Philosophy 3370: Metaphysics Spring 2008

§20063 MWF 12:00-12:50; 131 Harrin Hall

 

Instructor: Ron Novy

Email: rnovy@uca.edu

Telephone: 852-2641

Course Page: http://faculty.uca.edu/~rnovy

Office: 225A Harrin Hall

Office Hrs: MWF 9:00-9:50; 11:00-11:50; 1:00-2:40; by appt.

Texts:

Metaphysics (4th ed) by Richard Taylor

The Metaphysics of Death by John Martin Fischer

Additional required materials will be available via the course webpage. 

 

Course Description: Metaphysics can be thought of as an inquiry into the most basic and general features of existence. Aristotle called this inquiry "first philosophy” – the investigation of the philosophically most fundamental of matters. William James, on the other hand, tells us that metaphysics is “nothing but an unusually obstinate effort to think clearly.”  Taken together, metaphysics is a field of study that attempts to clearly and systematically address a wide-range of philosophical questions whose answers underlie our basic understanding of reality. In this course we will explore a number of such questions of historical and modern interest.

 

Structure & Expectations: for the most part, this class will follow a seminar format. As such, all members of the class are expected to attend all class meetings, to be familiar with the day’s assigned reading, and to actively participate in classroom discussions.

 

Grading: Your final grade for this course will be determined as follows: précis & presentation (10%), two evaluative critiques (10%), a paper portfolio (40%) and two exams (20% each). See notes at the course web page for further information on each component.

 

·         Exams: There will be both a mid-term and a non-cumulative final exam in this course.

 

·         Evaluative Critiques: Through the course of the semester, each student is required to submit two critical, one-page essays on an assigned text.

 

·         Paper Portfolio: Each student is expected to produce an eight-ten page conference-quality paper during the course of the semester.

 

·         Précis & Presentation: Each student is expected to draw up and present a précis on an assigned article.

 

Participation & Attendance: Roll will be taken regularly and will act as a ceiling on the student’s grade for the course. Regardless of grades received on the various assignments, a student’s course grade will not exceed the percentage of classes attended.

 

Additional Notes:

 

·                      Academic Dishonesty: The academic community regards academic dishonesty as an extremely serious matter with serious consequences that range from a failing grade to expulsion from the University. When in doubt regarding plagiarism, quotation, collaboration, etc. consult with the instructor. For further information regarding UCA’s academic misconduct policy, see the UCA Student Handbook.

 

·                      Sexual Harassment: Sexual harassment by any faculty member, staff member, or student is a violation of both federal law and university policy and will not be tolerated at UCA. For further information regarding the university’s sexual harassment policy, see the UCA Student Handbook.

 

·                      ADA:  The University of Central Arkansas adheres to the requirements of the Americans with Disabilities Act. If you require ADA accommodation, contact the Office of Disability Support Services at 450-3135.

 

·                     Gadgets: Classroom use of electronic information devices (cell phones, PDAs, IPods, etc.) is prohibited. 


PHIL3370 Metaphysics Reading & Exam Schedule Spring 2008

Monday

Wednesday

Friday

 

January 10  INTRODUCTORY BITS

Plutarch: The Ship of Theseus

 

January 14

Taylor Ch. 12: Polarity

Borges: The Library of Babel

 

January 16

Taylor Ch. 1: The Need for Metaphysics

Aristotle: Metaphysics

 

January 18

Beauvoir: “Woman as Other” from The Second Sex

January 21

MLK. Holiday

January 23      MINDS & BODIES

Taylor Ch. 2: Persons and Bodies

Taylor Ch. 3: Interactionism

 

January 25

Plato: Phaedo

 

January 28

Aristotle: De Anima

 

January 30

Descartes: Second Meditation

Bisson: They’re Made out of Meat

February 1

Taylor Ch. 4: The Mind as a Function of the Body

Borges: Borges and I

 

February 4

Locke: Of Identity & Diversity

February 6

Nagel: What is it like to be a bat?

February 8

Dennett: Where am I?

 

February 11

Putnam: Brains in a Vat

February 13

Hauser: Why isn’t my Pocket Calculator a Thinking Thing?

Leiber: Space-Time for Springers

February 15

Haraway: A Cyborg Manifesto

Kunzru: You are Cyborg

Clynes: Cyborgs in Space

 

February 18      FATE

Taylor Ch. 5: Freedom & Determinism

Taylor Ch. 6: Fate

 

February 20

Aristotle: On Fatalism

Aquinas: On Voluntary Action

 

February 22

No Class today (Midsouth Conf.)

Please read: Taylor Ch. 11: God

Asimov: The Last Question

 

February 25      GOD

Dennett: I Could Not Have Done Otherwise, So What?

 

February 27

Anselm: Ontological Argument

Gaunilo: In Behalf of the Fool

 

February 29

Rowe: Cosmological Argument

 

March 3

Feuerbach: The Essence of Religion in General

 

March 5

Guest Speaker: Dr. Donna Bowman,

On Process Philosophy

 

March 7

Swinburne: The Justification of Theism

 

March 10

EXAM #1

March 12

Taylor Ch. 10: Causation

 

March 14      TIME

Taylor Ch. 7: Space and Time

Taylor Ch. 8: The Relativity of Time and Space

 

March 17

Augustine: On Time

Newton: Space, time & Motion

Aristotle: Time is the Measure of Change

 

March 19

Keller & Nelson: Presentists Should Believe in Time Travel

March 21

McTaggart: The Unreality of Time

 

March 24

Spring Break

March 26

Spring Break

March 28

Spring Break

 

March 31

Taylor Ch. 9: Temporal Passage

 

April 2

Williams: The Myth of Passage

April 4

Lewis: Paradoxes of Time Travel

 

April 7

Heinlein: All You Zombies!

Bradbury: A Sound of Thunder

April 9             DEATH

Fischer: Death, Metaphysics, and Morality, 1-30 in TMOD

 

April 11

Murphy: Rationality and the Fear of Death, 41-58 in TMOD

April 14

Nagel: Death, 59-70 in TMOD

April 16

Rosenbaum: How to be Dead and not Care, 117-134 in TMOD

 

April 18

Parfit: Reasons and Person, 191-218 in TMOD

April 21

Luper-Foy: Annihilation, 267-290 in TMOD

April 23

Taylor Ch.13:Metaphysics &Meaning

Camus: The Myth of Sisyphus

 

April 25

Reading Day

 

 

April 30                    EXAM #2 (11a.m.)

TMOD: The Metaphysics of Death