion: Class Cancelled

 

 Weekly short essay question [Class cancelled.]

 Sept. 15

 Determinism & Compatibilism

 158-82

 Questions on determinism & compatibilism

 Sept. 17

 Libertarianism & Wm. James

 182-95

 Questions on Libertarianism & James

 Sept. 19

 Friday discussion

 

 Weekly short essay question

 Sept. 22

 Sartre, feminism, & freedom

 195-218

 Questions on Sartre, feminism, and freedom

 Sept. 24

 Reality: Plato & Aristotle

 222-42

  Questions on Plato & Aristotle

 Sept. 26

 Friday discussion

 

 Weekly short essay question

 Sept. 29

 Knowing reality: Descartes

 242-61

 Questions on Descartes' epistemology

 Oct. 1

 Knowing reality: Locke

 268-88

 Questions on Locke's epistemology

 Oct. 3

 Friday discussion

 

 Weekly short essay question

 Oct. 6

 Knowing reality: Berkeley & Hume

 288-304

 Questions on epistemology: Berkeley & Hume

 Oct. 8

 Kant's constructivism

 305-26

 Questions on Kant's epistemology

 Oct. 10

 Friday discussion

 

 Weekly short essay question

   Oct. 10
    Mid-semester exam due by 5:00 p.m.

   Mid-semester exam questions (MS Word format) or pdf format
Mid-semester Exam Guidesheet (MS Word)

 Oct. 13

 Why adopt religious beliefs?

 344-60

 Questions on religious belief

 Oct. 15

 Rational arguments for God

 378-90

 Questions on rational arguments for God

 Oct. 17

 Friday discussion

 

 Weekly short essay question

 Oct. 20

 Evil & Religious Faith

 391-401

 Questions on evil & religious faith

 Oct. 22

 Ethical values & relativism

 412-30

 Questions on ethical values & relativism

 Oct. 24

 Friday discussion

 

 Weekly short essay question

 Oct. 27

 Ethical absolutism & egoism

 430-47

 Questions on ethical absolutism & egoism

 Oct. 29  Against egoism; religious ethics
 447-67
 Questions on objections to egoism & religious ethics
 Oct. 31  Friday discussion
 Weekly short essay question
 Nov. 3
 Virtue ethics  474-86
 Questions on virtue ethics
 Nov. 5
 Duty ethics  486-500
 Questions on duty ethics
 Nov. 7
 Friday discussion
 Weekly short essay question
 Nov. 10
 Utilitarianism  500-513
 Questions on utilitarianism
 Nov. 12
 Existential ethics  518-36
 Questions on existential ethics
 Nov. 14
 Friday discussion
 Weekly short essay question
 Nov. 17
 Political philosophy: Plato & Hobbes  554-74
 Questions on Plato & Hobbes
 Nov. 19
 Political philosophy: Locke & Rawls  574-88
 Questions on Locke & Rawls
 Nov. 21
 Friday discussion
 Weekly short essay question
 Nov. 24
 Justice: J. S. Mill  599-608
 Questions on Mill
 (Nov. 26)
 (Thanksgiving Travel Day)
 (Nov. 28)
 (Thanksgiving Holiday)
 Dec. 1
 Redefined Friday discussion

 Weekly short essay question
 Dec. 9 (Tuesday)
 Final Exam  10:30-12:30
     Final exam questions

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