2013-2014 Calendar Proof PHIL PHILOSOPHY Note: See beginning of Section H for abbreviations, course numbers and coding. Introductory and Intermediate Level Courses These 1000 and 2000 level courses have no prerequisites, and except where otherwise noted, each may be taken as a first course in Philosophy. PHIL 1101 Critical Thinking 3 ch (3C) [W] Improves the ability to analyse and evaluate arguments and assertions met with in everyday life, and hence sharpens skills of reasoning to sound conclusions from available evidence. Does this by studying the classic fallacies that people often commit and using elementary formal logic to explore differences between deductive and inductive reasoning. PHIL 1201 Ethics of Life and Death 3 ch (3C) [W] Introduces various ethical theories and examines moral problems including abortion, euthanasia and capital punishment. PHIL 1301 Introduction to the History of Philosophy I 3 ch (3C) [W] This course offers a general survey of philosophy from the Pre-Socratics to Scholasticism. It will concentrate upon issues central to ancient and medieval philosophy through a look at such figures as Parmenides, Plato, Augustine and Aquinas. PHIL 1302 Introduction to the History of Philosophy II 3 ch (3C) [W] This course offers a general survey of philosophy from Rationalism to German Idealism. It will concentrate upon the concerns of modern philosophy by looking at the philosophies of such figures as Descartes, Hume, Kant, Hegel and Marx. Designed to bridge the gap for upper year students. PHIL 1401 God, Mind and Freedom 3 ch (3C) [W] This course provides an introduction to three important, interconnected issues in metaphysics. Questions concerning the defintion and existence of free will, the nature of the mind and its relation to the brain, as well as whether or not there are good reasons to belive in God, will be explored. PHIL 1501 Monsters and Philosophy 1|Page 3 ch [C][O] 2013-2014 Calendar Proof As a category, Monsters challenge our understanding of the normal, the natural, the intelligible and the ethical. In so doing, the study of monsters provides an opportunity to explore the perennial questions of philosophy in a new and interesting way. This course will use monsters as a tool to explore aspects of the three main branches of philosophy: metaphysics, ethics and epistemology. Some of the topics to be discussed will include human nature, the conditions of knowledge, the mind-body problem, artificial intelligence, ethical dilemmas and theories, the metaphysics of identity, and good and evil. Autonomy, Value and Well being: An Introduction to 3 ch [W] Ethical Theory This course investigates core problems and key authors in ethical theory. The main focus of the course is to treat the rival theories of eudaimonism, deontology and utilitarianism as they are expressed both in contemporary ethical literature and in their historical context by Aristotle, Immanuel Kant, and John Stuart Mill. We also give some attention to those figures that have influenced their development, such as Plato, Niccolò Machiavelli, Thomas Hobbes, Jeremy Bentham and Jean-Jacques Rousseau. In the last part of the course, we turn to another alternative--the work of Friedrich Nietzsche and his influential critique of much of the Western ethical tradition that preceded him. PHIL 2201 PHIL 2203 Ethical Issues in Business 3 ch (3C) [W] An introduction to moral problems arising in business. The course is designed to introduce the student to ethical theory and its relevance for business decision making. Prerequisite: Students enrolled in the Faculty of Business Administration must have completed 30ch, including ECON 1013 and ECON 1023 . Introduction to Contemporary Issues in the Philosophy 3 ch (3C) [W] of Law An introduction to contemporary philosophy of law, as treated by some of the following philosophers: Austin, Holmes, Frank, Hart, Kelsen, Finnis, Raz, Dworkin, Posner, Unger, MacKinnon. PHIL 2204 PHIL 2206 Environmental Ethics 3 ch (3C) [W] This course covers a range of thinking on a variety of issues concerning the environment. Specific issues addressed are: Do species other than human beings have value in themselves, or only because humans value them? Do non-organic entities possess value? What problems beset attempts to formulate an environmental ethic? 3 ch [C] [O] [W] Film is an incredible medium. Many issues in Philosophy can be explored and PHIL 2501 Philosophy and Film 2|Page 2013-2014 Calendar Proof explained through the medium of film. This course will examine some philosophical problems occasioned by great films. Some of the topics to be discussed might include free will and determinism, the mind-body problem, just war theory, human nature, and/or ethical theories. Advanced Level Courses PHIL 3101 Introduction to Symbolic Logic 3 ch (3C) The techniques of natural deduction, including conditional proof, indirect proof and separation of cases. Emphasizes applications in sentence logic and in the logic of quantification up to the logic of relations. Prerequisite: PHIL 1101 or an equivalent with permission of the instructor. 3 ch (3C) [W] Examines technology and its social impact. Topics include: Does living in a technological society impact the way that we look at ourselves and at the world around us? What are the positive and negative effects of the continuing incorporation of computers into our lives? Does biotechnology offer the promise of better and healthier lives for human beings and other organisms, or is it an ethically suspect means of interfering with natural development? Prerequisite: A course in Philosophy or permission of the instructor. Open to 2nd year students and above. PHIL 3201 Philosophy of Technology 3 ch (3C) [W] Examines technology and its social impact. Topics include: Does living in a technological society impact the way that we look at ourselves and at the world around us? What are the positive and negative effects of the continuing incorporation of computers into our lives? Does biotechnology offer the promise of better and healthier lives for human beings and other organisms, or is it an ethically suspect means of interfering with natural development? Prerequisite: A course in Philosophy or permission of the instructor. Open to 2nd year students and above. PHIL 3202 Philosophical Foundations of Feminism (O) 3 ch (3C) [W] An examination of the ethical issues raised by problems in Bioethics, such as experimentation with human subjects, euthanasia, assisted suicide and cessation of medical treatment, patients' rights, informed consent, and tissue transplantation. Open to 2nd year students and above. PHIL 3203 Health Care Ethics 3 ch (3C) [W] Examines in detail a particular ethical theory or tradition and assesses it in light of arguments made by its proponents and critics. The focus of the course will vary from year to year but may cover areas such as utilitarianism and its critics, feminist ethics, virtue ethics, ancient Greek PHIL 3211-19 Selected Topics in Ethical Theory 3|Page 2013-2014 Calendar Proof ethics, moral realism, social contract theory and Kant's ethics. May be taken for credit more than once. Title of topic will appear on transcript. Prerequisite: A course in Philosophy or permission of the instructor. Open to 2nd year students and above. 3 ch (3C) [W] Examines methods and philosophical ideas associated with accounts of how we ought to think of the natural environment and how we should act with regard to the environment. Possible topics include: deep ecology, ecological feminism and social ecology, globalization, modern conceptions of property rights, overpopulation, consumption, and the placing of an economic value on nature. May be taken for credit more than once. Title of topic will appear on transcript. Prerequisite: A course in Philosophy or permission of the instructor. Open to 2nd year students and above. PHIL 3221-29 Selected Topics in Environmental Philosophy 3 ch (3C) [W] The course strives to address two key questions: "What responsibilities do decision makers in organizations have to others?" and "Why do they have such responsibilities?" Analytical tools presented in the course to help answer these questions will include such approaches as Rawls’ distributive justice, Harsanyi's utilitarianism, and Gauthier’s morals by agreement, among many others. Students will be expected to understand the justification for each of these tools, apply them to cases discussed in class, and ultimately be able to recommend and defend what actions managers ought to take according to each method of analysis. In conjunction with the above analytical tools, the course will also introduce a variety of “thinking methods,” such as formal logic, thought experiments, and game theory, which underlie the tools. Open to 2nd year students and above. PHIL 3251 Advanced Business Ethics PHIL 3301 Early Greek Philosophy (A) 3 ch (3C) The period of philosophy beginning with Thales and culminating with Plato. Stresses the development of certain key themes and problems in this period and their influence on later philosophical thought. Half the course is devoted to examining philosophical thought prior to Plato; the other half focuses on Plato's thought. Prerequisite: A course in Philosophy or permission of the instructor. Open to 2nd year students and above. 3 ch (3C) [W] Focuses on Aristotle and subsequent developments in Greek philosophy. Half the course examines different aspects of Aristotle's thought, the other half considers post-Aristotelian schools of thought. Prerequisite: A course in Philosophy or permission of the instructor. Open to 2nd year students and above. PHIL 3302 Later Greek Philosophy (A) PHIL 3303 Modern Philosophy I (A) 4|Page 3 ch (3C) [W] 2013-2014 Calendar Proof Introduction to some of the philosophical issues of 17th-century philosophy, such as: philosophical method; the nature, scope and limits of knowledge; the nature of reality; the question of the nature and existence of God. Reference is made to selections from some of the important philosophers of the era--e.g., Descartes, Locke. Prerequisite: A course in Philosophy or permission of the instructor. Open to 2nd year students and above. 3 ch (3C) [W] Introduction to some of the philosophical issues of 17th- and 18th-century philosophy, such as: philosophical method; the nature, scope and limits of knowledge; the nature of reality; the question of the nature and existence of God. Reference is made to selections from some of the important philosophers of the era--e.g., Leibniz, Hume. Prerequisite: A course in Philosophy or permission of the instructor. Open to 2nd year students and above. PHIL 3304 Modern Philosophy II (A) PHIL 3305 Capitalism Vs. Communism This course focuses primarily on the philosophical works of Adam Smith, a founder of capitalism, and Karl Marx, a founder of communism. The socio-political-economic structures they envisioned for society are defined, and the justificatory arguments they provide for their structures are examined. The philosophical foundations of anarchism, feudalism, Leninism, libertarianism, mercantilism, and socialism may also be studied for comparison purposes, time permitting. Open to 2nd year students and above. 3 ch (3C) [W] Examines the major themes of existential philosophy developed in the nineteenth and twentieth Centuries such as the self, existence, freedom, relationships with others, etc.. References are made to selections from some of the important existential thinkers -- e.g. Kierkegaard, Nietzsche, Sartre, Simon Weil, Camus, Arendt, Heidegger. Open to 2nd year students and above. PHIL 3306 PHIL 3308 Introduction to 19th and 20th Century Existential Philosophy Plato’s Republic (O) 3ch [W] This course provides an in-depth study of Plato’s most important and influential dialogue--his masterpiece on justice, the Republic. We shall cover all of its major philosophical problems through a close reading of the whole dialogue, also taking account the role of the dramatic element of the dialogue for understanding those problems. Open to 2 nd year students and above. PHIL 3311 Nietzsche on Socrates’ Death-Wish 3 ch [W] Friedrich Nietzsche saw the beginning of western philosophy as the birth of a cultural deathwish glorified in the suicide of Socrates. This course looks at Nietzsche’s portrait of Socrates in 5|Page 2013-2014 Calendar Proof order to access his perception of ancient Greek philosophy, tragic poetry and culture. In so doing, the course will clarify Nietzsche’s attacks on Christianity and Modernity as sources of the nihilism he believed would promote the death-wish of “Socratism.” The course will also give some consideration to Nietzsche’s confrontation with nihilism in terms of his conceptions of the Will to Power, the Ubermensche, the Revaluation of all Values, the Master Race, and Eternal Recurrence. Open to 2nd year students and above PHIL 3312 Infinity: Emmanuel Levinas' Encounter with the Other 3 ch [W] This course will concentrate on the philosophy of Emmanuel Levinas (1906-1995). Initially influenced by Edmund Husserl and Martin Heidegger, Levinas’ philosophical path diverged in the direction of Ethics as a radical critique of the traditional view of human beings as “knowing” or “rational” subjects. This course will look at Levinas’ ethics both as a critique of traditional and contemporary theories of knowledge and existence, as well as a post-modern critique of western philosophy. These concerns are developed through Levinas’ descriptions of our encounter with the “Other” in terms of his investigations into the human face, desire, gift, language, the concern for justice, and God. Open to 2nd year students and above. PHIL 3313 Reason Vs. Faith: The Philosophy of Kierkegaard 3 ch [W] This course approaches Kierkegaard’s philosophy through his text Philosophical Fragments. Written by one of the foremost of continental philosophers, this text explores the possibility of something we rarely hear spoken of these days–namely, the possibility of a relationship with absolute, eternal truth. This text will serve as a means to clarifying some of the central features of Kierkegaard’s thinking such as: the relationship between reason and faith, the status of the self as a rational identity, the significance of human life within history, the aesthetic, ethical and religious modes of existence, and indirect communication. Open to 2nd year students and above. PHIL 3314 Nietzsche's Faith and Critique of Christianity 3 ch [W] Considered one of the founding thinkers of what would eventually be called “existential philosophy,” Friedrich Nietzsche’s attempt to destroy the tradition of philosophy anticipates not only many themes in post - WW II Continental thought, but also those now flourishing in postmodern philosophy. This course will concentrate on one of the better known and central features of his philosophy, namely, his critique of Christianity. This approach allows us access to his criticism of Western Philosophy; the basis for his attack on modernity. Some of the central concerns will be Nietzsche’s portrait of Jesus of Nazareth, view of Plato’s philosophy as symptomatic of a cultural illness that would become manifest in Christianity, and how ancient Greek philosophy and Christianity constitute the basis of cultural Nihilism. Open to 2nd year students and above. PHIL 3315 20th Century Women Philosophers 3 ch [W] This course concentrates primarily on the philosophical and religious works of post-World War II women in the area of Continental philosophy. The philosophical texts of Simone de Beauvoir, Hanna Arendt, Simone Weil and Edith Stein will be explored to illustrate how the brutality, 6|Page 2013-2014 Calendar Proof turbulence and genocide marking the Second World War led them to speak about violence and evil through their respective existential, political, and religious philosophies. Some of the themes that will be discussed are the objectification of “the Other” within the philosophical and literary works of Simone de Beauvoir; Nazism and the responding political philosophy of Hanna Arendt; and the possibility of a religious life in the midst of strife and war in the work of Simone Weil and Edith Stein. Prerequisites: Open to 2nd year students and above. PHIL 3316 Michel Foucault on Sexuality and the Self 3 ch [W] Among the most influential of contemporary philosophers, Foucault stood directly opposed to the thinking of the “existentialist.” Critical of the humanism of post-WW II French philosophy, Foucault, largely influenced by Nietzsche, pursued what would in his early work become known as an “archeology” of knowledge and later as “genealogy.” The course will follow a close reading of The History of Sexuality in order to concentrate on his investigation into the construction of “human sexuality” as an object of “knowledge.” This investigation will be used to clarify Foucault’s recognition of the conditions of power that function in “discourse,” and how his philosophy serves as a critique of the origins and methods of the social sciences. Open to 2nd year students and above. PHIL 3317 Jean-Paul Sartre's Philosophy of Freedom 3 ch [W] The popular view of the “existentialist” owes much to Jean-Paul Sartre–the most well known philosopher of post WW II Europe. Having studied with Edmund Husserl, who exposed him to the method of “pure phenomenology,” Sartre would apply this method in his descriptions of human freedom as “dread,” “bad-faith,” “the look,” and “desire,” to mention just a few of the themes found in his philosophical texts, plays, and novels. The course will concentrate primarily on his Being and Nothingness, to explore how Sartre recognizes the intentional structure of human consciousness in relation to ourselves, our bodies, human relationships, atheism, and the world. Open to 2nd year students and above. PHIL 3318 Martin Heidegger's Destruction of Philosophy 3ch [W] This course introduces students to the philosophy of one of the foremost thinkers of the 20th Century, Martin Heidegger. Through an investigation into the seminal themes of his text, Being and Time, we will look at Heidegger’s descriptions of ourselves as “Dasein,” (Being There”) in terms of his analyses of “possibility,” “facticity,” “authenticity,” “dread,”, “fallenness,” and “Being-Toward-Death.” Lectures will initially concentrate on three introductory concerns: 1) the early influences upon Heidegger’s thinking (Nietzsche, Kierkegaard); 2) Husserl’s method of pure phenomenology; and 3) how 1 and 2 provide the foundations for what would emerge as “existential philosophy” after WW II. Open to 2nd year students and above PHIL 3321-29 Selected Topics in Ancient Greek Philosophy This course offers an in depth examination of a major Platonic dialogue or treatise of Aristotle. The course will offer a close reading of that dialogue or treatise, taking into account the historical, literary and wider philosophical context of that author's work, while offering a critical philosophical analysis and evaluation of the core problems raised in that text. Topics and texts 7|Page 2013-2014 Calendar Proof will alternate between Plato and Aristotle each time offered. Title of topic will appear on transcript. Open to 2nd year students and above. PHIL 3331 Michel Foucault’s Discipline and Punish: The Birth of the Prison. (O) 3 ch [W] This course concentrates on two central themes: the first is Foucault’s perception of the genealogy of the social sciences in relation to the practices of incarceration and punishment in mid-eighteenth century Europe. The second follows his perception of contemporary interpretations of self-identity as they have been generated by: the continued growth of penal institutions, the social sciences as disciplines of “subjectivity”, the distinction between torture and punishment, and subjective vs. objective surveillance. Open to 2nd year students and above. 3 ch (3C) [W] At the discretion of the instructor, a topic in metaphysics is selected and studied in depth. Possible topics may include the mind-body problem, free will and determinism, the nature of causality, etc. Each topic will be given a number and the title of the topic studied will appear on students’ transcripts. Students may take more than one topic for credit. Open to 2nd year students and above. PHIL 3401-9 Selected Topics in Metaphysics 3 ch PHIL 3404 Aquinas [C][O][W ] Beginning with Aquinas's reflections on the nature of God this course will trace Aquinas's thought as it progresses in the Summa theologiae and the Summa contra Gentiles in order to examine the philosophical problems that perplexed Aquinas and his solutions to these problems. Open to 2nd year students and above. PHIL 3421 Philosophy of Mind 3 ch [W] What is a human being? Are human beings simply material objects? Are they a combination of matter and soul? What is consciousness and how can it be explained? In this class students will be introduced to these questions and will explore various answers to these questions from the history of philosophy and from contemporary discussions. Students will engage the answers provided in class as a means of formulating their own understanding of the connection between mind and brain and mind and body. Open to 2nd year students and above. PHIL 3422 Philosophy of Science 3 ch [W] Kuhn’s Structure of Scientific Revolutions challenged traditional conceptions of science and scientific progress and precipitated much of contemporary discussions in philosophy of science. Focusing on the history of science, Kuhn argued that logical reconstructions of science were inadequate. His argument encouraged philosophers of science to construct relativistic accounts of science and scientific progress. Beginning with the Logical Positivists, this course will trace different accounts of science, with special attention to the debate between realist and anti8|Page 2013-2014 Calendar Proof realist conceptions of science. Open to 2nd year students and above. PHIL 3423 Knowledge and Reality 3 ch [W] One of your main objectives as a student, is to learn–that is, to acquire knowledge. This is true whether you pursue knowledge for its own sake or for its “value” in terms of earning a university degree. But do you ever wonder whether knowledge is really worth pursuing? And if it is, what makes it valuable? And do you ever wonder whether it is even possible to know anything with certainty? In this course, we will explore these questions by focusing on three problems: the Gettier Problem, the Value Problem, and the Problem of Skepticism. Some readings will be drawn from classical sources (Plato and Descartes), but most will come from contemporary texts. Open to 2nd year students and above. PHIL 3424 Language and the World 3 ch [W] What is meaning? How does language relate to speakers, their thoughts, and the world? How do we understand one another? Are the truth and falsehood of our statements determined by the world or by our linguistic conventions? Attempts at answering these fundamental questions about language have given rise to a number of important issues within contemporary philosophy. This course will be an overview of these issues as well as their bearing on broader debates within metaphysics, such as realism and anti-realism. Readings will come from authors of the 20th century analytic tradition, such as Frege, Russell, Ayer, Quine, Kripke, Putnam, Grice, and others. Open to 2nd year students and above. PHIL 3431 Philosophy of Religion 3 ch (3C) Explores some of the traditional issues associated with belief in God, including: the arguments for God's existence, the problem of evil, the meaningfulness of religious language, and how the divine attributes are to be understood. Prerequisite: A course in Philosophy or permission of the instructor. Open to 2nd year students and above. PHIL 3601 Liberalism and Its Critics (O) 3ch [W] This course provides a contemporary treatment of key themes in liberal political theory, especially the work of John Rawls. We will pay special attention to his conception of freedom (both its worth and extent) and equality, as well as their compatibility and role in justice. The second half of the course considers some important communitarian critics of liberal political theory, including Alisdair MacIntyre, Michael Sandel and Charles Taylor. Open to 2 nd year students and above. PHIL 3602 The Philosophy of Richard Rorty (O) 3ch [W] This course examines the philosophy of Richard Rorty. Topics covered include Rorty's relationship to the analytic tradition, his debt to Nietzsche, and his appropriation of Hegel and Dewey. The course allows wider exploration of Rorty's contributions to the philosophy of science, ethical theory, the American pragmatic tradition, his reformulation of philosophy, and 9|Page 2013-2014 Calendar Proof his dialogue with the political left in the United States. Open to 2 nd year students and above. PHIL 4301 Introduction to the Philosophy of Kant (O) 3 ch (3S) [W] Examines the argument of the Transcendental Analytic in Kant's pivotal work, The Critique of Pure Reason. Introduces Kant's philosophical method and his transcendental philosophy. Considers their implications for an understanding of the problems of metaphysics and the theory of knowledge. Prerequisite: 6 ch in Philosophy or permission of the instructor. PHIL 4311 Nietzsche's Zarathustra 3 ch (S) [W] Nietzsche’s Thus Spoke Zarathustra was the favourite of his own books, about which he nevertheless said, “For everyone else, it is obscure, mysterious, and ridiculous.” This course will investigate Nietzsche’s Zarathustra as a means to excavating exactly what Nietzsche said is expressed by this book; namely, the central themes of his philosophy. The course will look into why Nietzsche wrote this book in the style of the Old Testament, and how it articulates his perception of the “Will to Power,” “The Overman,” “The Master Race,” and the “Revaluation of all Values.” Prerequisite: Permission of the instructor. PHIL 4432 Science vs God? 3 ch [W] This course examines the relationship between science and religious belief. Questions of whether design is a legitimate scientific concept, whether methodological naturalism is a prerequisite of scientific inquiry, and whether ‘God of the gaps’ arguments are ever legitimate will be examined, as will be various models of how God is conceived as working within nature. Prerequisite: Permission of the instructor. PHIL 4433 The Concept of Miracle 3 ch [W] The course provides an in-depth discussion of philosophical questions associated with the concept of miracle. Questions of whether the concept of a miracle is logically coherent, whether miracles should be defined as violating the laws of nature, whether testimonial evidence could ever be sufficient to justify belief in a miracle, and whether the occurrence of miracles would intensify the problem of evil are examined. Prerequisite: Permission of the instructor. PHIL 4434 Husserl's Pure Phenomenology 3 ch (S) [W] This course introduces students to the philosophical method of phenomenology. Developed by the German philosopher Edmund Husserl, the method of what he called “pure phenomenology” has determined the character of Continental Philosophy throughout the 20th century. Emerging as a radical break with the philosophical tradition, Husserl’s thought provided the method that would determine the course of 20th century existential philosophy and serve as the point of departure for postmodernism. The course will be concerned with the main features of Husserl’s thought, particularly his theory of the intentional structure of consciousness, his critique of traditional epistemology, and the foundations and crises of the sciences, as well as his views on the “natural attitude,” the “irreality” of “the world,” and the “life-world..” Prerequisite: Permission of the instructor. 10 | P a g e 2013-2014 Calendar Proof PHIL 4601-9 Individual Studies in Philosophy (O) 3 ch (T) [W] Courses of independent study of specified texts or topics in Philosophy under the supervision of a member of the Department. These courses will normally be given only between May and August inclusive and with the agreement of the supervisor. They require the approval of the Chair of the Department and the Dean of the student's Faculty, and are subject to the regulations for individual Studies published in the Intersession/Summer Session Calendar. Prerequisite: 30 ch, including at least 6 in Philosophy. 11 | P a g e