Friday, August 10, 2007

Course Details

Introduction to Philosophy
Camden County College, Blackwood Campus
Philosophy 101, Fall 2007
Section 01: MWF, 9:00 a.m. – 9:50 a.m. in Wilson Hall 201
Section 02: MWF, 11:00 a.m.
11:50 a.m. in Lincoln Hall 019

Instructor: Sean Landis
Email: slandis@camdencc.edu
Phone: 609-980-8367
Course Website: http://cccphilosophy07.blogspot.com

Required Texts
A Rulebook for Arguments, 3rd Edition, Anthony Weston (RA)
Classics of Western Philosophy, 7th Edition, edited by 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? Does God exist? 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.

Grades
90-100% = A; 80-89% = B; 70-79% = C; 60-69% = D; below 60% = F.

Quiz:10%
Midterm: 20%
Final: 25%
2 Papers: 5% each (10% total)
Journal: 15%
Oral Report: 15%
Attendance/Participation: 5%

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, not just the second half. The final will last 50 minutes, and will take place on the last day of class.

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

Oral Report: The oral report will be a group project presented in front of the class. Each group of 3-4 students will present a 10- to 15-minute presentation toward the end of the semester.

Papers: There will be 2 papers, the first on epistemology, and the second on ethics.

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

Group Work: There will be a lot of group work throughout the semester in which students get together to analyze short articles from newspapers or magazines on the philosophical issues being discusses in class.

Classroom Policies
Academic Integrity: Cheating and Plagiarism will not be tolerated in the class. Students found guilty of either will definitely fail the exam or assignment—and possibly the entire class. (Come to me if you are unsure what constitutes cheating or plagiarism.)

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.

Important Dates
August 31: Last day to drop a course & receive a 100% refund.
September 17: Last day to drop a course & receive a 50% refund.
September 24: Last day to sign up to audit a course.
December 5: Last day to withdrawal from Fall Classes.

Course Schedule

September 5—7: Intro to Class
Wednesday: Check. Check One. Sibilance. Introduction to Class (no reading)
Friday: How to Do Philosophy in 50 Minutes (no reading)

September 10—14: Arguments
Monday: Arguments (RA Chapters 1 and 2)
Wednesday: Types of Arguments (RA Chapters 3-5)
Friday: Types of Arguments (RA 3-5); group work

September 17—21: Arguments
Monday: Deductive Arguments (RA Chapters 6)
Wednesday: Deductive Arguments (RA Chapters 6); group work
Friday: Writing Essays (RA Chapters 7-9)

September 24—28: Arguments
Monday: Writing Essays (RA Chapters 7-9); group work
Wednesday: Fallacies (RA Chapter 10)
Friday: Fallacies & Psychological Impediments (handout); group work

October 1—5: Epistemology
Monday: QUIZ #1; Intro to Epistemology (no reading)
Wednesday: Plato (handout)
Friday: Descartes: Meditations One and Two (CWP 490-496)

October 8—12: Epistemology
Monday: Bostrom: “Do We Live in a Computer Simulation?” (handout); group work
Wednesday: Locke: An Essay Concerning Human Understanding Intro & Chapter 1 (CWP 629-631)
Friday: Hume: An Enquiry Concerning Human Understanding Sections II—IV, Part I (CWP 767-773)

October 15—19: Epistemology/The Existence of God
Monday: Hume (continued); group work
Wednesday: PAPER #1 due; Aquinas: Question 2 in Summa Theologiae (CWP 450-453)
Friday: Aquinas (continued); group work

October 22—26: Existence of God
Monday: Anselm: Chapters 2—5 in Proslogian (CWP 415-416)
Wednesday: Review for Midterm (no reading)
Friday: MIDTERM

October 29—November 2: Existence of God
Monday: Gaunilo’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 5—9: Existence of God/Problem of Evil
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 12—16: Problem of Evil/Free Will
Monday: B.C. Johnson (handout)
Wednesday: Problem of Evil wrap-up (no reading); group work
Friday: Maimonides: The Guide of the Perplexed (CWP 434-439)

November 19—21: Free Will
Monday: Aristotle: Book III of On the Soul (CWP 223-227)
Wednesday: Hospers (handout)
Friday: THANKSGIVING BREAK (no class!)
carpe diem, lazy bones

November 26—30: Free Will/Ethics
Monday: Journal due; Free Will wrap-up (no reading); group work
Wednesday: Aristotle: Book III, Chapter 1 in Nicomachean Ethics (CWP 275-277)
Friday: Aristotle: All of Book II of Nicomachean Ethics (CWP 269-275)

December 3—7: Ethics
Monday: Mill: Part of Chapter 2 in Utilitarianism (CWP 1060-1063)
Wednesday: Kant: First Section in Grounding for the Metaphysics of Morals (CWP 984-991)
Friday: Ethics wrap up (no new reading)

December 10—14: Ethics/Group Presentations
Monday: PAPER #2 due; preparation for presentations (no reading)
Wednesday: group presentations
Friday: group presentations

December 17—19: Review/Final Exam
Monday: Review for final exam
Wednesday: FINAL EXAM
sup cat