Courses Taught ( )* Thomas Nadelhoffer

Similar documents
Philosophy Courses Fall 2016

JASON S. MILLER CURRICULUM VITAE

Compatibilist Objections to Prepunishment

PL-101: Introduction to Philosophy Fall of 2007, Juniata College Instructor: Xinli Wang

7AAN2011 Ethics. Basic Information: Module Description: Teaching Arrangement. Assessment Methods and Deadlines. Academic Year 2016/17 Semester 1

Incompatibilism (1) Anti Free Will Arguments

Free Will. Course packet

Philosophy Courses-1

POWERS, NECESSITY, AND DETERMINISM

METAPHYSICS. The Problem of Free Will

Philosophy Courses-1

Theories of the mind have been celebrating their new-found freedom to study

Philosophy Courses for Fall 2012

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

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

4AANA004 Metaphysics I Syllabus Academic year 2015/16

Department of Philosophy

The readings for the course are separated into the following two categories:

FREE WILL AND DETERMINISM: AN ADOPTION STUDY. James J. Lee, Matt McGue University of Minnesota Twin Cities

Josh Parsons MWF 10:00-10:50a.m., 194 Chemistry CRNs: Introduction to Philosophy, (eds.) Perry and Bratman

Philosophy of Mind (MIND) CTY Course Syllabus

Please remember to sign-in by scanning your badge Department of Psychiatry Grand Rounds

Take Home Exam #1. PHI 1700: Global Ethics Prof. Lauren R. Alpert

2018 Philosophy of Management Conference Paper submission NORMATIVITY AND DESCRIPTION: BUSINESS ETHICS AS A MORAL SCIENCE

Comprehensive. Hard Determinism Compatibilism. Compatibilism. Soft Determinism. Hard Incompatibilism. Semicompatibilism. Illusionism.

Phil 104: Introduction to Philosophy

Department of Philosophy TCD. Great Philosophers. Dennett. Tom Farrell. Department of Surgical Anatomy RCSI Department of Clinical Medicine RCSI

THE NATURE OF MIND Oxford University Press. Table of Contents

INTRODUCTION TO PHILOSOPHY

PHILOSOPHY DEPARTMENT FALL SEMESTER 2009 COURSE OFFERINGS

DEPARTMENT OF PHILOSOPHY FALL 2014 COURSE DESCRIPTIONS

General Philosophy. Stephen Wright. Office: XVI.3, Jesus College. Michaelmas Overview 2. 2 Course Website 2. 3 Readings 2. 4 Study Questions 3

In his pithy pamphlet Free Will, Sam Harris. Defining free will away EDDY NAHMIAS ISN T ASKING FOR THE IMPOSSIBLE. reviews/harris

Φ The Department of Philosophy

Syllabus PHI 3501: FREE WILL Spring 2018 COURSE DESCRIPTION

Formative Assessment: 2 x 1,500 word essays First essay due 16:00 on Friday 30 October 2015 Second essay due: 16:00 on Friday 11 December 2015

Ending The Scandal. Hard Determinism Compatibilism. Soft Determinism. Hard Incompatibilism. Semicompatibilism. Illusionism.

PHILOSOPHY (PHIL) Philosophy (PHIL) 1. PHIL 56. Research Integrity. 1 Unit

Are Humans Always Selfish? OR Is Altruism Possible?

PHILOSOPHY DEPARTMENT

PHI 1700: Global Ethics

WEEK 1: WHAT IS KNOWLEDGE?

Environmental Ethics. Espen Gamlund, PhD Associate Professor of Philosophy University of Bergen

What Should We Believe?

Folk Fears about Freedom and Responsibility: Determinism vs. Reductionism

SPRING 2014 UNDERGRADUATE COURSE OFFERINGS

A Coherent and Comprehensible Interpretation of Saul Smilansky s Dualism

Classical Theory of Concepts

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

Journal of Philosophy, Inc.

PL 399: Knowledge, Truth, and Skepticism Spring, 2011, Juniata College

Causation and Free Will

INTRODUCTION TO PHILOSOPHY PHIL 1, FALL 2017

The Consequence Argument

DEPARTMENT OF PHILOSOPHY FALL 2013 COURSE DESCRIPTIONS

The Incoherence of Compatibilism Zahoor H. Baber *

5AANA009 Epistemology II 2014 to 2015

Second Term,

Is it Reasonable to Rely on Intuitions in Ethics? as relying on intuitions, though I will argue that this description is deeply misleading.

Can A Priori Justified Belief Be Extended Through Deduction? It is often assumed that if one deduces some proposition p from some premises

CHAPTER 2. The Classical School

Luck, Rationality, and Explanation: A Reply to Elga s Lucky to Be Rational. Joshua Schechter. Brown University

COURSES FOR PHILOSOPHY

Short Answers: Answer the following questions in one paragraph (each is worth 4 points).

Professional Ethics. Today s Topic Ethical Egoism PHIL Picture: Ursa Major. Illustration: Cover art from Ayn Rand s The Fountainhead

Naturalism and is Opponents

MANIPULATION AND INDEPENDENCE 1

DOES NEUROSCIENCE UNDERMINE RESPONSIBILITY?

Think by Simon Blackburn. Chapter 3b Free Will

general information Times Instructor Office hours Course Description Goals Requirements MWF 9:30-11:45, Gilman 17 Tammo Lossau

INTRODUCTION TO PHILOSOPHY Brandeis University Fall 2015 Professor Andreas Teuber

Neo-Confucianism: Metaphysics, Mind, and Morality

The Zimboic Hunch By Damir Mladić

Delusions and Other Irrational Beliefs Lisa Bortolotti OUP, Oxford, 2010

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

24.03: Good Food 3 April Animal Liberation and the Moral Community

Contemporary Social and Moral Problems in the U.S.

PHILOSOPHY 306 (formerly Philosophy 295): EGOISM AND ALTRUISM

CLASS PARTICIPATION IS A REQUIREMENT

Session One: Identity Theory And Why It Won t Work Marianne Talbot University of Oxford 26/27th November 2011

The Paradox of a Dead Person

A New Argument Against Compatibilism

De Ethica. A Journal of Philosophical, Theological and Applied Ethics Vol. 1:3 (2014)

Hence, you and your choices are a product of God's creation Psychological State. Stephen E. Schmid

PRELIMINARY QUIZ OPTIMISTS AND PESSIMISTS OPTIMISTS AND PESSIMISTS THE REACTIVE ATTITUDES OPTIMISTS AND PESSIMISTS 10/18/2016

Responsibility and Good Reasons

PHILOSOPHY (PHIL) Philosophy (PHIL) 1. PHIL HISTORICAL INTRODUCTION TO PHILOSOPHY Short Title: HIST INTRO TO PHILOSOPHY

Philosophical Ethics. The nature of ethical analysis. Discussion based on Johnson, Computer Ethics, Chapter 2.

Journal of Cognition and Neuroethics

Final Paper. May 13, 2015

Law and Philosophy Fellow, University of Chicago Law School, July 2012-present. Dissertation: Reasons and Resentment (defended June 11, 2012)

Surveying Freedom: Folk Intuitions about Free Will and Moral Responsibility

Metaphysics PHIL6308 New Orleans Baptist Theological Seminary Division of Theological and Historical Studies June 12-23, 2017

Philosophy Courses Fall 2011

KELLY ANNE MCCORMICK

MICHAELMAS TERM 2013 ESSAY TOPICS: JUNIOR FRESHMEN SHP, TSM

Ethics is subjective.

Equality, Fairness, and Responsibility in an Unequal World

COURSE OUTLINE. Philosophy 116 (C-ID Number: PHIL 120) Ethics for Modern Life (Title: Introduction to Ethics)

Utilitarianism: For and Against (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1973), pp Reprinted in Moral Luck (CUP, 1981).

Transcription:

Dickinson College (2006-present): Courses Taught (2006-2011)* Thomas Nadelhoffer Neuroethics (Fall 2011): In recent decades neuroscientists have made progress toward understanding the neural bases of human behavior. As this progress continues, neuroscience becomes increasingly relevant to a number of real-world endeavors that involve understanding, predicting and changing human behavior. In this seminar we will examine the ways in which neuroscience is being applied in law, criminal justice, education, economics and business. For each application area we will briefly review those aspects of the basic brain science that are most relevant, and then study the application in more detail. Specifically, we will ask: What has neuroscience brought to these endeavors that is new and helpful? What are the prospects for applied neuroscience in the near future? How might these developments change society and raise new ethical challenges? Which areas are experiencing genuine breakthroughs thanks to neuroscience, and which have succumbed to neuro-hype? 1. Neuroethics: An Introduction with Readings. Edited by Martha Farrah (MIT Press). 2. On-line materials and in-class handouts. Seminar: Free Will and Science (Fall 2008) In this course we will survey some of the recent literature on the relationship between the sciences of the mind and free will and moral/legal responsibility. Along the way, we will flesh out the boundaries of some of the key positions in the free will debate, we will discuss whether our gathering understanding of how the mind works sheds light on this debate, and we will consider whether our conception of the goal and justification of moral and legal responsibility out to be revised in light of what scientists have learned in the past twenty years about neuropsychology. 1. Fischer, Kane, Pereboom, and Vargas: Four Views on Free Will (Blackwell) 2. Baer, Kaufman, and Baumeister (eds.): Are We Free? Psychology and Free Will (OUP) Animal Welfare and Morality (Spring 2008) The central issue that we will address is whether the interests of non-human animals matter, morally speaking. If we think that their interests should be taken into consideration, a number of thorny issues immediately arise. For instance, what obligations do we have towards nonhuman animals? Do they have rights? If so, whose job is it to enforce them and what kinds of laws should be put in place to protect their welfare? If not, then why should we care about their welfare at all? Should non-human animals be treated no differently than property? Is the consumption of meat morally permissible? Even if it is, are factory farms nevertheless problematic? Finally, is it immoral to use non-human animals for experimentation (e.g., vivisection), entertainment (e.g., circus acts) or sport (e.g., hunting, fishing, dog fighting)? These are the kinds of questions that we will be addressing in this course. 1. Peter Singer: Animal Liberation 2. Cass Sunstein & Martha Nussbaum (eds.): Animal Rights: Current Debates and New Directions *Complete syllabi available upon request

Contemporary Philosophy Workshop (Spring 2008 & Spring 2009) This is a skills development course in the close analytic reading of texts in contemporary philosophy, and the challenges of writing a journal-length philosophical essay focused on a contemporary problem. Students will be introduced to a range of contemporary philosophy journals, and the principal research tools with which the contours of contemporary debates in philosophy can be traced. Each student will spend a significant part of the course writing successive drafts of a journal article attempting to respond to a recently published journal article which you have selected. It will be conducted in a seminar/workshop format supplemented by individual meetings with the professor. 1. Anthony Weston (ed.), A Rulebook for Arguments, 3 rd Edition 2. Lewis Vaughn, Writing Philosophy: A Student s Guided to Writing Philosophy Essays 3. Peg Tittle, What If Collected Thought Experiments in Philosophy First Year Seminar: The Philosophy of Human Rights (Fall 2007) What does it mean to have a right? Are some human rights inalienable? What is the relationship between rights and the law? How ought human rights to be enforced? Is humanitarian intervention ever morally, politically, and legal justified? These are the kinds of issues that we will be addressing in our attempts to understand the nature and limitations of human rights. In our effort to shed light on these aforementioned questions, we will examine both traditional and contemporary philosophical treatments of human rights paying particularly close attention to how these views can provide us with helpful lenses through which to examine the current global state of affairs with respect to human rights. 1. Patrick Hayden, Philosophy of Human Rights: Readings in Context (2001) 2. Philip Gourevitch, We wish to inform you that tomorrow we will be killed with our families: Stories from Rwanda (1998). Seminar: Intuitions in Philosophy (Fall 2007): When doing contemporary analytic philosophy, one frequently finds philosophers appealing to intuitions in their efforts to support their preferred theories. And while this kind of intuitiondriven philosophy has been common practice since Socrates, a number of pressing questions arise. What are intuitions? Whose intuitions count? How do we go about exploring the intuitions that matter? Recent discoveries by social psychologists, neuroscientists, and experimental philosophers have cast doubt on this entire approach to doing philosophy. The goal of this course is to familiarize students with (a) the metaphilosophical assumptions that undergird intuition-driven philosophy, (b) the problem with these assumptions, and (c) the various ways philosophers may try to salvage the use of intuitions in philosophy. 1. Rethinking Intuition, Ramsey and Depaul (eds.) 2. Course packet Free Will (Spring 2007): This course is designed to provide students with a general introduction to some of the perennial questions surrounding free will. Along the way we will examine determinism, indeterminism, moral responsibility, and the notion of alternative possibilities. In addition to investigating the traditional debate between determinists and indeterminists, we will also survey some of the contemporary literature on compatibilism, hard incompatibilism, free will skepticism, illusionism, and revisionism. Finally, we will consider whether recent discoveries in the social and brain sciences pose a threat to our picture of ourselves as free, autonomous, and responsible agents.

1. Gary Watson (ed.), Free Will 2. Course packet Critical Reasoning (Spring 2007): How do arguments work? What makes some arguments better than others? What is the relationship between logic and the law? These are some of the questions we address in this course. The goal is to equip students with the basic reasoning skills that are necessary for recognizing and analyzing argumentation as it occurs in a variety of contexts such as editorials, discussions, speeches, argumentative essays, philosophical texts, and legal cases. Moreover, we will apply the analytical reasoning skills that we develop in the beginning of the course to real world contemporary moral, legal, and policy issues such as the nature of statutory interpretation, and the appropriateness of judicial activism. We will also consider the legal status of (a) enemy combatants, (b) abortion, (c) music sharing, (d) the insanity defense, (e) executing juveniles, (f) burning crosses, and (g) affirmative action. 1. Elias Savellos and Richard Galvin, Reasoning and the Law (RL) 2. M. Ethan Katsh and William Rose, Taking Both Sides: Clashing Views on Legal Issues (TBS) Seminar: Morality and the Mind (Fall 2006): In this class we are going to examine some of the empirical evidence concerning the neuropsychological and evolutionary underpinnings of our moral faculties. Having examined some of the gathering data from moral psychology, we will consider how these data shed light on some traditional moral and legal problems. The goal will be to encourage students to view our moral faculties through a wide variety of lenses both empirical and philosophical. Issues to be discussed will include: Do non-human primates have a moral faculty? How did human morality evolve? Is altruism possible? How did our sense of fairness evolve? What does contemporary neuroscience reveal about morality? What problems arise in moral and legal philosophy in light of recent and foreseeable developments in neuroscience? 1. Evolutionary Origins of Morality: Cross-Disciplinary Perspectives, Leonard Katz (ed.) 2. Sentimental Rules, Shaun Nichols 3. Course packet Crime and Punishment (Fall 2006): In this class we are going to examine some of the traditional justifications for criminal sanctions. More specifically, we will be examining different models of punishment with an eye towards determining which legal sanctions are pragmatically effective and morally acceptable. Issues to be discussed will include: What is the general justifying aim of punishment? What sorts of constraints must be put in place for various forms of punishment to be morally justified? What sorts of behaviors merit criminal sanctions? What sorts of criminal sanctions are effective? What is the hallmark of legal responsibility? Is capital punishment either effective or morally justified? 1. The Death Penalty in America: Current Controversies, Hugo Bedau (ed.) 2. Foundations of Criminal Law, Leo Katz, Michael Moore, and Stephen Morse (eds.) Ethics (Multiple Sections): This course is designed to provide students with an introduction to both classical ethical theories and applied moral issues. The course will be divided into two main parts: 1) a general introduction to the main traditions within ethical theory, and 2) an analysis of how the different

ethical theories affect our answers to important, yet difficult, applied ethical issues such as abortion, euthanasia, animal rights, drug criminalization, free speech, punishment, and distributive justice. The goal throughout will be to focus on the interplay between moral philosophy and public policy. 1. James Rachels, The Elements of Moral Philosophy (MP) 2. Hugh LaFollette (ed.), Ethics in Practice (EP) Florida State University (2006): Seminar: Neuroscience, Moral Responsibility, and the Law (Summer 2006) In this course we will survey some of the recent literature on the relationship between the sciences of the mind and free will and moral/legal responsibility. Along the way, we will flesh out the boundaries of some of the key positions in the free will debate, discuss whether our gathering understanding of how the mind works sheds light on this debate, and consider whether our conception of the goal and justification of moral and legal responsibility ought to be revised in light of what scientists have learned in the past twenty years about neuro-psychology. 1. Brent Garland (ed.), Neuroscience and the Law: Brain, Mind, and the Scales of Justice (2004) 2. Laurence Tancredi, Hardwired Behavior (2005) 3. Course packet The Philosophy of Mind (Spring 2006): This course is designed to provide students with a general introduction to some of the perennial questions in the philosophy of mind including, what does it mean to have a mind? What is the mark of mentality? What is the relationship between the mind and the body? What is the relationship between my inner mental states and my outward behavior? Can machines think? What do our beliefs refer to? What is the nature of consciousness? Is common-sense folk psychology threatened by the scientific study of mental states and processes? In attempting to answer these questions, we will examine classics in the philosophy of mind by Rene Descartes, Gilbert Harman, David Lewis, Saul Kripke, Daniel Dennett, Hilary Putnam, David Armstrong, J.J.C. Smart, Jaegwon Kim, Carl Hempel, Paul Churchland, Alan Turing, John Searle, Lynne Rudder Baker, and others. 1. John Heil, Philosophy of Mind: A Guide and Anthology (Oxford University Press: 2004) 2. Jaegwon Kim, Philosophy of Mind (Westview Press: 1996) The Philosophy of Law (Spring 2006): This course is a comprehensive introduction to some of the perennial issues in the philosophy of law. We will focus on theories of law i.e., accounts of the origin, nature, and justification of law and on other jurisprudential issues such as law and morality, legal interpretation, law and liberty, and the limits and justification of criminal sanctions. By the end of the course, students will have gained a solid understanding of different schools of legal thought as well as the tools to decipher legal opinions. The course will be focused primarily on answers to the following questions: What is law? What is the proper relationship between morality and law? How is the U.S. Constitution to be interpreted? What ought to be the limits of our political and legal freedoms? What are the goals and limits of criminal sanctions? Text: The Philosophy of Law: Classic and Contemporary Readings with Commentary. Frederick Schauer and Walter Sinnott-Armstrong (eds.)