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January 10, 2017 Page 1 PHIL 110000 DEPARTMENT OF PHILOSOPHY SPRING 2017 INTRO TO PHILOSOPHY 013 23960 TR 03:00 PM-04:15 PM BRNG 1268 Kelly, D. 015 23962 TR 01:30 PM-02:45 PM BRNG 1268 Cover, J. 016 23963 TR 09:00 AM-10:15 AM BRNG 1268 Smith, D. 018 23965 TR 04:30 PM-05:45 PM BRNG 1254 Davis, T. 019 23966 TR 03:30 PM-04:20 PM WTHR 172 Marina, J. Y01 59277 ARR HOURS Grad Staff The basic problems and types of philosophy, with special emphasis on the problems of knowledge and the nature of reality. PHIL 11000 INTRO TO PHILOSOPHY HONORS H01 14979 TR 04:30 PM-05:45 PM BRNG 1230 Brower, J. An introduction to the activity of philosophy through a close reading of classic philosophical texts from the ancient, medieval, and modern periods. Emphasis will be on topics relating to human nature and their implications for such issues as immortality of the soul, the nature and value of philosophy, and the good life for human beings. The course will begin by tracing the development of a specific conception of human beings, which dominated Western philosophy until the end of the Middle Ages, according to which human beings are a certain type of substance, distinguished from all non-human animals by the possession of a rational soul (i.e., an intellect and a will). In the remainder of the course, we will discuss the considerations that eventually led to its decline, beginning in the early modern period. This course does not presuppose any prior acquaintance with philosophical texts or methods, and is designed to help students acquire basic skills in critical thinking and reasoning. Readings will include selections from the writings of Plato, Aristotle, Augustine, Aquinas, Descartes, Hume, and Russell. PHIL 11100 ETHICS 016 23985 MWF 02:30 PM-03:20 PM BRNG 1268 Bernstein, 017 23986 TR 12:00 PM-01:15 PM BRNG 1268 Harris, L. 018 23987 MWF 01:30 PM-02:20 PM BRNG 1268 Grad Staff 018 23988 TR 10:30 AM-11:45 AM BRNG 1268 Frank, D. 022 69718 MWF 09:30 AM-10:20 AM BRNG 1268 Kain, P. 024 17366 MWF 10:30 AM-11:20 AM BRNG 1268 Grad Staff 025 17367 MWF 12:30 PM-01:20 PM BRNG 1268 Grad Staff Y01 59301 ARR HOURS Grad Staff A study of the nature of moral value and obligation. Topics such as the following will be considered: different conceptions of the good life and standards of right conduct; the relation of non-moral and moral goodness; determinism, free will, and the problem of moral responsibility; the political and social dimensions of ethics; the principles and methods of moral judgment. Readings will be drawn both from contemporary sources and from the works of such philosophers as Plato, Aristotle, Aquinas, Butler, Hume, Kant, and J. S. Mill. PHIL 11400 GLOBAL MORAL ISSUES 001 59273 MWF 10:30 AM-11:20 AM BRNG 1230 Grad Staff 003 65000 MWF 01:30 PM-02:20 PM BRNG 1230 Grad Staff Y01 64997 ARR ARR HOURS Grad Staff A systematic and representative examination of significant contemporary moral problems with a focus on global issues such as international justice, poverty and foreign aid, nationalism and patriotism, just war, population and the environment, human rights, gender equality, and national selfdetermination. PHIL 12000 CRITICAL THINKING 001 15147 MWF 11:30 AM-12:20 PM BRNG 1268 Curd, Y01 15173 ARR HOURS Grad Staff This course is designed for people who are interested in applying reasoning skills to everyday issues and debates. The goal is to enable you to reconstruct and evaluate arguments from a wide variety of sources and to invent good arguments of your own. The sources range from newspaper editorials, letters to the editor, and public policy debates to legal cases, reports of experiments, epidemiological studies, and public opinion polls. Though the approach is largely informal, we will study two areas of logic in some depth, namely, propositional logic ( Symbolic Sentential Logic ) and the theory of the categorical syllogism ( Arguments about Classes ). Some parts of the course also involve applications of concepts from statistics and probability theory.

January 10, 2017 Page 2 PHIL 15000 PRINCIPLES OF LOGIC PHIL 20700 ETHICS FOR TECH, ENGR & DESIGN 001 23997 TR 04:30 PM-05:45 PM BRNG 1268 Tulodziecki, D. 002 65062 MWF 03:30 PM-04:20 PM BRNG 1268 Grad Staff [note: fulfills UCC quantitative reasoning/math requirement] This course is an introduction to the basic concepts and methods of modern logic, with emphasis on the construction and appraisal of complex patterns of reasoning. Some of the things expected will be the recognition and reconstruction of arguments in ordinary language, the symbolization of propositions and arguments from English into logical notation, the testing of arguments for validity, and understanding and constructing proofs. You will be expected to know the notation and the techniques of propositional and predicate logic. Put less formally, you will learn what it means for a claim to follow from others, and to recognize and construct good arguments of your own. PHIL 20600 PHILOSOPHY OF RELIGION 001 14991 TR 03:00 PM-04:15 PM BRNG 1254 Bergmann, The course will be divided into three parts. The first part of the course will deal with a question that has loomed large in the philosophical history of western monotheism (Judaism, Christianity and Islam): is belief in God rational? The focus here will be on arguments for God s existence (such as the argument from the fact that the universe seems to have been designed), on arguments against God s existence (e.g., the argument that a perfect God wouldn t permit terrible things to happen and yet they happen), and on whether belief in God can be rational if it isn t supported by argument. The second part of the course will focus on the fact that there are many different religions in the world, most of which claim to be the only religion that is right about the most important truths. Our question here will be whether, in the face of this plurality of religions, it can be rational to think that one s own religion is right and that other religions incompatible with it are mistaken. The third part of the course will focus on some questions in philosophical theology questions such as: Can we be free if God foreknows what we will do? Does it make sense to make requests of God in prayer given that, whether we pray or not, a perfect being would know what we want and would do what is best? The course requirements will include several short quizzes, some short writing assignments, a midterm exam, and a final exam. 001 17554 TR 01:30 PM-02:45 PM BRNG 1254 Davis, T. The course is designed to increase students awareness of the professional and ethical responsibilities of those planning to work in technology, engineering, design and related fields, helping them to anticipate and navigate issues that arise in national, international, and cross-cultural contexts. The main concerns are thus with developing the ability to apply a general ethical framework to new and unique situations, and with deepening students understanding of the relation between their future professions and contemporary ethical issues, in global, economic, environmental, and social contexts. The course covers how this framework should be constituted and also provides practice in applying such a framework to specific issues that arise in global contexts. Students are expected to have prior experience in science, technology, engineering, or design (via EPICS, GEP, internship, co-op, EWB, student design team, etc.) to apply in exploring the topics of the course. It may be taken for honors credit, and used to fulfill the requirements for a Scholarly Project: honors students will be asked to use their own projects in technology, engineering or design as the bases for ethical case studies, which will be presented in an ethics symposium at the end of the term. PHIL 21900 INTRO EXISTENTIALISM 001 15015 MWF 10:30 AM-11:20 AM BRNG 1248 Grad Staff A survey of both the philosophical and more literary writings of the existentialist movement. Readings will be chosen from among the following writers: Kierkegaard, Nietzsche, Dostoevsky, Kafka, Marcel, Heidegger, Camus, Sartre, Jaspers, de Beauvoir, Ortega, and Merleau- Ponty. PHIL 22500 PHILOSOPHY AND GENDER 001 59980 MWF 03:30 PM-04:20 PM BRNG 1230 Grad Staff An examination of the beliefs, assumptions, and values found in traditional and contemporary philosophical analyses of women. A range of feminist approaches to knowledge, values, and social issues will be introduced. PHIL 23000 RELIGIONS OF THE EAST 001 10596 MWF 03:30 PM-04:20 PM STEW 314 Purpura, A. A study of the history, teaching, and present institutions of the religions of India, Southeast Asia, China, and Japan. This will include Hinduism,

January 10, 2017 Page 3 Jainism, Sikhism, Buddhism, Confucianism, Taoism, Shintoism, and Zoroastrianism. PHIL 23100 RELIGIONS OF THE WEST 001 10243 MWF 11:30 AM-12:20 PM BRWN 1154 Ryba, T. A comparative study of the origins, institutions, and theologies of the three major Western religions, Judaism, Christianity, and Islam. PHIL 24000 SOCIAL AND POLITICAL PHILOSOPHY 001 69621 TR 09:00 AM-10:15 AM BRNG 1230 McBride, W. What have been some of the great social aspirations and values of the past, and how are they related to our own? In this course, a number of the major issues and writers in Western social and political thought will be introduced and discussed. There will be classical readings from Plato, Aristotle, Machiavelli, Hobbes, Locke, Rousseau, and Marx, followed by a segment devoted to contemporary writers and issues. During the latter, each student will be asked to select a book to present briefly to the class; this will serve as the basis of a final term paper. (Other requirements, in addition to class participation and meeting with the instructor, will be a shorter paper early in the term and a mid-term and final examination). Text: Michael S. Morgan, ed., Classics of Moral and Political Theory, 5 th edition Hackett paperback, 978-1-60384-442-0. PHIL 260 PHILOSOPHY AND LAW 001 14945 MWF 12:30 PM-01:20 PM BRNG 1230 Grad Staff A discussion of philosophical issues in the law: a critical examination of such basic concepts in law as property, civil liberty, punishment, right, contract, crime and responsibility; and a survey of some main philosophical theories about the nature and justification of legal systems. Reading will be drawn from both law and philosophy. PHIL 27000 BIOMEDICAL ETHICS 001 24011 TR 01:30 PM-02:20 PM SMTH 108 Song, Y. An examination of the moral problems raised by developments in medicine and the biomedical sciences. Topics include abortion, reproductive technologies, euthanasia and physician-assisted suicide, experiments involving human subjects, and health care delivery. PHIL 29000 ENVIRONMENTAL ETHICS 001 24016 MWF 12:30 PM-01:20 PM BRNG 2280 Bernstein, An introduction to philosophical issues surrounding debates about the environment and our treatment of it. Topics may include endangered species, "deep ecology," the scope and limits of cost-benefit analyses, and duties to future generations. PHIL 29300 PHILOSOPHY OF DISABILITY 001 18342 MWF 09:30 AM-10:20 AM BRNG 1230 Song, Y. A study of the nature and value of disability, as well as some of the social and political issues that most concern persons with disabilities. Topics include definitions of disability, the epistemic and moral status of persons with disabilities, the relationship between cognitive disability and moral agency, the ethics of creating disability and of preventing it, the aesthetics of the disabled body, and disability in social justice theories. PHIL 30100 ANCIENT PHILOSOPHY 001 16146 TR 10:30 AM-11:45 AM BRNG 1230 Curd, P. Thales and his Presocratic counterparts are generally reckoned to be the first western philosophers. This course will trace the development of philosophy in Greece from its beginning in Thales and the Milesian school through to Aristotle. Along the way we shall consider the questions the Greek philosophers asked: What is it to be real? What is the nature of knowledge? Can we explain change? Can I know anything about the everchanging world of sense-experience? What would such knowledge be like? Is moral knowledge possible? Emphasis will be placed on the works of Heraclitus, Parmenides, Plato, and Aristotle. PHIL 30200 HISTORY OF MEDIEVAL PHILOSOPHY 001 15043 TR 01:30 PM-02:45 PM BRNG 1230 Brower, J. A survey of some of the main trends and major figures of medieval philosophy. Emphasis will be on close reading and analysis of representative texts in medieval metaphysics, epistemology, and ethics, but some attention will also be given to broader philosophical traditions that develop during the thousand years separating late antiquity from the Renaissance. Readings (in English translation) may include Augustine,

January 10, 2017 Page 4 Boethius, Avicenna, Anselm, Abelard, Maimonides, Aquinas, Scotus, Ockham and Suarez. PHIL 30300 HISTORY OF MODERN PHILOSOPHY 001 24019 TR 03:00 PM-04:15 PM BRNG 1230 Jacovides, Philosophy flourished in the early modern period (for us, between 1633 and 1787). We shall examine the central doctrines of Descartes, Locke, Spinoza, Berkeley, and Kant. Our central epistemic topics will be the problem of skepticism, whether we have any innate ideas, and how we can know anything about the outside world. Our central metaphysical topics will include the nature of minds, the nature of bodies, and the relation between them. We shall also consider how these philosophers attempted to fit God into their newly scientific worldviews. Three papers will be assigned. PHIL 30400 19 TH CENTURY PHILOSOPHY 001 17676 TR 12:00 PM-01:15 PM BRNG 1230 Smith, D. This is a course in nineteenth-century philosophy that will focus on the work of five key philosophers of the period: G. W. F. Hegel, Karl Marx, Søren Kierkegaard, Friedrich Nietzsche, and William James. The emphasis throughout the course will be on a close reading of the primary texts. We will trace out the fundamental philosophical problems and themes that were addressed during the century. PHIL 35000 PHILOSOPHY AND PROBABILITY 001 14948 TR 01:30 PM-02:45 PM BRNG 1248 Draper, P. The aim of this course is to use mathematical probability to explicate the concept of evidence and then use that explication to address a variety of foundational problems in the philosophy of science. Topics include the rules of mathematical probability and their relevance to philosophy of science; the basic structure of scientific reasoning; the issue of why simpler theories are, not just easier to use, but more likely to be true; the question of whether or why strong or conclusive evidence against a scientific theory is, in principle, easier to come by than strong or conclusive evidence for it; challenges to the method of statistical significance testing; the problem of whether it is possible to justify induction; and the issue of how one theory can be more likely to be true than all competing theories even though that theory fits the data no better or even worse than some of those competing theories. There are no pre-requisites for this course. The main requirements for the course are homework, quizzes, and a comprehensive final exam. PHIL 41100 MODERN ETHICAL THEORY 001 17564 MWF 11:30 AM-12:20 PM BRNG 1230 Kain, P. A philosophical examination of the major controversies in the history of modern ethics, including arguments about the place of reason and of sentiment in ethics, the basis of moral obligation, the relation between God and morality, and the relation between morality and science. We will study the work of philosophers such as Thomas Hobbes, G. W. Leibniz, Francis Hutcheson, David Hume, Immanuel Kant, J.S. Mill, Friedrich Nietzsche, and others; paying particular attention to the work of Hume and Kant. Assignments will include frequent short papers (< 500 words), one 6-8 page argumentative essay, a midterm essay exam and a final exam. PHIL 42100 PHILOSOPHY OF SCIENCE 001 17567 MWF 2:30PM-3:20PM BRNG 1230 Curd, The aim of the course is to explore some of the main issues and problems in contemporary philosophy of science: demarcation, laws of nature, explanation, induction and confirmation, rationality and relativism, realism versus antirealism. The emphasis is on the philosophy in the philosophy of science. Consequently, most of the people we will be reading are philosophers and philosophers of science people like Kuhn, Duhem, Carnap, Hempel, van Fraassen and Hacking not scientists. The concern with philosophy also means that we will have little to do with the history, sociology, and psychology of science. The focus is on philosophical issues that arise in the natural sciences (principally physics, chemistry, and biology). PHIL 42500 METAPHYSICS 001 17568 TR 9:00AM 10:15AM BRNG 1248 Cover, J. The French philosopher J. Maritain once said A philosopher is not a philosopher if he is not a metaphysician. He meant this to be true of any philosopher or, as the case might be, non-philosopher: perhaps epistemologists and ethicists are not philosophers; or perhaps instead epistemologists and ethicists are metaphysicians. Consider Bergmann, the epistemologist: if he were a philosopher who failed to be a metaphysician, would we have in him a case of a philosopher

January 10, 2017 Page 5 failing to be a philosopher? This question begins approaching issues of (i) Modality and Essentialism, which will make up a third of the issues we shall discuss in this course. The other two are issues of (ii) Ontology and of (iii) Identity, Persistence, and Change. In connection with (i), we ll work toward a principled approach to such claims as these: -- Since nine is the number of planets, and the number of planets could have been greater than it is, nine isn t essentially odd. -- If a claim is necessarily true, that is owing to the meanings of words (think of All bachelors are unmarried ). But of course no claim to the effect that thus-and-so exists can be true merely owing to the meanings of words. So, nothing exists necessarily, not even God, or the number five, or the principle of non-contradiction. In connection with (ii), we ll figure out how to approach and evaluate claims such as these: -- If Plato showed courage and courage is a virtue, then there exist at least two things: Plato, and courage. -- Everything is the correct (and important) answer to the question What exists? -- My cheese has four holes and your cheese has five; there are numbers; but there are no holes. And, in connection with (iii), such claims as these: -- According to Leibniz s Law, if x = y, then (of course!) x can t have properties that y lacks. The offspring of Jack and Eunice Cover, born on 26 June 1958, weighed seven pounds. Professor Cover weighs 127 pounds. So, Professor Cover can t be the offspring of Jack and Eunice Cover. -- Since Lois believes that Superman can fly, Superman has the property of being believed by Lois to be able to fly. Since Lois doesn t believe that Clarke Kent can fly, Clarke Kent lacks the property of being believed by Lois to be able to fly. So then, Superman has a property that Clarke lacks, and hence by Leibniz s Law Clarke isn t Superman. But Clarke is Superman. Thus, Leibniz s Law is false. [But Leibniz s Law is true. So um.] -- Either there is no such thing as Descartes right hand, or else two things can exist in the same place at the same time. PHIL 503 STUDIES IN EARLY MODERN PHILOSOPHY 001 17573 M 02:30 PM-05:20 PM BRNG 1248 Jacovides, Descartes is the father of modern philosophy. We ll read most of Cambridge University Press s three volume edition of his writings. Our topics will include his epistemology, his metaphysics, his philosophy of religion, and his relation to the scientific revolution. Two papers, a class presentation, and an analytical bibliography will be assigned. PHIL 515 TWENTIETH CENTURY ANALYTICAL PHILOSOPHY II 001 17575 W 11:30 AM-02:20 PM BRNG 1248 Bertolet, R. We shall investigate some of the most significant work in what we have come to regard as the analytic tradition from 1929 through the early 1970s, with an occasional glance backwards or forward. We will read work by some of the members of the Vienna Circle, Ryle, Ayer, Carnap, and Quine, along with some subsequent reactions. This work ranges over philosophy of science, metaphysics and epistemology, logic and philosophy of language, and (to a lesser extent) philosophy of mind. A concern often encountered is the relation between science and philosophy, hence the question of what philosophy can hope to achieve. Course requirements will include half a dozen discussion notes and three papers. Please note that PHIL 51400 is not a prerequisite for this course. PHIL 52000 EXISTENTIALISM 001 17581 TR 10:30 AM-11:45 AM BRNG 1248 McBride, W. This course will combine historical survey with in-depth analysis of a few major works in the existentialist tradition. It will consider individual works by Kierkegaard and Nietzsche, essays by Heidegger in the volume edited by David Krell, and by Simone de Beauvoir in a volume edited by Margaret Simons, and sections of Sartre s Being and Nothingess. Each participant will be asked to give a class presentation on a work that is not part of the common readings, and to write a term paper.

January 10, 2017 Page 6 PHIL 53200 STUDIES IN THEORY OF KNOWLEDGE 001 17587 TR 12:00 PM-01:15 PM BRNG 1248 Bergmann, The focus of the course will be contemporary analytic epistemology. The four main topics we will look at are: 1. the foundationalism-coherentism debate 2. the internalism-externalism debate 3. skepticism and responses to it 4. the epistemology of intuition Course requirements: keeping up with the reading, a short paper, a longer paper, a class presentation, and several shorter written assignments (no exam). PHIL 54200 RATIONALITY & RELATIVISM: AFRICAN-AMERICAN PERSPECTIVES 001 17590 TR 03:00 PM-04:15 PM BRNG 1248 Harris, L. An examination of relativism, particularly reasons on the side of Protagoras claim that man is the measure of all things and thereby reasons contrary to Plato s transcendental rationalism. The examination will involve pragmatism and its conception of social entities and truth. Selected problems will be drawn from the philosophy of race and authors Richard Rorty and Alain Locke. PHIL 60100 SPECIAL TOPICS ANCIENT PHILSOPHY 001 17591 M 11:30AM-02:20 PM BRNG 1248 Curd, P. The practice of the earliest Presocratic thinkers challenges traditional early Greek views that human beings are epistemically feeble and can know very little. The Ionians make claims about the fundamental structure of the cosmos and the principles that govern it. These assertions presuppose that they have knowledge of things far beyond their own (or any human) experience. Both Heraclitus and Parmenides certainly suppose that human knowledge is possible, even if quite difficult to attain. So the question arises: what could possibly justify the Presocratic confidence in human capacities to discover and to know? Most Presocratic thinkers share a commitment to two claims. The first is the basic intelligibility of the cosmos. The second is that human beings, having capacities for perception, thought, and understanding can come to know things beyond their direct experience. This seminar is an exploration of the early Greek philosophers philosophical justifications for these claims, especially how they involve rejection of traditional (Homeric and Hesiodic) views about the gods, and about the limited nature of human understanding. Prerequisite: PHIL 50100 (or permission of the instructor). PHIL 68000 DISSERTATION WORKSHOP SEMINAR 001 17590 TR 4:30PM-5:45PM BRNG 1248 Kelly, D. The aim of this course is to provide a constructive forum for the development of graduate students dissertation projects, to help sustain progress on research and maintain participation in a supportive intellectual community. The course will also serve as a key component of students' preparation for the job market. Each student will present work of their own--e.g., an overview of their dissertation project, or a chapter or a part of a chapter from their dissertation, for discussion with the other graduate students in the seminar and the faculty instructor. Students are required to make the written version of the material to be presented available to the class at least one week before their presentation and discussion. All students are expected to read and come prepared to discuss the material presented. Regular attendance is expected of all participants. Prerequisite: 6 credit hours at the graduate level in Philosophy. PHIL 68500 PHILOSOPHY OF KANT 001 17593 F 12:30 PM-03:20 PM BRNG 1248 Marina, J. This course will be concerned with the critical philosophy as a whole. Primary emphasis, however, will be on the theories of knowledge and metaphysics as developed in the Critique of Pure Reason. Lesser attention will be paid to Kant's ethics and the principles of judgment as time permits. Please contact Sue Graham (CLA Counseling and Student Services for more information) at 765-49-44976 or sgraham@purdue.edu. See URL Philosophy Courses for additional information.