Introduction to Philosophy PHIL 11 Spring 2015 TuTh 6:00 – 7:45pm Earth and Marine Sciences, B 206 Instructor Janette Dinishak Office: Office Hours: Email: 105 Cowell Faculty Annex (the annex is south of Page Smith Library) 2:20pm - 3:45pm, Tuesdays & Thursdays [email protected] Teaching Assistants (TAs) Israel Dawson: Jared Gampel: Nikos Knightly: Delio Vasquez: [email protected] [email protected] [email protected] [email protected] Section Day Time Location TA A M 09:30AM-10:40AM Cowell Acad 216 Jared B M 11:00AM-12:10PM Cowell Acad 216 Jared C W 12:30PM-01:40PM Cowell Acad 216 Nikos D W 02:00PM-03:10PM Cowell Acad 216 Nikos E Tu 08:30AM-09:40AM Cowell Acad 223 Delio F Th 10:00AM-11:10AM Crown Clsrm 201 Delio G W 02:00PM-03:10PM Crown Clsrm 201 Delio H W 03:30PM-04:40PM Crown Clsrm 201 Nikos I M 03:30PM-04:40PM Crown Clsrm 201 Jared J F 09:30AM-10:40AM Cowell Acad 223 Israel K F 11:00AM-12:10PM Cowell Acad 223 Israel L F 12:30PM-01:40PM Cowell Acad 223 Israel 1 TAs will announce their office hours during your first discussion section meeting in Week 2. Their office hours will also be posted on our course website in eCommons by Week 2. Swapping Sections If you would like to swap sections you must do so officially, through the online enrollment system. This ensures that you are recorded in AIS as a member of the section you plan on attending. You can only swap into a section with an available seat. The registrar’s guidelines for swapping classes are here: How to Change a Grade Option or Secondary Section: http://registrar.ucsc.edu/faqs/students/enrollment/edit-enrollment.pdf FAQs Student Enrollment Questions: http://registrar.ucsc.edu/faqs/students/enrollment/index.html Please contact the registrar for additional help with enrollment issues: http://registrar.ucsc.edu/about/contact-us.html. Course Description This course provides an introductory survey of classic and contemporary approaches to some central topics in several key sub-disciplines of philosophy: philosophy of religion, metaphysics, epistemology, philosophy of mind, and ethics. Some of the questions we will explore include: What is philosophy? Is it a subject matter? An activity? What is the value of philosophy? Does God exist? What can we know? Is the mind distinct from the body? How do we know what is right and what is wrong? Is disability necessarily a negative feature? What is it that makes some lives meaningful, others less so? General Education Requirements Satisfied: Textual Analysis and Interpretation (TA), Introductions to Disciplines, Humanities and Arts (IH) Readings Text: Introduction to Philosophy: Classical and Contemporary Readings (6th edition), edited by John Perry, Michael Bratman, John Martin Fischer. Oxford University Press 2012. Available for purchase at Literary Guillotine 204 Locust Street, downtown Santa Cruz (831-4571195); Webpage: http://www.literaryguillotine.com/. 2 A copy of our text is on reserve at McHenry Library (2-hour loan period). Assigned readings listed in the tentative schedule below are found in our required text unless otherwise indicated. Any additional recommended or required readings will be posted in Resources on eCommons at least one week prior to the class meeting in which the reading will be discussed. For eCommons technical support, please contact the ITS Help Desk: Online: http://itrequest.ucsc.edu/ Phone: (831) 459-HELP (4357) Email: [email protected] In-Person: Kerr Hall Rm. 54, M-F 8am to 5pm Here is a link to “Helpful eCommons Info for Students”: https://ecommons.ucsc.edu/access/content/group/473329d1-b5f5-43b9-bfb69b70859f2442/eCommons%20Help%20for%20Students Course Requirements Weight Due Dates In-Class Midterm Essay 1 Essay 2 In-Class Final Exam 15% 20% 25% 30% April 16 April 30 May 21 June 10 Section 10% Weeks 2 thru 10 Attendance & Participation Each student is assigned to a discussion group led by a TA. Discussion sections will start meeting in Week 2 and continue to meet each week, including Week 10. There are two aspects of section: 1. Section Attendance is mandatory. TAs will take attendance. Student who miss three or more discussion sections will receive 0% credit for discussion section and an additional half letter grade reduction to their final course grades (e.g., a B will drop to a B minus). 2. Section Participation is strongly encouraged. Your section is your smaller, more interactive learning community. The success of this community depends on your consistent attendance and quality participation. There are lots of ways to participate: (a) ask a question; (b) answer a question posed by someone else; (c) initiate a line of discussion by making a comment about the reading or something that came up in lecture; (d) respond to a comment someone else has made during the section meeting. There are also less familiar forms of participation. Some of them are “silent”. If you’re shy or prefer not to speak in section for some reason, consider writing down a question or comment in section and then handing it in to your TA after class. Or go to your TA’s office hours. Maybe you like to think with pictures and diagrams more than with words. Draw a cartoon or diagram that illustrates a concept from class and share it with your TA or with me. Come talk to me during my office hours. Or approach me during the lecture break. Or share an outside resource with me that I can incorporate in lecture (e.g., a relevant poem, song, or video clip). 3 Midterm and Final Exam The in-class midterm will consist of short answer and essay questions. The final exam will consist of essay questions. The midterm covers material from the first few weeks of the course. The final is cumulative. Essays Specific instructions and topics will be provided in lecture and posted on eCommons under Resources. Other Course Information 1. Students with diverse learning styles and needs are welcome in this course! If you qualify for classroom accommodations because of a disability, please submit your Accommodation Authorization from the Disability Resource Center (DRC) to me after class or during my office hours, preferably within the first two weeks of the quarter. The sooner you let us know your situation, the sooner we can assist you. Contact DRC at 831-459-2089 or by email at [email protected]. For more information please visit UCSC’s Disability Resource Center homepage: http://drc.ucsc.edu/ . 2. Extra help: Learning Support Services (LSS) offers many academic programs to UCSC students (see http://www2.ucsc.edu/lss/ ). One of these programs is course-specific tutoring that is available to all UCSC students. Students meet in small groups (up to 4 people per group) led by a tutor. This quarter Camille will be assisting you. All UCSC students are eligible for up to 1 hour of tutoring per week per course, and may sign-up for tutoring beginning Tuesday, April 7th, at 10:00am here: https://eop.sa.ucsc.edu/OTSS/tutorsignup/. All of the LSS tutors are current UCSC undergraduate students who have previously taken the course, have received a B or above, and have been recommended by a UCSC faculty member in the appropriate academic discipline. 3. Late assignments: Late assignments and make-up tests are not allowed except for documented emergencies/illness, DRC accommodations, or conflicts with religious observance. Please notify your TA in advance of your need for an exception to course deadlines and attendance requirements. Ensure that all your correspondence on the matter is documented (e.g., save copies of your email correspondence). 4. Laptops and other electronic devices. The success of our class depends on you being present, not just physically but also in terms of engagement and focus. In an effort to promote focus and limit distractions, students are asked to “unplug” for class. The use of laptops, cell phones, iPads, and other electronic devices are not permitted during class time. If you need to use a laptop or other electronic device during class due to learning differences or other legitimate reason, please consult with me and I will consider making an exception. 5. To pass this course, all assignments must be completed. Any student who fails to do so will not pass the course. Students who plagiarize an assignment will receive 0% credit for the plagiarized assignment, which means they will not meet this requirement and will fail the course. If you’re struggling to fulfill the requirements for any reason, please talk with me during my office hours about your situation. 6. Email correspondence: Please direct any questions you may have regarding assignments, evaluative feedback, or administrative concerns to your TA first. This will facilitate record-keeping and communication. Your TA is also available via email. As always, I’m here too if you have any questions or concerns about anything related to our course. Note regarding all email correspondence: Please be kind and considerate. Note what section you’re in when you correspond with any member of our teaching team. Because substantive philosophical questions about readings, arguments, or ideas often require back and forth discussion, they are best answered in person—during office hours or in discussion section. 7. Plagiarism: You are responsible for being familiar with UCSC’s policies on academic integrity (http://www.ue.ucsc.edu/academic_integrity). Proper sourcing and good scholarship are expected. 4 Plagiarism is a serious academic offense and will not be tolerated. Plagiarism will be handled on a case-bycase basis. If you have any questions or concerns about how to avoid plagiarism and ensure the originality of your work, please ask us. UCLA has helpful tips on avoiding plagiairsm: http://unitproj.library.ucla.edu/col/bruinsuccess/ “How Not to Plagiarize”: http://www.writing.utoronto.ca/images/stories/Documents/how-not-toplagiarize.pdf Tentative Reading and Lecture Schedule For the most up-to-date information regarding our actual reading and lecture schedule, check the first page of each weekly lecture supplement posted in eCommons under Resources. Week Topic (3/31 & 4/2) The Value of Philosophy (4/7 & 4/9) Readings: On the Study of Philosophy (6 pgs) Plato, “Apology: Defense of Socrates” (16 pgs) God and Evil Discussion sections begin meeting. Readings: Saint Thomas Aquinas, “The Existence of God” (3 pgs) Blaise Pascal, “The Wager” (4 pgs) Gottfried Leibniz, “God, Evil and the Best of All Possible Worlds” (2 pgs) (4/14 & 4/16) Knowledge and Reality **4/16** In-Class Test Bring blue books How to write a philosophy paper Readings: René Descartes, “Meditations on First Philosophy” (25 pgs) (4/21 & 4/23) Knowledge and Reality cont’d Readings: David Hume, “An Enquiry Concerning Human Understanding” pp. 193-205 (13 pgs) 5 (4/28 & 4/30) Minds, Bodies, and Persons **4/30: Essay 1 due in lecture Readings: Frank Jackson, “What Mary Didn’t Know” (4 pgs) Peter Carruthers, “The Problem of Other Minds” (available under Resources on eCommons) (7 pgs) (5/5 & 5/7) Minds, Bodies, and Persons cont’d (5/12 & 5/14) Readings: Alan Turing, “Computing Machinery and Intelligence” (13 pgs) John Searle, “Minds, Brains, and Programs” (13pgs) Searle cont’d & Ethics and Society (5/19 & 5/21) Readings: John Stuart Mill, “Utilitarianism” (17 pgs) John Stuart Mill, “The Subjection of Women” (5 pgs) Ethics and Society cont’d **5/21: Essay 2 due in lecture** (5/26 & 5/28) Readings: Immanuel Kant, “Groundwork of the Metaphysic of Morals” (17 pgs) Ethics, Neurodiversity, Disability (6/2 & 6/4) Readings: Jim Sinclair, “Don’t Mourn For Us” (available under Resources on eCommons) (4 pgs) Simon Baron-Cohen, “Neuroethics of Neurodiversity” (available under Resources on eCommons) (7 pgs) Elizabeth Barnes, “Disability, Difference Minority” (available under Resources on eCommons) (19 pgs) Existential Issues Readings: Albert Camus, “The Myth of Sisyphus” (3 pgs) Richard Taylor, “The Meaning of Human Existence” (17 pgs) Susan Wolf, “The Meanings of Lives” (12 pgs) Final Exam: Wednesday, June 10, 4:00-7:00pm Bring blue books 6
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