Ethics + Philosophy Prepared by Jill Kennedy, O Donel

Similar documents
Wednesday, April 20, 16. Introduction to Philosophy

Introduction to Philosophy 1301

A History of Western Thought Why We Think the Way We Do. Summer 2016 Ross Arnold

Philosophy & Religion

Qué es la filosofía? What is philosophy? Philosophy

Essay requirements: Perhaps the Online Writing Lab at Purdue University says it best:

PHILOSOPHY MICHAEL J. VLACH, PH.D. the Big idea for the 101 Most important People and Concepts in Philosophy. Silverton, or

Undergraduate Calendar Content

Shanghai Jiao Tong University. PI900 Introduction to Western Philosophy

Key Vocab and Concepts. Ethics, Epistemology, Aesthetics, logic, social and political, religious, metaphysics

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

Introduction to Philosophy 1301

I SEMESTER B. A. PHILOSOPHY PHL1B 01- INTRODUCTION TO PHILOSOPHY QUESTION BANK FOR INTERNAL ASSESSMENT. Multiple Choice Questions

Introduction to Philosophy 1301

Teachur Philosophy Degree 2018

Robert Kiely Office Hours: Monday 4:15 6:00; Wednesday 1-3; Thursday 2-3

A History of Western Thought Why We Think the Way We Do. Summer 2016 Ross Arnold

THE RISE OF MODERNITY: DESCARTES, KANT, HEGEL, + MARX

A Major Matter: Minoring in Philosophy. Southeastern Louisiana University. The unexamined life is not worth living. Socrates, B.C.E.

History of Philosophy and Christian Thought (02ST504) Reformed Theological Seminary Orlando, FL Spring 2019

Background to Early Modern Philosophy. Philosophy 22 Fall, 2009 G. J. Mattey

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

A History of Western Thought Why We Think the Way We Do. Summer 2016 Ross Arnold

Johns Hopkins Center for Talented Youth Introduction to Philosophy

A Quick Review of the Scientific Method Transcript

(INTRODUCTION TO PHILOSOPHY)

Business Research: Principles and Processes MGMT6791 Workshop 1A: The Nature of Research & Scientific Method

DOMINICAN UNIVERSITY COLLEGE

PHILOSOPHY. Written examination. Monday 15 November 2004

Philosophy HL 1 IB Course Syllabus

PELLISSIPPI STATE TECHNICAL COMMUNITY COLLEGE MASTER SYLLABUS INTRODUCTION TO PHILOSOPHY PHL 1010

TABLE OF CONTENTS. A. "The Way The World Really Is" 46 B. The First Philosophers: The "Turning Point of Civilization" 47

PHILOSOPHY. Written examination. Monday 17 November 2003

POLITICAL SCIENCE 3102 (B) Sascha Maicher (Fall 2014)

CHAPTER ONE What is Philosophy? What s In It For Me?

KCHU 228 INTRO TO PHILOSOPHY FINAL PROJECT. The Instructors Requirements for the Project. Drafting and Submitting a Project Proposal (Due: 3/3/09)

Introduction to Philosophy: The Big Picture

TEST: Monday Dec. 17, 8:00 10:00 a.m. (can leave if completed after 9:30 a.m.)

PELLISSIPPI STATE TECHNICAL COMMUNITY COLLEGE MASTER SYLLABUS INTRODUCTION TO PHILOSOPHY PHIL 1030

PHIL 1313 Introduction to Philosophy Section 09 Fall 2014 Philosophy Department

Introduction to Philosophy

Admin Identifying ethical issues Ethics and philosophy The African worldview Ubuntu as an ethical theory

HOUSTON COMMUNITY COLLEGE SYSTEM Northeast College NOLN

Philosophy Courses. Courses. Philosophy Courses 1

Philosophy 501/CCT 603 Foundations of Philosophical Thought. Arthur Millman Fall 2018 Office: W/5/020 Wednesdays 7:00

Photo: Anne-Maria Yritys Trust the vibes you get. Energy does not lie. ~Unknown

Shanghai Jiao Tong University. PI900 Introduction to Western Philosophy

Chapter 2 Human Nature

PL 305: Modern Philosophy -- the Origin of the Modern Mind Fall of 2012, Juniata College

West Los Angeles College. Philosophy 1 Introduction to Philosophy. Spring Instructor. Rick Mayock, Professor of Philosophy

Philosophy. The unexamined life is not worth living. Plato. O More College of Design Mission Statement

Final Exam Review. Age of Reason and Scientific Revolution

The Good Life (HNRS 2010)

2/8/ A New Way of Thinking: The Birth of Modern Science. Scientific Revolution

PHI 1001 History of Philosophy: Ancient and Medieval Tuesday 1 st February 2011

PHILOSOPHY 111: HISTORY OF PHILOSOPHY EARLY MODERN Winter 2012

Philosophy (30) WINTER 2005

Philosophy. Philosophy 491. Department Offices. Faculty and Offices. Degree Awarded. Program Student Learning Outcomes

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

PHILOSOPHY (PHIL) Course Areas. Faculty. Bucknell University 1. Professors: Richard Fleming, Sheila M. Lintott (Chair), Gary M.

School for New Learning DePaul University The Examined Life: A Question of Philosophy

Introduction to Philosophy Levels 1 and 2

Please answer the following questions, saving your answer before proceeding to the next question.

Chapter 1 The Activity of Philosophy 2 Chapter 2 Philosophy's History 10 Chapter 3 Philosophy and the Examined life 18

PH 101: Problems of Philosophy. Section 005, Monday & Thursday 11:00 a.m. - 12:20 p.m. Course Description:

Introductory PHIL 100 Introduction to Philosophy 1. Logic A study of the principles of reasoning. PHIL 103 Logic 1 PHIL 201 Symbolic Logic 1

PHILOSOPHY COURSE DESCRIPTIONS

ST504: History of Philosophy and Christian Thought. 3 hours Tuesdays: 1:00-3:55 pm

PL 406 HISTORY OF MODERN PHILOSOPHY Fall 2009

Philosophy comes from two Greek words meaning love of wisdom. This may still be the best short definition of philosophy.

PHILOSOPHY (PHIL) Philosophy (PHIL) 1

Department of Philosophy & Religion

Student Outcome Statement

Philosophy Catalog. REQUIREMENTS FOR A MAJOR IN PHILOSOPHY: 9 courses (36 credits)

Department of Philosophy

OTTAWA ONLINE PHL Basic Issues in Philosophy

PHILOSOPHY. Written examination. Monday 18 November 2002

PHILOSOPHY, BACHELOR OF ARTS (B.A.) WITH A CONCENTRATION IN ETHICS AND PUBLIC POLICY

Raphael The School of Athens. Hello Plato

Any Philosophy that can be put in a nut shell belongs in one. - Hillary Putnam. Course Description

Nietzsche and Existentialism. by: Khail Sims. Eric Matos, Cameron Crosby, and Trevor Nelson

Introduction to Philosophy (PHIL 1301) Credit: 3 semester credit hours (3 hours lecture) Prerequisite/Co-requisite: None.

Development of Thought. The word "philosophy" comes from the Ancient Greek philosophia, which

Fu Jen Catholic University. PHI 115 Introduction to Philosophy. Summer 2019

Philosophy Quiz 12 The Age of Descartes

POLS 3000 INTRODUCTION TO POLITICAL THEORY

PHIL U282: FREE WILL AND DETERMINISM Loyola University of New Orleans, Fall 2016, Dr. Ben Bayer

PHILOSOPHY (PHIL) PHIL Courses. Philosophy (PHIL) 1

PHIL 3480: Philosophy of Religion (3 credits)

PHILOSOPHY. Chair: Karánn Durland (Fall 2018) and Mark Hébert (Spring 2019) Emeritus: Roderick Stewart

DEPARTMENT OF PHILOSOPHY AND RELIGIOUS STUDIES

Logic, Truth & Epistemology. Ross Arnold, Summer 2014 Lakeside institute of Theology

Minzu University of China. PHI 115 Introduction to Philosophy. Summer 2019

Atheism From the University to Society. Edwin Chong. April 2, 2006

Notes on Postmodernism and the Emerging Church (accompanying slides)

Neo-Atheism on the University Campus. Edwin Chong. UniverSanity January 25, 2008

Course Description. This course is an examination of the bases and norms for conduct as applied to both the individual and society.

The British Empiricism

Rosen Educational Services materials copyright 2010 Rosen Educational Services, LLC. All rights reserved.

Kant s Transcendental Idealism

Transcription:

Ethics + Philosophy 2101 Prepared by Jill Kennedy, O Donel

VIDEO With help from the 5 minute Philosopher http://www.youtube.com/watch? v=ofyw9oqd8ya

! Philosophy is EVERYWHERE philosophy of business, philosophy of dating etc.! Philosophy is the act of REFLECTIVE THOUGHT, QUESTIONING and WONDER.! It is the search of TRUTH! Philosophy is the search for WHAT IS RIGHT.

! Comes from Greek word philo meaning to love and sophia meaning wisdom an open-minded search for truth.! A philosopher is not necessarily wise but wants to become wise! Anyone can be a philosopher!! The ability to wonder is the distinguishing trait of philosophers.

! What is the meaning of life?! What is the meaning of love?! Is it wrong to tell this lie?! Does evil exist?! Does God exist?! Are people innately good?! Can I be sure I m not dreaming right now?! Am I a good person?! What does it mean to be a good person?! Where did the universe come from?! What makes one piece of art beautiful and another a piece garbage?

! Whether you ve thought or wondered about these questions or not, congratulations! You re about to!! Philosophy is all about thinking about thinking! It s not about the answers: it s about thinking about the questions!! Philosophy provides an opportunity to evaluate, discuss and reflect on questions hopefully leading to answers.

! There is no concrete definition of philosophy.! The shortest definition came from contemporary philosopher Anthony Quinton who wrote: philosophy is thinking about thinking - Anthony Quinton

! Invented by ancient Greeks to answer the big questions about: Nature of reality Quest for happiness How to build a good society What makes life worth living What do you believe are the answers to these questions?

! The philosopher s task is not to understand concepts, it is to try to understand what exists and the nature of it s existence.! A philosopher does not ask the time instead a philosopher would say Does time exist? If so, what is time?! The philosopher, however, must create logical, well-crafted arguments to support their opinions.

! Thales of Miletus! Plato! Isaac Newton! Socrates! Gottfried Leibniz! Aristotle! Mary Wollstonecraft! Mohandas Gandhi! Niccolo Machiavelli! Aquinas! Karl Marx! Immanuel Kant! Soren Kierkegard! Martin Luther King Jr.! St. Augustine of Hippo! Albert Einstein! Noam Chomsky! George Santayna! Rene Descartes! David Hume! Jean-Paul Sartre! Michel Foucault! Confucius! Friedrich Nietzsche! Susan Blow! Galileo Galilei! Sigmund Freud! Hypathia of Alexandria! Simone de Beauvoir! Nicolaus Copernicus! Voltaire! Jesus Christ! Yoda (?)

! Philosophy began in the 5 th and 6 th century BCE (before common era).! Socrates brought the field of ethics into existence.! Plato wrote about metaphysics, ethics and knowledge, developing a distinctive interpretation of human nature.! Aristotle also took part in the study of metaphysics and ethics while founding the discipline of logic.! Descartes focused on how people know, in the 1600s he was recognized as the founder of modern philosophy: that everything should be doubted.

! Metaphysics: The nature of reality - the world and the existence of gods. What is real?! Logic: How to build arguments to get answers! Epistemology: Study of knowledge. How do we know what we think we know?! Ethics: How do we tell right from wrong? Proper conduct of one s personal life! Political philosophy: What is the best form of government?! Aesthetics: What is art? How does it influence society? What is beauty?! How would YOU answer these questions?!

! Where do people find answers? Peers Family Media Science Religion Other? So how does philosophy differ from say, religion, or science?

! Posts a question (hypothesis) and seeks answers! Conducts experiments by observing or manipulating the natural world (like your labs)! Posts a question (inquiry) and seeks answers! Tries to clarify people s thinking Science Philosophy

! Wants a guide for how to live a good and moral life! Finds truth through intuition and revelation! Wants a guide for how to live a good and moral life! Seeks truth through argument and logic Religion and Mysticism Philosophy

! Our main focus for this course is the ethics branch of philosophy but we ll still visit all the others.! Ethics is the study of values, of how we ought to live. It involves reflective, rational thinking to determine which behaviours are right or wrong Can you see any challenges to determining right and wrong behaviours?

! The main objective is to introduce you to some of the ideas and philosophers who have tried to explore the big questions! We ll use classical philosophical inquiries to try and get some answers (Start with a question, explore all sides)! It s not about memorizing! The main thing is to engage the ideas!

! Learn: How to think (i.e./ metacognition) rather than What to know (i.e./ memorization)! Examine the relationship between development of religious thought and philosophical views! Explore how various living belief systems explain basic principles of reality! Investigate sources of influence on moral and ethical decision-making! Assess your own understanding of ethical decisionmaking, morality and ethics develop personal working definitions

! Assignments/Projects/Worksheets 50%! Participation (small and large group 20% discussion, attentiveness during lectures/ discussions/videos/presentations, attendance)! Journal (Teacher assigned reflections) 20%! Quizzes/Case studies (open book) 10%

You will need: 1. Journal (or small exercise) 2. Exercise for answering questions 3. Folder or binder for handouts and worksheets 4. Writing Utensil pen or pencil *2 and 3 can be in same small binder

! What benefits can you now see about exploring philosophy?! Think: Laws Government Environment Human Rights

JOURNAL ENTRY #1! Question: a.) What does it mean to be fair and just? b.) Are you a fair and just person? How/Why?

JOURNAL #2! Question: a.) How do you know who your friends are? b.) Has social media changed the definition of friendship? How/Why or How/Why not?

JOURNAL ENTRY #3! Question: Should you ever tell a lie?! We ll come back to this one later... >:)

JOURNAL ENTRY #4! Question: Are there times when you should be violent?

! This concludes our introduction. What do you think so far!?