What Philosophy Is

80-100
Fall, 2007

Teaser Trailer

1. Have you ever wondered if Socrates could beat Superman in a fight?

2. Does God speak to you at night, telling you to take your little cousin up to Squirrel Hill and prepare him as a sacrifice?

3. Do you ever ponder whether your life is real or just part of a computer simulation created to calculate the ten billionth digit of pi?

4. Do you ever question whether Shakespeare's Hamlet or Britney Spears’ “Toxic” is the superior work of art?

Find answers to these and other burning questions this fall in What Philosophy Is.

 

Your Instructor

Name: David Gray, Graduate Student Extraordinaire

Office: Baker Hall 143

Work Phone: 412-268-8148

Email: degray@andrew.cmu.edu

 

Your Teaching Assistants

Name: Ruth Poproski, Canadian

Office: Baker Hall 143

Email: rpoprosk@andrew.cmu.edu

Name: Dan Malkiel, Southern Gentleman

Office: Baker Hall 161A

Email: dmalkiel@andrew.cmu.edu

 

Course Description

In this course, we will explore some of the fundamental problems that have engaged philosophers for thousands of years and assess the various solutions they propose. Unfortunately, there is no simple and precise definition of the subject-matter for philosophy, as it covers many different disciplines. For this course, we will look at five branches within philosophy and some basic problems they each address: ethics, theology, metaphysics, epistemology, and aesthetics. In class discussion and recitation, students are encouraged to present and critically examine their own views on these issues. While these problems may initially appear obscure and possibly unsolvable, our responses to them profoundly shape our lives and how we understand ourselves and our place in the world.

 

Important Handouts

Syllabus

 

Schedule

Date
Topic
Readings
Aug 27

Introductions

None

Aug 29 Ethics and Religion

Plato, Euthyphro from Stephen M. Cahn (ed.), Philosophy for the 21st Century (P21C) pp. 13-24

Aug 31 Recitation

Lewis Vaughn, Chapter 1 from Writing Philosophy (WP), pp. 3-20

     
Sept 3 No Class!

Labor Day - Woo Hoo!

Sept 5 Moral Conventionalism

Ruth Benedict, “Anthropology and the Abnormal” (handout)

James Rachels, “The Challenge of Cultural Relativism” from (P21C), pp. 594-602

Sept 6 Movie

The Shop on Main Street
7:00pm in SH 125

Sept 7 Recitation

Lewis Vaughn, Chapter 2 from (WP), pp. 21-42

     
Sept 10 Moral Subjectivism

David Hume, An Enquiry Concerning the Principles of Morals (handout)

James Rachels, “Subjectivism in Ethics” (handout)

Sept 12 Egoism

Plato, Republic (handout)

Ayn Rand, “Value Yourself” (handout)

James Rachels, “Egoism and Moral Skepticism” from (P21C), pp. 603-609

Sept 14 Recitation Lewis Vaughn, Chapter 3 from (WP), pp. 43-54
     
Sept 17 Hedonistic Utilitarianism

Jeremy Bentham, “The Principle of Utility” (handout)

Robert Nozick, “The Experience Machine” from (P21C), pp. 580-581

Sept 19 Eudaimonistic Utilitarianism

John Stuart Mill, Utilitarianism from (P21C), pp. 575-579

E.F. Carritt, “Criticisms of Utilitarianism” (handout)

Sept 20 Movie Crimes and Misdemeanors
7:00pm in SH 125
Sept 21 Recitation Lewis Vaughn, Chapter 4 from (WP), pp. 55-84
     
Sept 24 Kantian Moral Theory Immanuel Kant, Groundwork for the Metaphysics of Morals (handout)
Sept 26 Torture and “Dirty Hands” Michael Walzer, “Political Action: The Problem of Dirty Hands” (handout)
Sept 28 Recitation Lewis Vaughn, Chapter 5 from (WP), pp. 85-95
     
Oct 1 The Ontological Proof of God's Existence

Saint Anselm, “The Ontological Argument” from (P21C), pp. 24-25

Immanuel Kant, “Critique of the Ontological Argument” from (P21C), pp. 27-28

William L. Rowe, “Why the Ontological Argument Fails” from (P21C), pp. 32-35

Oct 3 The Cosmological Proof of God's Existence

Saint Thomas Aquinas, “Five Ways to Prove the Existence of God” from (P21C), pp. 35-36

Michael Martin, “The Cosmological Argument” from (P21C), pp. 37-39

Oct 4 Movie

The Seventh Seal
7:00pm in SH 125

Oct 5 Recitation

Lewis Vaughn, Chapter 6 from (WP), pp. 96-102

First Paper Topic Handed Out

     
Oct 8 The Teleological Proof of God's Existence David Hume, Dialogues Concerning Natural Religion, Parts II, V, and XI, from (P21C), pp. 40-42, 50-52, 67-71
Oct 10 The Problem of Evil Richard Swinburne, “Why God Allows Evil” from (P21C), pp. 72-81
Oct 12 Recitation

Bring a Rough Draft of First Paper

     
Oct 15 The Paradox of Faith

Genesis 22:1-14 (handout)

Søren Kierkegaard, Fear and Trembling (handout)

Oct 17 The Death of God

Friedrich Nietzsche, “The Death of God” (handout)

First Paper Due at 11:59:59 PM

Oct 18 Movie

Winter Light
7:00pm in SH 125

Oct 19 No Recitation! Mid-Semester Break - Woo Hoo!
     
Oct 22 Free Will and Determinism Peter Van Inwagen, “The Incompatibility of Free Will and Determinism” from (P21C), pp. 420-428
Oct 24 Determinism and Responsibility Harry G. Frankfurt, “Alternative Possibilities and Moral Responsibility” from(P21C), pp. 414-420
Oct 25 Movie

Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are Dead
7:00pm in SH 125

Oct 26 Recitation None
     
Oct 29 Radical Doubt and the Cogito Rene Descartes, Meditations on First Philosophy from (P21C), pp. 101-108
Oct 31 Skepticism and Common Sense G.E. Moore, “Proof of an External World” from (P21C), pp. 137-139
Nov 1 Movie Rashômon
7:00pm in SH 125
Nov 2 Recitation None
     
Nov 5 Wittgenstein on Certainty Ludwig Wittgenstein, On Certainty from (P21C), pp. 140-151
Nov 7 Knowledge as Justified True Belief Edmund Gettier, “Is Justified True Belief Knowledge?” from (P21C), pp. 161-162
Nov 9 Recitation None
     
Nov 12 Reliabilism Alvin I. Goldman, “Discrimination and Perceptual Knowledge” from (P21C), pp. 163-175
Nov 14 The Conditional Theory of Knowledge Robert Nozick, “Knowledge and Scepticism” from (P21C), pp. 176-188
Nov 15 Movie The Thin Blue Line
7:00pm in SH 125
Nov 16 Recitation None
     
Nov 19 Art and Society

Plato, Republic (handout)

Aristotle, Poetics (handout)

Second Paper Topic Handed Out

Nov 21 No Class! Travel-to-the-Turkey Day - Woo Hoo!
Nov 23 No Recitation! Eat-Those-Leftovers Day - Woo Hoo!
     
Nov 26 The Standards of Taste

David Hume, Of the Standards of Taste from (P21C), pp. 813-823

Nov 28 Aesthetic Judgment Immanuel Kant, Critique of Judgment from (P21C), pp. 823-832
Nov 29 Movie Who the #$&% Is Jackson Pollock?
7:00pm in SH 125
Nov 30 Recitation Bring a Rough Draft of Second Paper
     
Dec 3 Aesthetics and the Good Leo Tolstoy, What is Art? (handout)
Dec 5 What is Philosophy?

Plato, Republic (handout)

Aristotle, Metaphysics (handout)

Voltaire, “The Good Brahmin” (handout)

Second Paper Due at 11:59:59 PM

Dec 6 Movie Ikiru
7:00pm in SH 125
Dec 7 Recitation None
     
Dec 17 Final Exam 5:30 - 8:30 PM in DH A310

 

Course Texts

  • Philosophy for the 21st Century. Edited by Stephen M. Cahn. New York: Oxford University Press, 2003.
  • Lewis Vaughn. Writing Philosophy: A Student’s guide to Writing Philosophy Essays. New York: Oxford University Press, 2006.

 

Useful Links

Routledge Encyclopedia of Philosophy -- http://www.rep.routledge.com/index.html
Sweet online resource! Go here first. There is also a CD-ROM version available from CMU's Hunt Library.

The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy -- http://plato.stanford.edu
Another good online encyclopedia for philosophy.


Answers

1. Scholars still debate on who would be superior -- Superman or Socrates -- but as Jeremy puts it, “I bet Socrates could confuse the hell out of Superman.”

2. That God! What a joker!

3. Mmmm pie!

4. I'll just say that only one of these has a prominent place in my apartment...

 

 

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