2012-2013

PHIL 49700 Workshop: Preliminary Essay

The workshop involves discussion of general issues in writing the essay and student presentations of their work. Although students do not register for the Summer quarter, they are expected to make significant progress on their preliminary essay over the summer.

All and only philosophy graduate students in the relevant years. A two-quarter (Spring, Autumn) workshop on the preliminary essay required for all doctoral students in the Spring of their second year and the Autumn of their third year.

2012-2013 Spring

PHIL 36900 Phenomenon: From the Constitution of the Object to the Self-Manifestation of the Event. Kant, Husserl, Heidegger

(DVPR 36900, THEO 36900)
J. Marion
2012-2013 Spring
Category
Early Modern Philosophy (including Kant)
Phenomenology

PHIL 31900 Feminist Philosophy

(GNSE 29600, HMRT 31900, LAWS 47701, PLSC 51900, RETH 41000)

The course is an introduction to the major varieties of philosophical feminism: Liberal Feminism (Mill, Wollstonecraft, Okin, Nussbaum), Radical Feminism (MacKinnon, Andrea Dworkin), Difference Feminism (Gilligan, Held, Noddings), and Postmodern "Queer" Feminism (Rubin, Butler). After studying each of these approaches, we will focus on political and ethical problems of contemporary international feminism, asking how well each of the approaches addresses these problems. (I)

Undergraduates by permission only.

2012-2013 Spring
Category
Feminist Philosophy
Social/Political Philosophy

PHIL 29405/39405 Advanced Logic

In this course we will prove the Undecidability of Predicate Logic, and both Gödel’s First and Second Incompleteness Theorems. We will also examine the concept of interpretability, and will make some connections with broader issues in mathematics. Finally, we will discuss some uses and abuses of Gödel’s Theorems that can be found outside logic and mathematics. For instance, do Gödel’s Theorems entail that the mind is not a machine? (II) (B)

Intermediate logic or prior equivalent required, or with consent of instructor.

2012-2013 Spring
Category
Logic

PHIL 22500/32500 Biological and Cultural Evolution

(NCDV 27400, BPRO 23900, BIOS 29286, CHSS 37900, HIPS 23900, LINIG XXXXX)

Core background in evolution and genetics strongly recommended. This course draws on readings and examples form linguistics, evolutionary genetics, and the history and philosophy of science. We elaborate theory to understand and model cultural evolution, as well as explore analogies, differences, and relations to biological evolution. We also consider basic biological, cultural, and linguistic topics and case studies from an evolutionary perspective. Time is spent both on what we do know, and on determining what we don't. (B)

William Wimsatt, S. Mufwene
2012-2013 Spring
Category
Philosophy of Science

PHIL 22200/32200 Philosophy of Cognitive Science

(CHSS 34914,HIST 24914/34914)

Cognitive science is an interdisciplinary field in which theories and methods from psychology, neuroscience, linguistics, artificial intelligence, and philosophy are used to study cognition. Computational models play an increasingly significant role in the understanding of cognitive phenomena such as perception, categorization, concept formation, and problem solving. In this course, students will become familiar with some of the methods and models used in cognitive science, and discuss philosophical issues pertaining to the methodology and basic premises of cognitive science. (B)

C. Bloch
2012-2013 Spring
Category
Philosophy of Science
Philosophy of Mind

PHIL 21713/31713 Aristotle on Virtue

(FNDL 21715)

Examination of Aristotle’s theory of moral virtue as it is developed in the Nicomachean Ethics, Eudemian Ethics, and Politics. How does virtue differ from self-control? In what way is virtue a perfection of both our capacity for non-rational desire and our reason? What does Aristotle mean by saying that virtuous people act for the sake of the beautiful? How is virtue promoted and sustained by political community? What is the relation between virtue and natural flourishing? (A) (IV)

2012-2013 Spring
Category
Ancient Philosophy

PHIL 21314/31314 The Presocratics

This is an advanced survey course on the Presocratics. The figures covered will include but will not be limited to Thales, Anaximander, Anaximenes, Heraclitus, Parmenides, Anaxagoras, Empedocles, and the Atomists. The focus will be primarily on issues of metaphysics, epistemology, and natural philosophy, though other topics will be discussed as they arise. (B) (IV)

C. Frey
2012-2013 Spring
Category
Ancient Philosophy

PHIL 20120/30120 Wittgenstein’s Philosophical Investigations

We'll read and discuss Wittgenstein's Philosophical Investigations. Our central concerns will include: (1) Wittgenstein's metaphilosophy, (2) meaning and rule-following, (3) privacy and expression. (B) (III)

Two previous courses in the Philosophy Department required; Philosophical Perspectives does not qualify.

2012-2013 Spring
Category
History of Analytic Philosophy

PHIL 20640/30640 Ontological Dependence

This course will examine historical and contemporary approaches to the relation of ontological dependence, focusing on Aristotle, Descartes, and among more recent authors, Kit Fine. Questions to be discussed will include: What is ontological dependence and how does it differ from other dependence relations, e.g., causation or priority in definition? How does this relation bear on notions such as substance and essence, and vice versa? What is the historical trajectory from Aristotle onwards concerning these questions? (B) (III) (IV) (V)

M. Malink, A. Schechtman
2012-2013 Spring
Category
Metaphysics
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