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Ethics (PHIL 102), Spring 2017, University of Oregon Dr. Colin Koopman Course Description: This course will offer an introduction to central concepts of ethical inquiry and moral philosophy. What is of paramount importance for us as individuals and as a society? To guarantee equal rights for all? To provide better lives for those less fortunate? To treat well those with whom we interact? And can all of these be of paramount importance at once? In this course you will develop a vocabulary for addressing these questions using the frameworks of the most influential moral theories shaping contemporary ethical and political discourse. In the first weeks of the course we will begin by studying the basic concepts of the most influential classical moral theories. We will read selections from Aristotle on virtue ethics, from Immanuel Kant on rights-based deontology, from John Stuart Mill on utilitarianism, and from William James on pragmatist approaches to the very idea of moral philosophy. Following this background exposure to the basic organizing concepts of contemporary moral theory, you will then learn how to utilize, enrich, and critique these theories by examining some of the most pressing ethical conflicts we face today. Critical moral issues we will consider in this part of the class will include economic inequality, racial injustice, and the ethics of emerging technologies of surveillance. Here we will read, among others, selections from Ta-Nehisi Coates, Cornel West, Michelle Alexander, John Rawls, and Martha Nussbaum. Instructor: Colin Koopman, koopman@uoregon.edu Office Hours: Wed 2:00-3:50 in SCH 250A (I am available for regular consultation during office hours. Unfortunately, in a course this size I cannot promise that I will be able to respond to all emails. Note also that I am very unlikely to reply to messages sent via Canvas.) GTFs (Teaching Assistants): Devin Fitzpatrick, dfitzpat@uoregon.edu; Office Hours: Thur 1:00-2:50 in SCH 158 Joshua Kerr, jkerr@uoregon.edu; Office Hours: Mon 2:00-3:50 in SCH 158B Sarah McLay, smclay@uoregon.edu; Office Hours: Mon 10:00-11:50 in SCH 158 Maggie Newton, mnewton@uoregon.edu; Office Hours: Tue & Thur 12:00-1:00 in SCH 221 Paul Showler, pauls@uoregon.edu; Office Hours: Monday 2:00-3:50 in SCH 158 Class Meetings: Lectures every Monday & Wednesday, 4:00-5:20, in Lillis 182 Sections every Friday, time and room TBD based on what you signed up for Course Documents & Information: See the course website on the UO Canvas platform. PHIL 102 Syllabus Dr. Koopman page 1

Course Schedule, incl. Reading Schedule & Assignment Due Dates: All assigned readings are to be completed before the lecture during which they will be discussed. Date Class Topics & Assigned Reading INTRODUCTION: Approaching Ethics Philosophically 4/3 Introduction to the Class & Discussion of Syllabus 1. What is ethics? An introduction. 2. Discussion of syllabus and class expectations. 3. Exercise: why does morality matter? 4/5 Why Morality Matters: Confronting Issues in Ethics Guest Lecture by Dr. Lewis Gordon (Univ. of Connecticut), The Intimate Relationship between Fascism and Racism w/ reception afterward 4/7 Section Discussion of Why Moral Matters Matter to You with your GTF UNIT I: Meta-Ethics How to Approach Ethics Philosophically 4/10 Getting Philosophical about Moral Matters William James, The Moral Philosopher and the Moral Life in WTB Jane Addams, Democracy and Social Ethics ( Introduction ) 4/12 Defusing Moral Skepticisms Bernard Williams, Morality, Chs. 1-4, pp. 3-38 William James, The Dilemma of Determinism in WTB [note the heavy reading load!] 4/14 Section Discussion of the Very Idea of Moral Philosophy with your GTF UNIT II: Normative Ethics The Three Major Approaches to Normative Ethics 4/17 Deontological Ethics, Part I: Immanuel Kant, GMM, Preface and First Section Recommended: Williams, Morality, Ch. 8 (pp. 63-72) 4/19 Deontological Ethics, Part II: Immanuel Kant, GMM, Second Section In-Class Workshops on Philosophical Writing, Part I: Topic: focusing your argument Prepare: bring a hypothetical thesis statement (on Kant) to class PHIL 102 Syllabus Dr. Koopman page 2

Background: read handout titled Writing Introductory Paragraphs 4/21 Section Discussion of Kant s Deontological Moral Theory with your GTF 4/24 Utilitarian Ethics, Part I: John Stuart Mill, Utilitarianism, Chs. I & II Recommended: Williams, Morality, Ch. 10 (pp. 82-98) 4/26 Utilitarian Ethics, Part II: John Stuart Mill, Utilitarianism, Chs. III & IV In-Class Workshops on Philosophical Writing, Part II: Topic: counter-argument and engaging the conversation Prepare: locate an objection to utilitarianism & Mill s reply in Utilitarianism, Ch. II pp. 7-26 4/28 Section Discussion of Mill s Utilitarian Moral Theory with your GTF 5/1 Virtue Ethics: Aristotle, Nicomachean Ethics, Book I (I.1, I.5, I.9) & Bk II (II.1, II.2, II.3) Recommended: Williams, Morality, Chs. 6 & 7 (pp. 48-62) In-Class Workshops on Philosophical Writing, Part III: Topic: basic concepts of argument, inference, reasoning, & logic Prepare: familiarize yourself with the vocabulary on the Basic Concepts of Logic handout (we will work through this in lecture) 5/1 Midterm to be distributed today at end of class. Midterm due on Wed 5/3 at the beginning of lecture. Late midterms will not be accepted without a doctor s note or other valid excuse. UNIT III: Engaged Ethics Three Contemporary Problems & Their Historical Contexts UNIT III.A: The Ethics of Inequality (focusing on distributive justice) 5/3 Equality by Agreement: A Procedural Rights-Based Approach John Rawls, Justice as Fairness, 1-6, 13-18 Recommended: John Rawls entry at Stanford Encyc. Phil. at < https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/rawls/> 5/5 Section Discussion of Rawls s Difference Principle with your GTF 5/8 Equality of Capabilities: An Aristotelian Account (w/ some Kantian elements) Martha Nussbaum, Creating Capabilities, Ch. 2, pp. 17-45 PHIL 102 Syllabus Dr. Koopman page 3

Recommended: Amartya Sen, Inequality Reexamined, pp. 12-30 5/10 Global Equality: A Utilitarian Perspective Peter Singer, Famine, Affluence, and Morality Recommended: Henry Shue, Nationality and Responsibility 5/12 Section Discussion of the Ethics of Equality with your GTF Essay on Ethics of Equality Due 5/15 at start of lecture UNIT III.B: The Ethics of Identity (focusing on racial identity in America) 5/15 What is Race? Why is it a Moral Matter? Paul C. Taylor, Race: A Philosophical Introduction, pp. 3-17, 84-86, 116-118 W.E.B. Du Bois, The Souls of Black Folk, Ch. 1 Recommended: Race at Stanford Encyc. Phil. at < https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/race/> 5/17 Histories of Racial Injustice: How Race Came to Define Us (& Still Does) Cornel West, A Genealogy of Modern Racism, pp. 47-65 Michelle Alexander, The New Jim Crow, pp. 182-187, 190-200 5/19 Section Discussion of Why Race is a Moral Matter with your GTF 5/22 Responding to Racial Injustice: Integration & Reparations Elizabeth Anderson, The Imperative of Integration, pp.3-7, 86-88, 112-117, 134-137 Ta-Nehisi Coates, The Case for Reparations (pdf or online at www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2014/06/the-case-for-reparations/361631/) Essay on Ethics of Racial Identity due 5/24 at start of lecture UNIT III.C: The Ethics of Technology (focusing on privacy & surveillance) 5/24 Why is Technology a Moral Matter?: Virtue Ethics Approaches Langdon Winner, Citizen Virtues in a Technological Order Shannon Vallor, Envisioning the Good Life in the 21 st Century and Beyond Recommended: Colin Koopman, The Age of Infopolitics in The New York Times <read online at https://nyti.ms/2jlazlz> 5/26 Section focused on Group Privacy Collaborations with your GTF PHIL 102 Syllabus Dr. Koopman page 4

5/29 Memorial Day Holiday (5/29 in Spr 2017 academic year) 5/31 Putting Privacy in Context: Pragmatic Information Tech. Ethics Helen Nissenbaum, A Contextual Approach to Privacy Online Recommended: Deirdre Mulligan, Colin Koopman, & Nick Doty, Privacy is An Essentially-Contested Concept 6/2 Section focused on Group Privacy Collaborations with your GTF 6/5 Justifying Privacy: Utilitarian and Kantian Approaches Peter Singer, Visible Man: Ethics in a World Without Secrets Anita Allen, An Ethical Duty to Protect One s Own Information Privacy? Recommended: Bernard Harcourt, The Expository Society, pp. 1-3, 13-23 Group Technology Ethics Report due 6/7 at start of lecture CONCLUSION: Ethics and Self-Transformation 6/7 Moral Meliorism: Making Better Moralities William James, The Will to Believe 6/9 Section Discussion of Why Morality Matters with your GTF 6/12 Final Philosophical Reflective Essay due to your GTF PHIL 102 Syllabus Dr. Koopman page 5

Student Work & Assessment: 1. Lecture Attendance & Participation in Group Exercises during Lecture (5%) o This portion of your grade will be assessed on: participating in group and individual exercises announced during lecture, to be graded based on exercises including a brief in-class writing component which you will then turn in to your GTF at the end of lecture (those turning in these writings will receive full credit for this portion of their grade). 2. Discussion Section Attendance & Participation (10%) o Failure to attend section will result in the following deductions: You may miss up to 1 of your Friday section meetings with your GTF without any automatic penalty. If you miss more than 1 section, your overall grade will be lowered 5% (i.e., this portion of your grade will be cut in half) If you miss more than 2 sections, overall grade lowered by 10% (i.e., you will receive 0 points for this portion of your grade) If you miss more than 4 sections, you will fail the course. In the application of this rule, absences will only be excused for documented medical reasons or clear emergencies; other reasons will not serve as excuses. o Beyond the above deductions for failure to attend, this portion of your grade will be assessed on: your preparedness when you come to class, your degree of participation in class, your conducting yourself in a respectful manner in contributing to class discussions. 3. One Take-Home Mid-term Short Essay Exam (25%) o This written assignment will be graded on the following three assessment criteria: 1) the quality of your writing (including grammar, style, and organization), 2) your demonstration of understanding (comprehension of the concepts you write about, accuracy in describing the views of assigned reading material, accuracy in citation and quotation), 3) quality of your argument (including the soundness/cogency of your argumentation and the completeness of your argument in engaging reasonable alternative views). 4. One Argumentative Essay (30%); you will choose one of two topics to write on (either inequality or identity), or you can write on both and take the higher of the two grades o For this assignment, you will write a short argumentative paper discussing an important issue from our units on inequality and identity. o Part of your assignment for this essay is to formulate a good and interesting question, which you will then give a good answer to. As such, there will not be an assigned PHIL 102 Syllabus Dr. Koopman page 6

question/prompt beyond the following. The requirement for the topic of the essay is the following: Take a claim made by one of our authors in our assigned class readings and argue either for or against that claim: if you argue against the author, be charitable to their view but patiently explain why you find it incorrect, considering potential counter-arguments they would offer in reply; if you argue for the author s claim, then you need to frame your argument around a plausible critique of that claim (either a hypothetical critique or an actual critique from another class reading or an outside source). Your essay should also frame your argument using one or more of the conceptual frameworks studied in the first half of class (one of the three major moral theories of deontology, utilitarianism, and virtue ethics). o Format notes: 1200-1500 words (roughly 4-5 pages), 12 pt. Times New Roman, double-space, 1-inch margins all around, notes as single-space footnotes 10 point. In addition your paper must contain a bibliography of all references cited in the paper (which should be stapled to your paper but will not count as words for your wordcount limits). o This written assignment will be graded on the following three assessment criteria: 1) the quality of your writing (including grammar, style, and organization), 2) your demonstration of understanding (comprehension of the concepts you write about, accuracy in describing the views of assigned reading material, accuracy in citation and quotation), 3) quality of your argument (including the soundness/cogency of your argumentation and the completeness of your argument in engaging reasonable alternative views). 5. One Group Technology Ethics Report (20%); full guidelines to be distributed in lecture during Week 8, but briefly: o For this assignment, you will work in small groups (of 3 to 4 students) to produce a two-part report on an actually-existing privacy problem (contemporary or historical). The report will be written as if you are on a team of ethicists working at an ethics consulting firm that has been hired to report on this issue. The report will be in two parts: The first part will be written for your firm s client (you decide who this will be, it might be a government agency, such as a regulatory body or the Office of the President, or a corporation, or a non-profit lobby like Electronic Frontier Foundation, or even an individual). This report must consist of (at least) three portions: first, a description of the problem or issue you are reporting on; second, an analysis of the context of the case in the terms of the Contextual Integrity model of privacy (to be presented in lecture); third, a recommendation for how the client should act, with a consideration and discussion of at least two possible courses of action. PHIL 102 Syllabus Dr. Koopman page 7

The second part of the report will be an executive summary prepared not for your client, but for the chief of your firm. This should include a very brief abstract of the report (no more than one page), a discussion of your work process, and a quantification of the amount of work undertaken by each group member (as a percentage of the total work put into the project, with the max. for all group members being 100%). o Format notes: 1500-1800 words (roughly 5-6 pages), 12 pt. Times New Roman, double-space, 1-inch margins all around, notes as single-space footnotes 10 point. In addition your paper must contain a bibliography of all references cited in the paper (which should be stapled to your paper but will not count as words for your wordcount limits). This written assignment will be graded on the following three assessment criteria: 1) the quality of your writing (including grammar, style, and organization), 2) your demonstration of understanding (comprehension of the concepts you write about, thoroughness in engaging the issue you are writing), 3) quality of your argument (including the soundness/cogency of your argumentation and the completeness of your assessment in weighing alternative courses of action from that you recommend). 6. Final Short Philosophical Reflection (10%): a final brief reflective essay o In this concluding assignment you will address the following topic(s): What is your own will to believe? Why does moral self-transformation matter to you? How are you, or do you plan to transforming yourself as a moral agent You will want to consider which moral matters are most important (the what), offer an explanation of why those issues are important to you (the why), and describe what you do (or plan to do) to act according to the stated importance with which you regard this issue (the how). o This written assignment will be graded on the following three assessment criteria: 1) the quality of your writing (including grammar, style, and organization), 2) your demonstration of understanding (comprehension of the concepts you write about, accuracy in describing the views of assigned reading material, accuracy in citation and quotation), 3) depth of reflection displayed by your essay. o Format notes: roughly 900 words (or 3 pages), 12 pt. Times New Roman, doublespace, 1-inch margins all around, notes as single-space footnotes 10 point. Required Books: (note that you must use the edition listed; other editions will not be accepted). William James, The Will to Believe and Other Essays in Popular Philosophy (Dover Books) Bernard Williams, Morality: An Introduction (Cambridge University Press, Canto edition) Immanuel Kant, Grounding for the Metaphysics of Morals (Hackett Publishing) John Stuart Mill, Utilitarianism (Hackett Publishing) PHIL 102 Syllabus Dr. Koopman page 8

Beyond these four books all other readings will be available as PDFs or URLs on our course website. It is your responsibility to make sure you have access to them. If you do not have access to an assigned reading, check with your GTF, and let me know as soon as possible. Learning Objectives: This course is designed to provide you with the opportunity to: Learn the basic moral-theoretical frameworks in which many moral and political issues today are debated. Gain additional exposure to some of the basic terms of debate of a selection of important contemporary moral issues. Discuss these moral theories and moral issues in a respectful environment so that you may gain practice in deliberative exchange on moral issues using philosophical thinking. Improve your argumentative writing skills. Collaboratively work with others on a philosophical reflection on ethical issues in the form of a group written report. Additional Notes & Statements: Grading Standards: The following rubric reflects the general standards of the Philosophy Department at the University of Oregon: A = Excellent. No mistakes, well-written, and distinctive in some way or other. B = Good. No significant mistakes, well-written, but not distinctive in any way. C = Acceptable. Some errors, but a basic grasp of the material. D = Poor or Unacceptable. Several errors, with a tenuous grasp of the material. F = Failing. Problematic on all fronts, with no real grasp of the material, or a complete lack of effort. Computer Use in Class: My policy for this class is that you may use laptops and tablets in class (but not cell phones, smart phones, etc.) provided that you do not sit in the back four rows of the lecture hall and provided also that you do not use your computers to check your email, your social network sites, shop for shoes, etc.. If need be, we will revise this policy as the class progresses. Successful use of computers in the classroom is up to you, it s not up to me. Don t abuse this privilege such that it interferes with others enjoyment of it. Academic Honesty: The instructor reserves the right to assign a grade of F for the course to students who engage in any acts of academic dishonesty, including but not limited to: Plagiarism: Plagiarism is the inclusion of someone else s product, words, ideas, or data as one s own work. When a student submits work for credit that includes the product, words, ideas, or data of others, the source must be acknowledged by the use of complete, accurate, and specific references, such as footnotes. By placing one s name on work submitted for credit, one certifies the originality of all work not otherwise identified by appropriate acknowledgements. Verbatim statements by others must be enclosed by quotation marks or set off from the regular text as indented extracts. Students will avoid being charged with plagiarism if there is acknowledgement of indebtedness. Indebtedness must be acknowledged whenever: 1) one quotes another person s actual words or replicates all or part of another s product; 2) one uses another person s ideas, opinions, work, data, or theories, even if they are completely paraphrased in one s own words; 3) one borrows facts, statistics, or other illustrative material unless the information is common knowledge. Unauthorized collaboration with others on papers or projects can inadvertently lead to a charge of plagiarism. If in doubt, consult the instructor or seek assistance from the staff of Academic Learning Services (68 PLC, 346-3226). In addition, it is plagiarism to submit as your own any academic exercise prepared totally or in part by another person, even if that person is acting as a tutor or editor (and ends up substantially producing part of the work). Fabrication: Fabrication is the intentional use of information that the author has invented when he or she states or implies otherwise, or the falsification of research or other findings with the intent to deceive. Examples include, but are not limited to: 1) citing information not taken from the source indicated; 2) listing sources in a reference not used in the academic exercise; 3) inventing data or source information for research or other academic exercises. Cheating: Cheating is an act of deception by which a student misrepresents or misleadingly demonstrates that he or she has mastered information on an academic exercise that he or she has not mastered, including the giving or receiving of unauthorized help in an academic exercise. Examples include but are not limited to: 1) copying from another student s work; 2) PHIL 102 Syllabus Dr. Koopman page 9

collaborating without authority or allowing another student to copy one s work in a test situation; 3) using the course textbook or other material not authorized for use during a test; 4) using unauthorized material during a test; for example, notes, formula lists, cues on a computer, photographs, symbolic representations, and notes written on clothing; 5) resubmitting substantially the same work that was produced for another assignment without the knowledge and permission of the instructor; 6) taking a test for someone else or permitting someone else to take a test for you. PHIL 102 Syllabus Dr. Koopman page 10