Office Hours: Quad
362C: 1-3-5: 2:15-4:00 PM |
Dennis Beach, osb
1-3-5, 1:00 2:10
Quad 349
Is the way things appear to us the way they really are? If not, do we have
any access to the way things really are? How? And if we don’t, how could we ever
know or even suspect that the way things appear to us isn’t perhaps the way they
really are? These questions have been with philosophers ever since humankind
began to wonder about themselves and the world they live in. And when the
questions change from “What is true about the physical nature of the world?” to
“What is beauty?” “What is goodness or virtue?” or “Is there a God and can we know anything
about this God?” the problem becomes yet more urgent.
We will explore the relation of our knowing to the world first through a
contemporary introduction to the problem, and then by looking at the stands
taken by representative philosophers on the question of human knowing: Plato and
Socrates, Rene Descartes, Bertrand Russell, and José
Ortega y Gasset.
Norman Melchert, Whos to Say? A Dialogue on Relativism. Indianapolis: Hackett, 1994. | |
Plato, Five Dialogues. 2nd ed. Translated by G.M.A. Grube. Indianapolis, IN: Hackett, 2002. | |
Rene Descartes, Discourse on Method and Meditations on First Philosophy. 4th edition. Translated by Donald A. Cress. Indianapolis, IN: Hackett, 1998. | |
Bertrand Russell, Problems of Philosophy. 2nd edition. New York: Oxford UP, 1997. | |
José Ortega y Gasset, Some Lessons in Metaphysics (photocopy packet). Translated by Mildred Adams. New York: W.W. Norton, 1969. |
Note: Reading for philosophy classes generally makes up in density for what it lacks in length. That means that an adequate job of reading the assignments will perhaps require a slower, more thoughtful and questioning pace.
Philosophy is a participatory exercise of thought. That means that you can’t do well in the course unless you participate actively in the reading and discussion. I will often give daily assignments to prompt reflection on our reading, such as outlining the arguments in a section of the text, etc. The questions and tasks will vary from requiring simply thoughtful preparation for discussion to written notes or a post to the public folder discussion. These daily assignments will form 15% of your grade. Because they affect class on the day they are assigned, they cannot be made up if missed. There will be 2 significant papers (3-5 pages), one at the end of the introductory text and one in the second half of the semester. There will also be 3 exams. The first paper and exam will determine mid-term grades for First-year students.
The dates of the exams are: Exam 1: Tuesday, October 3; Exam 2: Thursday, November 2; and Final Exam: Wednesday, December 20 (8:00 - 10:00 AM — Final Exam period). Missing an exam will result in a grade of zero that cannot be made up.
Regular and active class attendance is expected. If you have to miss class because of illness or some other valid reason, I expect you to contact me about it before the absence. Voice-mail and e-mail make it fairly easy to leave a message. Missing class because you are leaving early for the Spring Break or Easter Break or for an interview or non-emergency doctor’s appointment are not considered excused. Absences will affect your participation grade; more than one unexcused absence will occasion a meeting to discuss your continued enrollment in the class, and further unexcused absences will result in loss of credit.
Each of the major exams and major papers will constitute one-sixth of your grade; daily assignments, including public folder entries, constitute the final sixth. Your participation grade will act as a "ceiling" for your overall grade. In other words, it will determine the highest grade you can receive for the course, no matter what grades you may have received on tests and papers. If you earn an "A" on exams and papers but do no more than sit like a desk potato in class, your final grade will be a "C." If your participation is strong, this may raise your grade one-half grade level (e.g., BC to B, B to AB) especially if your test and paper average is on the borderline.
Initial Reading Assignments:
August 29 (T) Introduction.
31 (Th) Melchert, Who’s to Say? First Conversation. See web schedule for other tasks.
September 4 (M) Melchert, Whos to Say? Continue discussion of First Conversation. Electronic Discussion
posting due. See
web schedule for instructions. Find Public Folders on
Outlook; near the bottom on the left-hand taskbar or folder list.
All Public
Folders-Academic-Philosophy-Dennis Beach-PHIL180-[unit].
6 (W) Read the Second Conversation. Further instructions on Web Schedule.
Further schedule information, electronic public folder discussion assignments, and writing assignments can be found on our Class Schedule Page: http://faculty.csbsju.edu/dbeach/phil180/scheduleF06.htm