Instructor: Charles Wallis
Office Phone:
Office:
E-mail: cwallis1@mediaone.net
Office Hours: MW 12:30-1:30
Web site:
Books
John Perry and Michael Bratman (ed.) Introduction to Philosophy:
Classic and Contemporary Readings
Reading and Other Assignments
WK 1 General Introduction
to Course
Readings:
"The Value of Philosophy", "The Province of Philosophy", "The Absurd" pp.
2-21
WK 2 What is Philosophy?
Readings: "The Value
of Philosophy", "The Province of Philosophy", "The Absurd" pp. 2-21
Doings: Monday September
6th, no class due to labor day holiday
WK 3 Reason and Religion:
Good and Evil
Readings: Introduction,
"The Ontological Argument"(pp.39-40), "The Existence of God Proven"
(pp.41-2),
"God, Evil, and the Best
of all Possible Worlds" (pp.29-30), "Must God Create the Best?" (pp. 31-38)
WK 4 Reason and Religion:
Good and Evil
Readings: "Why I
am not a Theist" (pp. 25-28), "Dialogues Concerning Natural Religion" (pp.
43-77)
WK 5
Reason
and Religion: Faith and Subjectivity
Readings: "The Wager" (pp.78-81), "Pascal's Wager" (handout)
WK 6 Reason and Religion:
Faith and Subjectivity
Readings: "Against
Objectivity in Religion", "Kierkegaard's Arguments Against Objective Reasoning
in Religion"
pp. 82-106
WK 7 Knowledge and
Reality: Introduction
Readings: "Meditations
on First Philosophy" pp.112-136
Doings: Columbus
day Monday October 11th
WK 8
Knowledge
and Reality: Classics in Epistemology
Readings: "Some Further Considerations Concerning Our Simple Ideas
of Sensation", "Three Dialogues
Between Hylas and Philonous" pp. 137-173
WK 9 Knowledge and
Reality: Classics in Epistemology
Readings: "Three
Dialogues Between Hylas and Philonous" pp. 143-173
WK 10 Knowledge and
Reality: Classics in Epistemology and Induction
Readings: and
"An Enquiry Concerning Human Understanding" and "The Problem of Induction"
pp. 189-214, 228-248
WK 11 Mind and Body:
Freedom and Determinism
Readings: "Has the Self 'Free Will'"?, "Of Liberty and Necessity,"
and
"I Could Not Have Done Otherwise--So What?" pp.436-456, 480-488
WK 12 Catch-up or further
assignment
Possible Readings: "Computing Machinery and
Intelligence" and "Minds, Brains, and Programs" pp. 358-383
WK 13
Course Requirements
Tests: I will base seventy-five percent of your grade upon three tests (twenty-five percent for each test). The first two tests will occur within the first eight weeks of the course. The third test will occur during the last class meeting. I will base the remaining twenty-five percent of the course grade upon twelve short weekly assignments. These assignments will be handed out on the class previous to their due date. I base these assignments upon your readings and the paradoxes listed at the end of your book. Grades for weekly assignments will be on a scale of 1-10.