Spinoza, A Spinoza Reader, ed. and trans. E. Curley (Princeton University Press).

Similar documents
Culture and Belief 31 Saints, Heretics and Atheists: An Historical Introduction to the Philosophy of Religion Spring 2015 Syllabus

PHILOSOPHY 111: HISTORY OF PHILOSOPHY EARLY MODERN Winter 2012

History of Modern Philosophy

Syllabus. Primary Sources, 2 edition. Hackett, Various supplementary handouts, available in class and on the course website.

Instructor Information Larry M. Jorgensen Office: Ladd Hall, room Office Hours: Mon-Thu, 1-2 p.m.

Lend me your eyes; I can change what you see! ~~Mumford & Sons

Leibniz and His Correspondents

Syllabus. Primary Sources, 2 edition. Hackett, Various supplementary handouts, available in class and on the course website.

WEEK 1: CARTESIAN SCEPTICISM AND THE COGITO

PHILOSOPHY 111: HISTORY OF PHILOSOPHY EARLY MODERN

Modern Philosophy (PHIL 245) Fall Tuesdays and Thursdays 2:20 3:30 Memorial Hall 301

Phil 3121: Modern Philosophy Fall 2016 T, Th 3:40 5:20 pm

PHIL 3020: Modern Philosophy, Spring 2010 MW 9:30-10:45, Denny 215 Dr. Gordon Hull

Philosophy 3020: Modern Philosophy. UNC Charlotte, Spring Section 001, M/W 11:00am-12:15pm, Winningham 101

This authoritative translation by John Cottingham of the Meditations is taken from the much acclaimed three-volume Cambridge. Descartes: Meditations

Philosophy 301L: Early Modern Philosophy, Spring 2011

Philosophy 223: Cartesian Man Fall Term 2011 Essentials Professor Alison Simmons Mondays 2-4

Framingham State University Syllabus PHIL 101-B Invitation to Philosophy Summer 2018

PHIL History of Modern Philosophy Spring 2015

From the fact that I cannot think of God except as existing, it follows that existence is inseparable from God, and hence that he really exists.

Lahore University of Management Sciences. PHIL 213: HISTORY OF WESTERN PHILOSOPHY FROM DESCARTES TO KANT Fall

Course Description and Objectives:

PHIL 100 AO1 Introduction to Philosophy

PL 406 HISTORY OF MODERN PHILOSOPHY Fall 2009

Reading Questions for Phil , Fall 2013 (Daniel)

Descartes and Schopenhauer on Voluntary Movement:

Metaphysics. Gary Banham

PHI 516 SEMINAR: LEIBNIZ FALL This seminar will be focused on understanding the thought of G.W. Leibniz in historical context.

Lahore University of Management Sciences PHIL 213 HISTORY OF WESTERN PHILOSOPHY FROM DESCARTES TO KANT

Spinoza, the No Shared Attribute thesis, and the

Introduction to Philosophy 1050 Fall Tues./Thurs :20pm PEB 219

PHILOSOPHY 8: EARLY MODERN PHILOSOPHY - SELF AND WORLD Harvard University Spring Term 2018: MW(F) 12-1 Emerson Hall 210

Knowledge, Reality, and Values CORC 1210 SYLLABUS

Prepared by: John Culp (626) , ext. 5243, Duke 241 Office Hours: MW 2:00-4:00 PM Other times by appointment

LART602: The Rational Eye Section 001 (CRN21943; 3 credit hours) Mondays, 5:00-7:45pm, OWEN G05 Winthrop University Spring, 2012

Syllabus Fall 2014 PHIL 2010: Introduction to Philosophy 11:30-12:45 TR, Allgood Hall 257

Leibniz s Conciliatory Account of Substance

PHIL History of Modern Philosophy Spring 2016

In Part I of the ETHICS, Spinoza presents his central

Lecture Notes Comments on a Certain Broadsheet G. J. Mattey December 4, 2008

Time 1867 words Principles of Philosophy God cosmological argument

Modern Philosophy Office Hours: Wednesday 11am 3pm or by apt. Office Location: PSY 244

G. J. Mattey s Lecture Notes on Descartes s Fourth Meditation 1

Fall 2018: PHIL 481 Philosophy as a way of life? Spinoza and the Stoics

UPI 2205 Ethics and the Environment

LART602: The Rational Eye Section 001 (CRN12253; 3 credit hours) Tuesdays, 5:00-7:45pm, OWENS 206A Winthrop University Fall, 2013

Philosophy 168. Descartes Fall, 2011 G. J. Mattey. Introductory Remarks

Columbia College Fall C1101 section 03 Contemporary Western Civilization I. Mon/Wed 9:00 10: Hamilton

Reading a Philosophy Text Philosophy 22 Fall, 2019

Instructor: Office hours Class meets Accommodations: Spinoza s Ethics Texts: Course Description:

I. Plato s Republic. II. Descartes Meditations. The Criterion of Clarity and Distinctness and the Existence of God (Third Meditation)

1/7. Metaphysics. Course Leader: Dr. Gary Banham. Room Tel. Ext.: 3036

Fall 2012 Syllabus Dr. Timothy J. Freeman THE UNIVERSITY OF HAWAII AT HILO

5AANB004 Modern II Spinoza & Leibniz

SCHEDULE OF SEMINAR READINGS First Semester, DATE FRESHMAN SOPHOMORE JUNIOR SENIOR. Cervantes: Don Quixote, Part I. Cervantes: Don Quixote

By the end of this course, students will be able to:

PHIL 1313 Introduction to Philosophy Section 09 Fall 2014 Philosophy Department

Descartes, Leibniz, Spinoza: Concept of Substance Chapter 3 Spinoza and Substance. (Woolhouse)

Introduction to Philosophy 1301

KINGSBOROUGH COMMUNITY COLLEGE of The City University of New York. Common COURSE SYLLABUS

Introduction to Philosophy (PHIL 120B) Fall Wednesdays and Fridays 12:50 2:00 Memorial Hall 302

The unity of Descartes s thought. Katalin Farkas Central European University, Budapest

Introduction to Philosophy 1301

Philosophy 18: Early Modern Philosophy

Spinoza on the Essence, Mutability and Power of God

Paul Lodge (New Orleans) Primitive and Derivative Forces in Leibnizian Bodies

Robert Kiely Office Hours: Tuesday 1-3, Wednesday 1-3, and by appointment

Access provided by University of Toronto Library (21 Nov :46 GMT)

Introduction to Philosophy: Knowledge and Reality

College of the Humanities HUMS Spinoza s Ethics Fall 2016

Course Syllabus Political Philosophy PHIL 462, Spring, 2017

Course Number: PHS 541 Course Title: Natural Theology Term: Summer Instructor Dr. Randall Colton,

Comments on Leibniz and Pantheism by Robert Adams for The Twelfth Annual NYU Conference on Issues in Modern Philosophy: God

COURSE GOALS: PROFESSOR: Chris Latiolais Philosophy Department Kalamazoo College Humphrey House #202 Telephone # Offices Hours:

Syllabus for BIB 421 Pentateuch 3.0 Credit Hours Spring The purpose of this course is to enable the student to do the following:

Syllabus PHIL 1000 Philosophy of Human Nature Summer 2017, Tues/Wed/Thurs 9:00-12:00pm Location: TBD

(P420-1) Practical Reason in Ancient Greek and Contemporary Philosophy. Spring 2018

Hume observes in the Treatise: "There is no question, which on account of its

Adding Substance to the Debate: Descartes on Freedom of the Will

University of International Business and Economics International Summer Sessions. PHI 110: Introduction to Philosophy

Hume s An Enquiry Concerning Human Understanding

MODERN PHILOSOPHY. Thinking in Letters

course PHIL 80: Introduction to Philosophical Problems, Fall 2018

1/9. Leibniz on Descartes Principles

Materialism and the Activity of Matter in Seventeenth-Century European Philosophy. Stewart Duncan. 23 May 2016

Course Syllabus Ethics PHIL 330, Fall, 2009

Philosophy 107: Philosophy of Religion El Camino College Spring, 2017 Section 2664, Room SOCS 205, MW 11:15am-12:40pm

The Rationalists: Descartes: Discourse On Method & Meditations; Spinoza: Ethics; Leibniz: Monadology & Discourse On Metaphysics By Rene

Two Kinds of Ends in Themselves in Kant s Moral Theory

Philosophy o f. Religion. Course Description

Fall 2016 Biblical and Post-Biblical Wisdom Literature Hebrew 2708 / Jewish Studies 2708 Meeting Time/Location Instructor: Office Hours:

Modern Philosophy from Descartes to Kant Philosophy 580

PHIL 370: Medieval Philosophy [semester], Coastal Carolina University Class meeting times: [date, time, location]

Course Text. Course Description. Course Objectives. StraighterLine Introduction to Philosophy

LEIBNIZ AND CHINA. Cambridge University Press Leibniz and China: A Commerce of Light Franklin Perkins Frontmatter More information

MODERN PHILOSOPHY: A STUDY OF KNOWLEDGE

University of Toronto Department of Political Science

THE CHALLENGES FOR EARLY MODERN PHILOSOPHY: EDITORIAL INTRODUCTION 1. Steffen Ducheyne

PHIL : Introduction to Philosophy Examining the Human Condition

INTRODUCTION TO EPISTEMOLOGY

Transcription:

Philosophy 120 The Continental Rationalists Fall 2009 Syllabus Important Information: Lecture: Tuesdays and Thursday at 11:00, Sever Hall 310 Professor: Jeffrey McDonough Office Hours: TBA E-mail: jkmcdon@fas.harvard.edu Course Web Page: http://www.courses.fas.harvard.edu/~phil120/ Discussion Sections: TBA Teaching Fellow: Allison Kuklok Office hours: TBA E-mail: kuklok@fas.harvard.edu Required Texts (available at the Coop): Descartes, The Philosophical Writings of Descartes, Volumes 1-3, edited and translated by J. Cottingham, R. Stoothoff, D. Murdoch, and on volume 3 A. Kenny (Cambridge University Press). Abbreviated below as CSM 1, CSM 2, and CSMK. Spinoza, A Spinoza Reader, ed. and trans. E. Curley (Princeton University Press). Leibniz, Philosophical Essays, ed. and trans. R. Ariew & D. Garber (Hackett), Abbreviated below as AG. Course Description: The seventeenth century was one of the most exciting and revolutionary periods in the history of philosophy. Among the prominent philosophers working in that period, Descartes, Spinoza and Leibniz have traditionally been grouped together under the label Rationalists in virtue of their willingness to lean heavily upon rational reflection to make bold conjectures about the nature of the world and the relation of humans to it. In this course, in addition to gaining an overview of the development of early modern rationalism, we will try to dig more deeply into a number of its central issues, arguments and controversies. Topics will include, among others, philosophical method, skepticism and its refutation, the nature of substance and matter, the relationship between mind and body, and natural philosophy. 1

Requirements and Grading: 1. Reading The ability to read texts carefully and thoughtfully is one of the most important skills the study of philosophy can help to foster. In order to better understand what is being taught, and to promote informed classroom discussions, required readings should be completed before lecture. Those readings are typically very short, but also very difficult, and students who wish to do well in the course are advised to read assigned texts several times. 2. Exams (undergraduates only) One of the aims of this course is to help students to gain an overview of some central themes in early modern rationalism. To promote that aim, as well as to provide students with an alternative means of being evaluated, three undergraduate exams will be administered over the course of the term. They are intended to test comprehension of the material covered in required readings, lectures, and discussion section, and will not require outside reading or research. Furthermore, exams will be primarily noncumulative and designed to test material in association with one of the three philosophers that we are studying (although comparison questions especially where those comparisons have been highlighted in lecture will be fair game). 3. Writing Assignments Undergraduates will be asked to complete two kinds of writing assignments. Each exam will include a take-home element that will require writing a 2-3 page essay. These short essays are intended to give students an opportunity to further develop their philosophical writing skills and receive feedback on their written work prior to the end of term. Undergraduates will also be required to complete an 8-12 page term paper. The term paper is intended to provide students with the opportunity to develop their own thoughts in greater detail and may be an extension of one of their shorter writing assignments. Graduate students will be required to complete three 3-5 page papers and a term paper of 12-15 pages (which likewise may be an extension of one of their shorter essays). Further details concerning writing assignments will be discussed in sections. 4. Grading For undergraduates, each exam will count for 25% of one s final grade. Term papers will also count for 25%. For graduates, each short writing assignment will count for 20% of one s final grade, and the term paper 40%. Regular attendance in lecture and discussion section, as well as participation in discussion section, is expected of everyone, and grades for most students will not be affected by participation. Exceptionally helpful contributions to discussion, or conversely failure to become productively involved in discussion, may result in the raising or lowering of a student s final grade by up to a third of a full letter (e.g. from a B+ to an A- or from a B+ to a B). Any student with four or more unexcused absences should expect to receive a failing grade for the course. 2

5. Special Needs and Emergencies Students requiring special assistance are encouraged to inform either the professor or teaching fellow. Absences from class or exam periods, and late papers, will be dealt with in accordance with the policies described in the Faculty of Arts and Sciences handbooks. Students should expect that failure to attend an exam without an excuse deemed legitimate by those policies will result in a score of zero for that exam, and under the same circumstances, late papers will be marked down a third of a letter grade for each day that they are late and not in the hands of the person who will be grading it. Requests made to the professor or teaching fellow prior to an absence or due date may result in special accommodation if something is coming up, let us know ahead of time; we must be fair, but we will do our best to accommodate your needs. Tentative Schedule (1) Thursday, September 3: Introduction to Early Modern Rationalism Required Reading: Syllabus DESCARTES (2) Tuesday, September 8: Descartes s Early Method Required Reading: Replies to Second Set of Objections (selection)=csm 2:110-113; Rule XII=CSM 1:39-51; Discourse on Method, Part VI=CSM 1:141-151. Optional Reading: Discourse on Method, Parts I-V=CSM 1:111-141 (3) Thursday, September 10: Epistemology: Doubt Required reading: Meditation 1=CSM 2:12-15; First Objection and Reply from Third Set of Objections=CSM 2:121. Optional reading: Dedication, Preface, and Synopsis to the Meditations=CSM 2:3-11. (4) Tuesday, September 15: Epistemology: Certainty Required reading: Meditations II-V=CSM 2:16-49 Optional reading: Second Set Objections and Replies (selection)=csm 2:89-90; Fourth Set Objections and Replies (selection)=csm 2:150 and CSM 2:171-172. 3

(5) Thursday, September 17: Cartesian Matter Required reading: Principles 2:1 2:19=CSM 1:223-231; Reply to the First Counter- Objections in Letter to More 15 April 1649 = CSMK 372. Optional reading: Principles 2:20-2:21=CSM 1:231-232 (6) Tuesday, September 22: Eternal Truths Required reading: Letter to Mersenne 27 May 1630=CSMK 25-26; Reply to Fifth Set of Objections (selection)=csm 2:261-3; Meditation 6 (selected paragraph)=csm 2:54; Section 6 from Sixth Set of Replies=CSM 2:291-292; For [Arnauld] 29 July 1648- Section 6=CSMK:358-59; Letter to Gibieuf 19 January 1642=CSMK 201-204. Optional reading: Letter to More 5 February 1649, CSMK 360-367. (7) Thursday, September 24: The Real Distinction between Mind and Body Required reading: Meditation VI=CSM 2:50-62; Selection from the Fourth Set of Objections=CSM 2:139-144. Optional reading: Principles 1:60=CSM 1:213; Selection from First Set of Objections=CSM 2:72-73; Selection from First Set of Replies=CSM 2:85-86; Selection from Second Set of Replies - Proposition IV=CSM 2:119-120; Selection from Discourse on Method, Part 4=CSM 1:127; Selection from Preface to Meditations=CSM 2:7; Fourth Set of Objections=CSM 2:139-144; Fourth Set of Replies CSM 2:154-162; Point 5 from Fifth Set of Objections=CSM 2:238-239 (8) Tuesday, September 29: Mind-Body Union Required reading: Descartes to Princess Elizabeth 21 May 1643=CSMK 217-220; Descartes to Princess Elizabeth 28 June 1643=CSMK 226-229; The Passions of the Soul Part I, Article 30=CSM 1:339; Descartes to Regius December 1641=CSMK 200-201; Letter to Regius January 1642=CSMK 205-209. Optional reading: Passage from Gassendi s Fifth Set of Objections=CSM 2:236-7; The Passions of the Soul, Part I, Article 34=CSM 1:341; Selection from Sixth Meditation (again)=csm 2:56-62; Gravity Example in Sixth Set of Replies=CSM 2:297f; Arnauld to Descartes [July 1648] AT 5:215 (not in CSMK); More to Descartes 11 December 1648 AT 5:238-39 (not in CSMK). (9) Thursday, October 1: EXAM ON DESCARTES 4

SPINOZA (10) Tuesday, October 6: Spinoza s Methods Required reading: The Emendation of the Intellect, Paragraphs 1-49 (available on course web site); Also quickly look through the Ethics for a feel of its presentation and structure. Optional reading: The Emendation of the Intellect, Paragraphs 50-110 (available on course web site); Letter 37 (all of Spinoza s letters listed in the syllabus will be available on the course web site). (11) Thursday, October 8: Substance and Modes Required reading: Ethics 1d3, 1d5, 1p25c. Optional reading: Descartes, Principles 1:51=CSM 1:210; Descartes, Second Set of Replies, V. Substance CSM 2:114. (12) Tuesday, October 13: Attributes Required reading: Ethics 1d4, 1d6, 1p4d, 1p10ds, 1p11, 2d2, 2p47d, Letter 9 Optional reading: 1p13cs, 1p19ds, 1p28ds, 2p7s, Letter 10, Letter 64 (13) Thursday, October 15: Spinoza s Master Argument for Monism, Part I Required reading: Ethics 1d6, 1p5, 1p11, 1p14 Optional reading: Letters 2, 3, 4 (all to Henry Oldenburg) (14) Tuesday, October 20: Spinoza s Master Argument for Monism, Part II Required reading: Ethics 1d2, 1d3, 1p6-1p11, 1p14. Optional reading: Letters 35 and 36. (15) Thursday, October 22: Infinite Modes Required reading: Ethics 1p21, 1p22, 1p23, 1p28, Letter 64. Optional reading: The Emendation of the Intellect, paragraphs, 99-101, Ethics 1p32c2. (16) Tuesday, October 27: Necessitarianism Required reading: Ethics 1p16, 1p28, 1p29, 1p33, 1p34, 1p35. Optional reading: Letters 40, 54, 74, 75, 80-83; Ethics 1p4d2. (17) Thursday, October 29: EXAM ON SPINOZA 5

LEIBNIZ (18) Tuesday, November 3: Matter Required reading: On Nature Itself=AG 155-167; On Body and Force, Against the Cartesians=AG 250-256; Discourse on Metaphysics 11 & 12= AG 43-44. Optional reading: Primary Truths (selection)=ag 33-40; Letter to Arnauld 28 November/8 December 1686 (selection)=ag 79-81; Letter to Arnauld 30 April 1687=AG 85-89; Note on Foucher s Objection=AG145-147; Letters to Johann Bernoulli=AG 167-171; Letter to Samuel Mason (selection) AG 228-230.. (19) Thursday, November 5: Dynamics Required reading: A Specimen of Dynamics I = AG 118-130; Discourse on Metaphysics 17 & 18=AG 49-52. Optional reading: Dynamics: On Power and the Laws of Corporeal Nature=AG 105-111; Letters to De Volder=AG 171-186 (20) Tuesday, November 10: Motion, Space and Time Required reading: Letters to Clark=AG 320-346 Optional reading: Primary Truths (selection: There is no vacuum )=AG 33. (21) Thursday, November 12: Two Accounts of Substance Required reading: Editor s introduction to Theological Writings related to the Catholic Demonstrations (posted on course site [L. 109]); Letter to John Frederick 1679 (posted on course site [L. 259-262]; To Arnauld (28 Nov/8 Dec 1686=AG 77-81; To Arnauld 30 April 1687=AG 81-90 Optional reading: Theological Writings related to the Catholic Demonstrations (posted on course site [L. 109-120]) (22) Tuesday, November 15: Corporeal Substances Required reading: Discourse on Metaphysics, sections 8-14=AG 40-47; Notes on Some Comments by Michel Angelo Fardella (1690)=AG 101-105; Leibniz to de Volder 20 June 1703=AG 174-178; Leibniz to de Volder 1704 or 1705= AG 181-4 Optional reading: Leibniz to de Volder 24 March/3 April 1699=AG 171-174; Leibniz to de Volder 30 June 1704=AG 178-181; (23) Thursday, November 19: Immaterial Substances Required reading: Principles of Nature and Grace, Based on Reason (1714)=AG 206-213; The Principles of Philosophy, or, the Monadology (1714=AG 213-225; Leibniz to Des Bosses 5 February 1712=AG 198-199. Optional reading: Notes for Leibniz to Des Bosses 5 February 1712=AG199-200; Leibniz to Des Bosses 26 May 1712=AG 200-201; Leibniz to Des Bosses, 29 May 1716=AG 201-206 6

(24) Tuesday, November 24: Incompossibility, Part I Required reading [note: required incompossibility readings will be posted together in a single file on the course web site]: From On the Secretes of the Sublime [11 February 1676] (A.VI.iii.472-473//DSR 21-23); From My Principle is: Whatever Can Exist and is Compatible with Others, Exists [12 December 1676] (A VI.iii.581-582/DSR 103-105); Section entitled, Intellectual Principles of the Existence of Things from the piece Metaphysical Definitions and Reflections, [Summer 1678-Winter 1680-1] (A VI.iv.1395/LOC 239); Passage from A Specimen of Discoveries of the Admirable Secretes of Nature in General, [1686?] (A VI.iv.1616-17/LOC 305) Optional reading [note: optional incompossibility readings will be posted together in a single file on the course web site]: On the Plentitude of the World, [Early 1676?] (A VI.iii.524-526/DSR 85-89); A Chain of Wonderful Demonstrations about the Universe [12 December 1676] (A VI.iii.584-85/DSR 107-111) (25) Thursday, November 26: No Class Thanksgiving Recess (26) Tuesday, December 1: Incompossibility, Part II Required reading [note: required incompossibility readings will be posted together in a single file on the course web site]: On the Ultimate Origination of Things [23 November 1697] (G VII 302-8/AG 149-155); A Resume of Metaphysics [ca. 1697] (G VII 289-91/MP 145-147); Letter to Louis Bourguet [December 1714] (G III 572-576/L 661-663). Optional reading [note: optional incompossibility readings will be posted together in a single file on the course web site]: On the Plentitude of the World, [Early 1676?] (A VI.iii.524-526/DSR 85-89); A Chain of Wonderful Demonstrations about the Universe [12 December 1676] (A VI.iii.584-85/DSR 107-111) (27) Thursday, December 3: EXAM ON LEIBNIZ ----FINAL PAPERS---- Undergraduate Final Papers Due by Thursday, December 17, 5:00 pm. Graduate Final Papers Due by Thursday, December 17, 5:00 pm. 7