THE HISTORY OF MODERN POLITICAL THOUGHT Wednesdays 6-8:40 p.m.

Similar documents
PHILOSOPHY 248 S O C I A L A N D P O L I T I C A L P H I L O S O P H Y COURSE DESCRIPTION

Introduction to Modern Political Theory

EUROPEAN POLITICAL THEORY: ROUSSEAU AND AFTER

POL320 Y1Y/L0101: MODERN POLITICAL THOUGHT Summer 2015

New School for Social Research Home Phone: (914) Spring 1997 Office: 445 Lang; Phone: x

Political Science 302: History of Modern Political Thought (4034) Spring 2012

Political Science 103 Fall, 2018 Dr. Edward S. Cohen INTRODUCTION TO POLITICAL PHILOSOPHY

Revolution and Reaction: Political Thought From Kant to Nietzsche

GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY LIBERAL STUDIES PROGRAM SYLLABUS. THE FOUNDATIONS OF MODERNITY LSHV 442 Section 01 (Fall, 2015) Thursday 6:30 9:15 PM ICC 204A

Lahore University of Management Sciences. POL 203 Introduction to Western Political Philosophy Fall

MC Radical Challenges to Liberal Democracy James Madison College Michigan State University Fall 2012 TTh 12:40 2:00 pm, Case 340

Political Science 603 Modern Political Thought Winter 2004

POL320 Y1Y/L0101: MODERN POLITICAL THOUGHT Thursday AH 100

POL320 Y1Y Modern Political Thought Summer 2016

POT 2002: Introduction to Political Theory

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

POT 2002: Introduction to Political Theory

POLS 3000 INTRODUCTION TO POLITICAL THEORY

Philosophy & Persons

POLITICAL SCIENCE 4082; M,W PM TUREAUD 225 HISTORY OF POLITICAL THOUGHT FROM MACHIAVELLI TO NIETZSCHE EARLY MODERN EUROPEAN THOUGHT

Introduction to Political Thought: POL-103 REVISED 1/8/18 Spring 2018 MWF, 9:30 am - 10:20 pm Johns Hall, 212

Political Science 603 M o d e r n P o l i t i c a l T h o u g h t Winter 2003

RADICAL HUMANITY. Course Description

HSTR th Century Europe

Introduction to Ethics

I. ASCRC General Education Form VIII Ethics and Human Values Dept/Program Political Science Course # PSC150

Introduction to Philosophy 1301

EXISTENTIALISM. Course Number PHIL Meeting Times MW 2:00-3:15. Instructor John V. Garner, Ph.D.,

THE UNIVERSITY OF VIRGINIA DEPARTMENT OF HISTORY POLITICS, SOCIETY, AND SOCIAL THOUGHT IN EUROPE II: SYLLABUS

Introduction to Philosophy: The Big Picture

Undergraduate Calendar Content

The University of North Carolina at Greensboro His 397: Modern European Thought: The Power of Ideas

Introduction to Philosophy 1301

Political Science 603. Winter 2006

Introduction to the Modern World History / Fall 2008 Prof. William G. Gray

PPL 399, Philosophical Perspectives on Liberty. Office Phone: Spring 2007 SYLLABUS

History H114 Western Civilization 2 Sect :00-1:15 MW CA 215

Course Description: Required texts:

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

PHIL1010: PHILOSOPHICAL ETHICS FORDHAM UNIVERSITY PROFESSOR ROBIN MULLER M/TH: 8:30 9:45AM OFFICE HOURS: BY APPOINTMENT

Course Syllabus Political Philosophy PHIL 462, Spring, 2017

Political Philosophy of Jean-Jacques Rousseau Politics 416 Tuesday and Thursday, 4:00, Kendall 331 Spring 2017, Hillsdale College

Enlightenment and Revolution in the Atlantic World

The Age of Reason. 21H.433 Instructor: David Ciarlo Spring, 2004 TR Description:

NORTH SOUTH UNIVERSITY DEPARTMENT OF HISTORY AND PHILOSOPHY DHAKA, BANGLADESH

Political Science 701 Liberalism and Its Critics

Introduction to Ethics

Course Syllabus Ethics PHIL 330, Fall, 2009

Instructor contact information

Office: Markstein 251 Off. hrs.: T 9:15-10:15, Th2:30 3:30, F1:15 2:15. HISTORY 324 ENLIGHTENMENT and EUROPEAN SOCIETY

JUSTICE AND POWER: AN INTRODUCTION TO POLITICAL THEORY

Revolution HIST 3626 / GOVT 3726

INTRODUCTION TO EUROPEAN CULTURAL HISTORY

Social Theory. Universidad Carlos III, Fall 2015 COURSE OVERVIEW COURSE REQUIREMENTS

The Key Texts of Political Philosophy

HIST 102: Western Civilization since 1600

HSTR th Century Europe

Student Outcome Statement

PSCI 4809/5309. CONCEPTS OF POLITICAL COMMUNITY II (Fridays 8:35-11:25 am. Please confirm location on Carleton Central)

21H.433 Instructor: Jeff Ravel THE AGE OF REASON. Oral Exercise (Trial of Louis XVI)

Philosophy 221/Political Science 221 Philosophical Foundations of the American Revolution

HOUSTON COMMUNITY COLLEGE SYSTEM Northeast College NOLN

Self, Culture and Society Section 6 The University of Chicago The College Fall 2011 Rosenwald 301; Tu Th 9:00-10:20

Course Description. Course objectives. Achieving the Course Objectives:

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

PHIL 11: INTRODUCTION TO PHILOSOPHY University of California, Santa Cruz Philosophy Department Winter 2016

1200 Academy St. Kalamazoo, MI 49006

PHIL : Introduction to Philosophy Examining the Human Condition

PHILOSOPHY 2 Philosophical Ethics

Religion and Political Thought: From Early Modernity to the 20 th Century. Course Schedule and Readings

This class explores various meanings of freedom in works of political philosophy, film, and music.

PS 506 French political thought from Rousseau to Foucault. 11:00 am-12:15pm Birge B302

FR 1083 Spring French Humanist Writers of the Renaissance: Sixteenth Century

Boston University Study Abroad London History of Western Ethical Philosophy CGS HU 201 (CGS Humanities) Summer 2014

Political Science 206 Modern Political Philosophy Spring Semester 2011 Clark University

CIEE Study Center in Amman, Jordan

History 247: The Making of Modern Britain, College of Arts and Sciences, Boston University Fall 2016, CAS 226 MWF 10-11am

University of Montana Political Science Department Modern Political Theory. PSCI 453 (Co-convening with PSCI 553) Dr.

Syllabus for GTHE 624 Christian Apologetics 3 Credit Hours Spring 2017

PS Human Portraits Through The Ages

PHIL 103 Introduction to Philosophy

C1102 Contemporary Civilization II: Radicals & Visionaries Professor Alhelí de María Alvarado-Díaz

FREEDOM & AUTHORITY Fall 2011 Blocks 1&2

University of Toronto Department of Political Science POL200Y1Y: Visions of the Just/Good Society Summer 2016

PHIL1110B Introduction to Philosophy 哲學概論 Course Outline

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

BLHS-108 Enlightenment, Revolution and Democracy Fall 2017 Mondays 6:30-10:05pm Room: C215

University of Toronto Department of Political Science

PL 406 HISTORY OF MODERN PHILOSOPHY Fall 2009

POS 308 Theorists and Theorizing Machiavelli ED 125 T, TH 8:45-10:05

History Europe Since 1789 Peter Weisensel Course Overview: Readings:

WESLEYAN UNIVERSITY. Department of History. History 202. Early Modern Europe

Philosophy o f. Religion. Course Description

THE MAKING OF MODERN CHRISTIANITY,

The Key Texts of Political Philosophy

Rousseau to Revolution PHL 324, PSC 292

Prerequisites: CORE 1101, ENGL 1201, ENGL 1202

The Topic: The Instructor:

Wednesday, April 20, 16. Introduction to Philosophy

FINAL EXAM SHORT-ANSWER QUESTIONS PHILOSOPHY 166 SPRING 2006

Transcription:

Department of Political Science SUNY Oneonta Spring 2002 Dennis McEnnerney Office: 412 Fitzelle Phone: 436-2754; E-mail: mcennedj@oneonta.edu Political Science 202 THE HISTORY OF MODERN POLITICAL THOUGHT Wednesdays 6-8:40 p.m. Course Description This course will survey selectively the history of European political thought from the Renaissance to the latter half of the nineteenth century, focusing on several influential political and philosophical works, the historical contexts in which those works were written, and the continuing relevance of those works. This period in European history was marked by rapid, continuing, and fairly radical changes in all spheres of life, with fateful consequences for the entire world, most of which soon found itself subject to what by the nineteenth century would be termed the "Great Powers" of Europe. Integral to the cultural, social, economic, and governmental transformations of modern European history were significant innovations in character, focus, and aims of political thought. Many of these innovations continue to shape, for better and for worse, the ways we conceive not only of politics but also of society, economy, and culture in the present "post-modern," "post-colonial" era. Some would even say that our apparently basic senses of self (as individuals, as members of social groups or national cultures) and of the physical world (as natural processes) are to a significant degree products of modern forms of political and philosophic thought. Course Goals The overall aim of the course will be to give students a solid grasp of the many meanings, implications, achievements, and limitations of political modernity as interpreted and shaped by some of the more perceptive European thinkers of the last four to five centuries. To this end, the course will attempt to place modernity within its historical context, by beginning with a classical philosopher (Boethius) and ending with a debate between two influential 20 th -century writers (Bloom and Sartre). The course will also serve to introduce students to the writings of several influential thinkers, including Machiavelli, Locke, Rousseau, Constant, Bentham, Tristan, Marx, and J.S. Mill. Finally, the course will offer students an opportunity to develop their critical reading, thinking, and writing skills. Course Requirements Reading. This course will have a heavy, yet quite rewarding, reading list. Students will be expected to keep up with the reading throughout the semester. Plan to spend a fair amount of time reading before attending class and, at times, re-reading after class. In general, texts are to be brought to our meetings so that they may be referred to in lecture and discussion. A few short items will be made available electronically, as indicated on the schedule below. Most readings, however, will come from the following texts, which you will likely need to purchase, since our Library does not own copies: Anicius Boethius, The Consolation of Philosophy, trans. Victor Watts, rev. ed. (Penguin Classics, 1999). Flora Tristan, Flora Tristan, Utopian Feminist: Her Travel Diaries & Personal Crusade, trans. Doris and Paul Beik (Indiana University Press, 1993). Modern Political Thought: Readings from Machiavelli to Nietzsche, ed. David Wootton (Hackett, 1996). Course Meetings. Most course meetings will consist of a mix of formal discussion, lecture, and informal discussion. Since we meet once per week, if all are agreeable, our meetings will be split into two segments, with a ten-minute break in between at approximately 7:15. Thus, we will usually meet until 8:40. In general, we will read one author per week. The first 20 minutes or so of the following weeks session will be devoted to discussion of the previous weeks author(s), as well as of student reaction papers from the preceding week. I will then introduce the next author, lecturing for about an hour. After the break, we will discuss the author s argument in some detail, for the remaining hour.

Discussion. Students will be assigned the job of beginning at least one class discussion during the semester, and all students will be expected to participate in formal and informal discussions with some regularity. Performance in our discussions will strongly influence the participation grade. Writing and Examinations. Students will be required to write 8 two-page summary and reaction papers; one in-class midterm (70 minutes); one term project (5-6 pages); and an in-class final examination. Grading and Attendance Policies Grades will be assigned on an 100-point scale and weighted in the following manner: 1. Midterm Wed., 6 March 20% 2. Term Project Wed., 8 May 25% 3. Final Examination Wed., 15 May 30% 5. Reaction Papers (8) 16% 6. Discussion Leadership 2% 7. General Participation 7% TOTAL: 100% The two-page reaction papers will be graded minimally: plus, check, minus. For detail on this requirement, see page six of this syllabus. Regular, timely attendance is mandatory. Unexcused absences and tardiness will be noted and will affect grades negatively. Three unexcused absences will lower your grade one step (for example, from a B+ to a B). Each subsequent absence will lower your grade another step. Six or more unexcused absences may result in a failing grade. Tardiness will also be noted. After the third late arrival, every instance of tardiness will be treated as an absence. There are few course meetings, so be there and be on time. If you have a good reason to be absent or late, notify me in writing as soon as possible, explaining and documenting your absence. Either give me a note in class or send me an e-mail message. I will notify you if I accept your explanation, or if we need to talk more about it during my office hours. The schedule of exams appears above and below. You will be expected to attend both of them. Exceptions will be made only in extreme and unavoidable circumstances. Note that the final is on the last night of finals week. Expect to attend for the whole period, focusing on coursework throughout. If you have a good reason for arriving late or leaving early, please notify me in advance in writing (e-mail is best). If you cannot notify me in advance, do so as soon as you can afterwards. As a courtesy to all, please turn off pagers and telephones while in class. Note that this entire syllabus is subject to change at the discretion of the instructor. Office Hours/Communication I will hold regular office hours on Wednesdays from 9:30-12:30 p.m. in my office at 412 Fitzelle Hall. My telephone number is 436-2754. Notes can be left for me in my mailbox at the Political Science/Sociology Office, 324 Netzer Administrative Building. E-mail messages can also be sent to me at: mcennedj@oneonta.edu

SCHEDULE OF MEETINGS, TOPICS, AND ASSIGNMENTS *Items preceded by an asterisk appear in Wootton, Modern Political Thought Note: All assignments are to be completed before class. 1. The Classical Perspective Wed., 16 January Introduction Class: Introduction to the course. Wed., 23 January Boethius Troubles, the Good Life, and the Classical Philosophical Tradition Anicius Boethius, The Consolation of Philosophy, Books 1-4, pp. 3-115. 2-page Boethius summary and reaction due in class. 2. Renaissance, Reformation, Enlightenment, and the Problem of Order Wed., 30 January Politics Ancient and Modern (1) / Renaissance Republicanism and the Rhetoric of Science *Niccolò Machiavelli, The Prince, Introductories and chs. 1-27, pp. 1-57. 2-page Machiavelli summary and reaction due in class. Wed., 6 February On Nature and Reformation (1) / Property and Liberal Society (1) *John Locke, Second Treatise of Government, Introductories and chs. I-XIX, pp. 303-86. 2-page Locke summary and reaction due in class. Wed., 13 February Property and Conformist Society (2)/ On Nature and Revolution (2) *Jean-Jacques Rousseau, Discourse on the Origin and Foundations of Inequality among Men, Introductories and Parts One and Two, pp. 397-463. 2-page Rousseau Discourse summary and reaction due in class. Wed., 20 February NO CLASS ENJOY WINTER BREAK! Wed., 27 February Enlightened Republicanism *Rousseau, On the Social Contract, pp. TBA. 2-page Rousseau Social Contract summary and reaction due in class.

3. Individualism and the Spirits of Modernity Wed., 6 March MIDTERM EXAMINATION / Politics Ancient and Modern (2): British Radicalism/Atomism *Jeremy Bentham, An Introduction to the Principles of Morals and Legislation, Introductory and selection, pp. 581, 585-604. Wed., 13 March Kant on Revolutionary Morality / Constant on Politics Ancient and Modern (2) 1. *Immanuel Kant, "An Answer to the Question: What Is Enlightenment?"* pp. 573-77. 2. Benjamin Constant, "The Liberty of the Ancients Compared with That of the Moderns: Speech Given at the Athéné Royal in Paris," in Political Writings (Cambridge University Press, 1992), pp. 309-328. [Note: This reading will be placed on electronic reserve and on the course website.] 2-page summary and reaction paper on Kant and Constant. Wed., 20 March Politics European and Male? / Utopia and Modernity Flora Tristan, Flora Tristan, Utopian Feminist: Her Travel Diaries and Personal Crusade, Intro. by Doris and Paul Beik and chs. 1-2, 4-6, pp. ix-xxi and 1-33, 53-176. 2-page summary and reaction on Bentham and Tristan due in class. Wed., 27 March NO CLASS - ENJOY SPRING BREAK! Wed., 3 April Revolutionary Socialism: The End of Modern Politics? / After the Revolution: Critical Theory 1. *Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels, The Communist Manifesto, pp. 826-46. 2. * Karl Marx, Capital, pp. 865-73. 2-page Marx/Engels summary and reaction due in class. 4. Liberalism and the Problem of Morality Wed., 10 April Freedom and Humanity / Liberal Individuality and the Hope for Progress *John Stuart Mill, On Liberty, Introductories and chs. I-V, pp. 579-84, 605-72. 2-page Mill summary and reaction due in class. Wed., 17 April The Virtue of Modernity? A Conservative Critique Allan Bloom, "Our Virtues," selection from The Closing of the American Mind. [Note: This reading will be placed on electronic reserve and on the course website.] 2-page Bloom reaction paper due in class.

Wed., 24 April Choosing Oneself? A Radical Call to Action Jean-Paul Sartre, "Existentialism Is a Humanism." trans. Bernard Frechtman, in The Fabric of Existentialism, eds. Richard Gill and Ernest Sherman, pp. 519-33. [Note: This reading will be placed on electronic reserve and on the course website.] 2-page Sartre reaction paper due in class. Wed., 1 May Review and Conclusions Review the semester. Wed., 8 April NO CLASS FOLLOW MONDAY SCHEDULE Final project due at noon in my box in 324 Netzer Hall. Wed., 15 April FINAL EXAMINATION, 6-8:30 p.m.

Two-Page Summary And Reaction Statements Over the course of the term, students will write at least eight short, informal summary-and-reaction statements. These pieces should: a) state in summary form what strikes you as the most significant or interesting point (or two points) made in the assigned text or texts; and b) explain your reaction to that aspect of the reading. These statements should be the equivalent of 1 ½ - 2 word-processed, double-spaced pages so about 375-525 words long. The format is informal: your statement should list your name, the date, the assignment (the authors, titles, and chapters/pages discussed), and your own title at the top. You should divide the statement into two parts, one summarizing the reading's most important point or points and the other giving your reaction to the reading. You need neither quote nor cite the text, though you can, if you think it important to do so. The statements should be written in clear, Standard English prose. The style may be informal. As you write, don t try to summarize all the points made in the reading. Focus on one or points (or, at most, three) that seems highly significant to you. This point or these points ought to have led you to think about something that seems important, significant, or meaningful. This point or these points need not be central to the reading, although in most cases I expect they will be. You may well write about some minor aside that the authors make, if that aside has led you to begin thinking. Just be sure to explain clearly and accurately what the authors say when you say the authors say something. Also, explain your reaction, your interest, your thought process. When I say, explain, I don t mean saying that something is interesting or it has made you think. Instead, identify what in particular strikes you as interesting, or what specific problems or ideas the reading raised for you, and then give the reader some sense of why any of these ideas seem important or significant to you. What has led you to react in the way you have? This assignment is meant to be focused on your thoughts insofar as they relate to the readings. You may explain why the authors' claims seem to you wrong-headed, or really cogent; why they excite or repel you; why they have made you think of something in a new way, or why they seem to point to a dead end. You may explain why the piece seems really bad or really good to you. This assignment lets you think aloud, as it were. The assignment also, I hope, will further four other aims. First, it will give you a chance to work on mastering the readings, as well as to demonstrate to me that you have done the reading. If there are parts of the readings that you don t understand, then write about the problems you have in seeing the author s points. I ll try to address those problems, either directly, by commenting on your paper, or indirectly, in class. Second, these assignments are designed to give you some easy practice in writing clearly and coherently. The more you learn to clarify your thoughts on paper, the better off you will be as a writer and student. Third, your comments may provide food for thought for you and your fellow students in class discussion and when you prepare to write exam essays. These papers will be graded minimally: plus, check, minus. At most, I will add only a few comments. Plus: a) the paper clearly and coherently develops an idea; b) it also accurately and fully summarizes what the readings say; and c) it convincingly and clearly shows why this point or line of thought is significant to you. Check: the paper is a serious effort that contains a reasonably accurate summary and a serious reaction. Minus: the paper is just thrown together, it lacks careful thought, or it is inaccurate about the reading, Pluses will earn extra credit (2.5%), with checks gaining full credit (2%), and minuses zero credit. I will give pluses rarely. I will sometimes give check/minus grades (1%). A check is the equivalent of an A+ already for 2% of your final grade. There are eleven reaction papers assigned, but only the eight best will be counted for the final grade. No late papers will be accepted. See the schedule of classes for the specific reading assignments and the dates reactions are due.