Monday, August 31, 2009

Course Details

Introduction to Philosophy
Camden County College, Blackwood Campus
Philosophy 101, Section 01
Fall 2009
Monday, Wednesday, Friday: 11:00 a.m. – 11:50 a.m.
Madison Hall, Room 311

Instructor: Sean Landis
Email: slandis@camdencc.edu
Phone: 609-980-8367
Course Website: http://cccphilosophy09.blogspot.com

Required Texts
A Rulebook for Arguments, 3rd Edition, Anthony Weston (RA)
Classics of Western Philosophy, 7th Edition, Steven M. Cahn (CWP)

About the Course
This course is designed to introduce students to philosophy. Throughout the semester, we will explore a handful of classic philosophical questions: What is knowledge, and what can we know? What evidence is there regarding the existence of a God? Do humans have free will? What does it mean to say that one thing is morally right and another is morally wrong?

In examining these issues, it is my hope that we can also develop the skills of doing philosophy—understanding philosophical arguments, evaluating the quality of such arguments, and developing good arguments of our own on philosophical topics. Our main goal is for each of us to come to appreciate the value of sitting and thinking. Long, careful, systematic, detailed thought is a great tool for increasing understanding on complex topics.

Evading the Issue

Grades
900-1000 points = A
800-899 points = B
700-799 points = C
600-699 points = D
below 600 points = F.

Quiz 100 points
Midterm 200 points
Final 250 points
2 Short Papers 50 points each
Journal 150 points
Group Presentation 150 points
Attendance/Participation 50 points

Quiz: There will only be one quiz, held at the end of arguments section of the course. The quiz will last 20 or 25 minutes, and be held at the beginning of class on the scheduled day.

Exams: There will be a midterm and a final exam. The midterm tests everything covered during the first half of the course, and will last the full period (50 minutes) on the scheduled day. The final exam is cumulative—that is, it tests everything covered throughout the whole course. The final will last 50 minutes, and will take place on the last day of class.

Papers: There will be 2 papers (about 2 pages long each), the first on our section on knowledge, and the second on our section on ethics.

Journal: Each student will keep a journal during our section on the existence of God and free will.

Group Presentation: There will be a group project presented in front of the class toward the end of the semester. Each group of 3 to 6 students will research a topic in philosophy not discussed in class, and present a 10- to 15-minute lesson on it to the rest of class.

Attendance/Participation: Most of this will be based on your attendance. If you’re there every class, you’ll get full credit for your attendance grade. In addition, there will be a lot of informal group work throughout the semester in which students get together to analyze the readings or philosophical issues being discussed in class. Group work can impact your grade.

Extra Credit: I like giving extra credit! I’ll be giving some official extra credit assignments throughout the semester. I’ll also be offering some extra credit points more informally during class time. Remind me about this if I slack off on dishing out extra credit points.

Classroom Policies
Academic Integrity: Cheating and plagiarism (using someone else’s words or ideas in a paper or assignment without giving credit to the source) will not be tolerated in the class. Students found guilty of either will definitely fail the exam or assignment—and possibly the entire class. FYI: I’m pretty good at catching plagiarists. I recommend not trying it!

Excused Absenses: Make-up exams, quizzes, in-class projects, and oral reports will only be rescheduled for any excused absences (excused absences include religious observance, official college business, and illness or injury – with a doctor’s note). An unexcused absence on the day of any assignment or test will result in a zero on that assignment or test.

Ask Me About My Bunny

Important Dates
September 1st: Last day to drop & receive a 100% refund.
September 16th: Last day to drop & receive a 50% refund.
September 23rd: Last day to sign up to audit a course.
December 4th: Last day to withdraw from Fall Classes.

Course Schedule

Sept. 2—4: Intro to Class/Arguments
Wednesday Introduction to Class (no reading)
Friday Doing Philosophy (no reading)

September 7—11: Arguments
Monday LABOR DAY (no class)
Wednesday Arguments (RA Chapters 1 and 2)
Friday Types of Arguments (RA 3-5); group work

September 14—18: Arguments
Monday Deductive Arguments (RA Chapters 6)
Wednesday Deductive Arguments (RA Chapters 6); group work
Friday Writing Essays (RA Chapters 7-9)

September 21—25: Arguments
Monday Writing Essays (RA Chapters 7-9); group work
Wednesday Fallacies (RA Chapter 10)
Friday Fallacies & Psychological Impediments (handout); group work

September 28—October 2: Knowledge
Monday QUIZ #1; Intro to Knowledge (no reading)
Wednesday Plato (handout)
Friday Descartes: Meditations One and Two (CWP 482-483, 490-496)

October 5—9: Knowledge
Monday Descartes continued (no reading)
Wednesday Bostrom: “Do We Live in a Computer Simulation?” (handout); group work
Friday Hume: An Enquiry Concerning Human Understanding Sections 2-4 (CWP 761-762, 767-773)

October 12—16: Knowledge/The Existence of God
Monday Hume continued; group work
Wednesday PAPER #1 due; Aquinas: Summa Theologiae Question 2 (CWP 440-441, 450-453)
Friday Aquinas: Summa Theologiae Question 2 (CWP 440-441, 450-453); group work

October 19—23: Existence of God
Monday Anselm: Chapters 2—5 in Proslogian (CWP 411-412, 415-416)
Wednesday Review for Midterm (no reading)
Friday MIDTERM

October 26—30: Existence of God
Monday Gaunilo: Guanilo’s Reply on Behalf of the Fool (CWP 425-427)
Wednesday Anselm & Guanilo (no reading); group work
Friday Hume: Parts II & V in Dialogues Concerning Natural Religion (CWP 862-867, 873-875)

November 2—7: Existence of God
Monday Hume (continued)
Wednesday Augustine: Books 1, 2, & part of 3 of On Free Choice of the Will (CWP 357-369)
Friday Augustine (continued); group work

November 9—13: Existence of God/Free Will
Monday Hicks (handout)
Wednesday Problem of Evil wrap-up (no reading); group work
Friday Maimonides: The Guide of the Perplexed (CWP 434-439)

November 16—20: Free Will
Monday Aristotle: Book III of On the Soul (CWP 223-227)
Wednesday Hospers (handout)
Friday Free Will wrap-up (no reading); group work

November 23—25: Ethics
Monday Mill: Part of Chapter 2 in Utilitarianism (CWP 1060-1063)
Wednesday Journal due; Kant: First Section in Grounding for the Metaphysics of Morals (CWP 984-991)
Friday THANKSGIVING BREAK (no class!) (woo?)
carpe diem, lazy bones

November 30—December 4: Ethics
Monday Aristotle: Book III, Chapter 1 in Nicomachean Ethics (CWP 275-277)
Wednesday Aristotle: All of Book II of Nicomachean Ethics (CWP 269-275)
Friday Ethics wrap up (no new reading)

December 7—11: Ethics/Group Presentations
Monday PAPER #2 due; preparation for presentations (no reading)
Wednesday group presentations
Friday group presentations

December 14—18: Review/Final Exam
Monday group presentations
Wednesday review for Final Exam
Friday FINAL EXAM

nuttin, supchoo?