Introduction to Philosophy
This course will focus on several classic philosophical texts, and two or three pieces by contemporary writers, to try to make clear what philosophical analysis looks like, how it is done, and how to apply those methods of analysis to current issues of interest. We will try to develop our analytic abilities further by breaking down specific arguments and criticizing them from a variety of directions. Hence, the course is designed to help you become a better and more critical thinker, reader, and writer, and an important part of this approach is class discussion. (Done correctly, this will have two happy results--you will be able to demonstrate your understanding of the texts by articulating the issues they raise, and class will go by more quickly.) Other than a willingness to ask questions and express your considered view, the fundamental requirements for doing well in this course are curiosity, an open mind, and a willingness to think about weird things you might not have thought about before.
Classroom procedure:
Lecture and discussion; some small-group work
Evaluation procedure:
3 in-class
tests
(10% each)
2 short (3-5 pages)
papers (20% each)
1 final paper (6-10
pages) (20%)
class
participation
(10%)
Grading Scale:
100-90
A
89-80
B
79-70
C
69-60
D
59-0
F
Borderline cases will be "fine-tuned" using the "+/-" gradations.
Texts:
Plato "Apology," "Crito," "Phaedo" (all in Grube translation of Plato: FiveWork is not to be submitted electronically, unless otherwise specified.
To request academic accommodations due to disability, please contact the Office for Students with Disabilities, 002 Albert Emanuel Hall, (937) 229-3684. If you have a self-identification form indicating that you have a disability which requires academic accommodations, please present it to me so we can discuss accommodations you might need in class.Plato notes
Hume notes
Tentative
Schedule:
September
1-22 "The Apology"
(con.) (if
time permits, we will discuss "Crito" as well)
6
Labor Day—no classes
15 Last day to drop classes without record
27-29 Descartes' Meditations on First Philosophy
11-20 Descartes' Meditations on First Philosophy (con.)
25-29 Hume's Enquiry Concerning Human Understanding
NovemberSeptember
27
First
short paper
due
October 22 Second examination
October 25 Second short paper due"All things excellent are as difficult as they are rare"
Baruch de Spinoza
As a student at the University of Dayton, you have affirmed that you will:
-
Complete
all assignments and examinations by the guidelines given by
instructors,
- Avoid plagiarism and any other form of misrepresenting someone else's
work
- Adhere to the Standards of Conduct as outlined in the Academic Honor
Code.