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PHI1010S: ETHICS
NQF credits: 18
(NOTE: This course may be offered in Summer Term - please
consult the Centre for Open Learning.)
First-year, second-semester course, 3 lectures and 1 tutorial per week.
Convenor: Professor D Benatar.
Entrance requirements:
Students must have at least a D symbol in English First
Language Higher Grade, or a pass on level 4 in the NSC.
Students who do not meet this entry requirement may be
admitted with the permission of the Head of Department.
Course outline:
This course
introduces students to moral philosophy and to the questions
it asks. These may include: What makes an action right? Is
morality relative (to one's own views or to one's culture)
or is it objective? What is the relationship between
religion and ethics? What is it to be a good person?
Lecture times:
5th period.
DP requirements: Regular
attendance at lectures and tutorials; completion of all
tests, submission of all essays and assignments by due
dates, and an average mark of at least 35% for the
coursework.
Assessment:
Coursework counts 40%; one
3-hour examination in October / November counts 60%.
PHI1024F: INTRODUCTION TO PHILOSOPHY
NQF credits: 18
(NOTE: This course may be offered in Summer Term - please
consult the Centre for Open Learning.)
First-year, first-semester course, 3 lectures and 1 tutorial per week.
Convenor: D Chapman.
Entrance requirements: As for PHI1010S.
Course outline:
This course
is an introduction to philosophy that aims to make students
more conscious, creative and critical in thinking about
their own fundamental beliefs and values. Fundamental issues
investigated include: the nature and possibility of
knowledge, self-knowledge, the relationship between the mind
and the body, the knowledge of other minds, whether we have
free will, and whether life has a meaning. These issues are
explored with the help of classical and contemporary
philosophers, including Plato, Aristotle, Aquinas,
Descartes, Hume, Kant, Hegel, Marx, Sartre and others.
Lecture times:
5th period.
DP requirements: As for PHI1010S.
Assessment: Coursework counts 40%; one 3-hour examination in June counts 60%.
PHI1025F: CRITICAL THINKING
NQF credits: 18
First-year, first-semester course, 3 lectures and 1 tutorial per week.
Convenor: Dr E Galgut.
Entrance requirements: As for PHI1010S.
Course outline: Why do we
value our beliefs? We value them because we take them to be
true and, as true, they are good guides. But how can we tell
when a belief is true? Our only handle here is whether or
not the belief is justified. So we aim to have beliefs that
are justified. The course concentrates on the practical
business of appraising justifications. Of course, we all
routinely attempt to justify our beliefs and arrive at new
beliefs on the basis of supposed justifications. But almost
as routinely we are hoodwinked. The course aims to make you
a better believer by making you more aware of the nature of
justification, of the different sorts of justification and
the pitfalls of each. At the end of it you will be less
gullible and more able to explain just why a particular
argument does or doesn't convince you.
Lecture times: 3rd
period.
DP requirements:
Regular
attendance at lectures and tutorials, completion of all
tests and submission of all essays and assignments by due
date.
Assessment: Coursework counts 50%; one 2-hour examination in June counts 50%.
This course is examined simultaneously with PHI1026F.
PHI2012F: PHILOSOPHY OF PSYCHOLOGY AND MIND
NQF credits: 24
(NOTE: This course may be offered in Summer Term - please
consult the Centre for Open Learning.)
Second-year, first-semester course, 3 lectures and 1 tutorial per week.
Convenors: Dr E Galgut and D Chapman.
Entrance requirements: At least second year status.
Course outline: The
question of the nature of the mind and its relation to the
body (e.g. the brain) is discussed at length, with attention
given to dualism, behaviourism, physicalism and
functionalism. Other topics which may be dealt with are the
nature of action, free will and determinism and the problem
of personal identity.
Lecture times: 7th
period.
DP requirements: As for PHI1010S.
Assessment: Coursework counts 40%; one 3-hour examination in
June counts 60%.
PHI2016S: PHILOSOPHY OF ART AND LITERATURE
NQF credits: 24
Second-year, second-semester course, 3 lectures and 1 tutorial per week.
Convenor: Dr E Galgut.
Entrance requirements: At least second year status.
Course outline: This
course will consider a variety of issues in contemporary
philosophy of art and literature - a subject area also
sometimes referred to as aesthetics. Among the issues that
will be discussed are: the ontology of art (comparing
literature, music, painting, etc); interpreting literary and
other art works; the nature of metaphor; the relationship
between art and morality; truth and sincerity as criteria of
literary and artistic value; the definition (or general
nature) of art and literature.
Lecture times: 2nd
period.
DP requirements: As for PHI1010S.
Assessment: Coursework counts 40%; one 3-hour examination in
October / November counts 60%.
PHI2037F: APPLIED ETHICS
NQF credits: 24
Second-year, first-semester course, 3 lectures and 1 tutorial per week.
Convenor: Professor D Benatar.
Entrance requirements: At least second year status.
Course outline: The course
involves the application of philosophical reasoning to real
life practical and moral issues. It will be shown how
rational argument can be brought to bear on the resolution
of ethical dilemmas and difficult questions about what we
ought to do. These may include issues concerning health
care, business, the professions, the environment, or
everyday life.
Lecture times: 3rd
period.
DP requirements: As for PHI1010S.
Assessment: Coursework counts 40%; one 3-hour examination in June counts 60%.
PHI2040S: PHILOSOPHY OF SCIENCE
NQF credits: 24
Second-year, second-semester course, 3 lectures and 1 tutorial per week.
Convenor: Dr J Ritchie.
Entrance requirements: At least second year status.
Course outline: The course
aims to introduce the students to the epistemological,
metaphysical and ethical issues that arise when science is
considered from a philosophical perspective. Through the
study of philosophers such as Popper, Kuhn and Feyerabend,
among others, the following sorts of questions will be
discussed: Do scientists employ a special method which sets
them apart from non-scientists and gives their claims
greater authority? Do electrons, genes and other entities
that we can’t see or touch really exist?
Are scientists
inevitably influenced by political and moral agendas or can
pure science be value free?
Lecture times: 2nd
period.
DP requirements:
Regular
attendance at lectures and tutorials, completion of all
tests and submission of all essays and assignments by due
dates.
Assessment: Coursework counts 40%; one 3-hour examination in October / November counts 60%.
PHI2041S: GREAT
PHILOSOPHERS
NQF credits: 24
Second-year, second-semester course, 3 lectures and 1 tutorial per week.
Convenor: Professor B Weiss and Dr G Fried.
Entrance requirements: PHI1024F and at least second
year status.
Course outline:
This course
will introduce you to a selection of philosophy’s major
figures. The figures chosen may vary from year to year but
they will be selected on the basis of their originality,
profundity, influence and on the degree to which their works
speak to one another. Philosophy often proceeds through an
engagement with its past and engaging with one’s
philosophical inheritance is one of the most rewarding
aspects of studying philosophy. This course will ask you to
try to understand a set of historical thinkers and writers
not as contemporaries who can be presumed to share our
philosophical concerns nor yet as merely historical figures;
rather we shall try to appreciate the thinker’s writings in
the context of his own concerns, which may differ
significantly from ours. We shall discover that, when
properly understood in this way, these thinkers still have
relevance.
Lecture times: 4th
period.
DP requirements: As
for PHI1010S.
Assessment: Coursework counts 40%; one 3-hour examination in
October / November counts 60%.
PHI2042F:
POLITICAL PHILOSOPHY
NQF credits: 24
Second-year, first-semester course, 3 lectures and 1 tutorial per week.
Convenor: Dr L Bloom.
Entrance requirements: At least second year status.
Course outline: What
should our government do for us? Do the rich owe anything to
the poor? Should society accept all cultures, or are there
limits to tolerance? Is democracy really a good system? What
is a just war, and can terrorism be justified? These are
some of the questions asked in political philosophy. This
course approaches the field in two ways. We choose several
great political philosophers from ancient times to the
twentieth century, and discuss their aims and arguments.
Then we select some areas from contemporary political
philosophy, and assess solutions to perpetual or recent
problems in these areas.
Lecture times: 2nd
period.
DP requirements: As
for PHI1010S.
Assessment: Coursework counts 40%; one 3-hour examination in
June counts 60%.
PHI2043F/S:
BUSINESS ETHICS
NQF credits: 18
Second-year, first or second-semester course, 3 lectures and 1 tutorial per week.
Co-Convenors: Dr G Fried and J Winfield.
Entrance requirements: At least second year status.
Course outline:
Ethical
choices are unavoidable in business. This course aims to
help you to articulate your options when confronted with an
ethical dilemma in business, and to make well-informed
judgements about the right thing to do. We will consider a
range of problems, from issues that could arise in your
first job to questions of business regulation that you may
one day face as a leader in commerce or government. In each
case, the course will challenge and assist you to recognise
ethical problems in practical situations, understand the
possible solutions, and make reasoned decisions.
Lecture times: 4th
period.
DP requirements: As
for PHI1010S.
Assessment: Coursework counts 40%; one 3-hour examination in
either June or October / November counts 60%.
PHI2044F:
PHILOSOPHY OF MATHEMATICS
(not offered in 2013)
NQF credits: 24
Second-year, first-semester course, 3 lectures and 1 tutorial per week.
Convenor: Dr G Fried.
Entrance requirements:
Second year status and at least 50% for Matric Mathematics,
or a pass for a MAM course, or a Lower Intermediate score
for the NBT in Quantitative Literacy.
Course outline:
Mathematics - the paradigm of a successful intellectual
practice, with highly secure results and many important
applications - raises deep philosophical questions. For
instance, if mathematical objects (like numbers) are not in
time or space, then how can we know anything about these
objects, and how can mathematics be of any use in
understanding the physical world? Some other questions: Does
mathematics have a foundation? What is a good mathematical
explanation? In what ways does the discipline of mathematics
develop? This course discusses and evaluates major
contributions, both historical and current, to the
philosophy of mathematics. The intended audience includes
students who enjoy more abstract areas of philosophy in
general as well as those interested in the significance of
mathematics in particular.
Lecture times: 1st
period.
Assessment:
40% coursework (10% for first essay, 20% for second essay,
10% for weekly quizzes), 60% exam. A DP requires timely
completion of all coursework and attendance at 80% of
lectures and tutorials.
PHI3023F:
LOGIC AND LANGUAGE
NQF credits: 24
Third-year, first-semester course, 3 lectures and 1 tutorial per week.
Convenor: Professor B Weiss.
Entrance requirements: PHI2041S
and any one of the other second year PHI courses that count
toward the major.
Course outline: The
philosophical investigation of linguistic meaning came to
occupy a pivotal role in philosophy a little over a hundred
years ago. The investigation became pivotal because the
notion seems deeply perplexing.—.what sort of relation does
a linguistic sign bear to what it represents? how do we form
the ability to understand a potential infinity of
sentences?.—.and because, more controversially, it came to
seem that we could pursue many other questions in philosophy
by looking at how language works. The philosophical focus on
language was facilitated by developments in logical theory.
The course begins by equipping you with the technical basis
in logic and then builds on this to explore the workings of
language.
Lecture times: 7th period.
DP requirements: As for PHI1010S.
Assessment: Coursework counts 40%; one 3-hour examination in
June counts 60%.
PHI3024S:
METAPHYSICS AND EPISTEMOLOGY
NQF credits: 24
Third-year, second-semester course, 3 lectures and 1 tutorial per week.
Convenor: Dr J Ritchie and D Chapman.
Entrance requirements:
PHI2041S, and any one of the other second year PHI
courses that count toward the major, and PHI3023F.
Course outline: On one
widespread conception, metaphysics is a first-order inquiry
into “what there is”, whilst epistemology is second-order
inquiry reflecting on “what it takes to know what there
is.” But the pursuit of epistemology raises metaphysical
questions too: what do our ways of knowing tell us about
human nature, and the nature of the world? This course
explores some core contemporary issues in both areas of
inquiry, and considers the relationship between them. Topics
in metaphysics may include contemporary investigations into
the nature of the mind, its relations to the body and the
external world, as well as the nature of causation, space
and time. The course may also include some reflection on
how, if at all, metaphysical knowledge is possible. Topics
in epistemology may include exploring contemporary debates
regarding the conception of knowledge, the structure and
nature of epistemic justification, the relationship between
reasons and beliefs and the value (if any) of skepticism.
Lecture times: 7th period.
DP requirements: As for PHI1010S.
Assessment: Coursework counts 40%; one 3-hour examination in October / November counts 60%.
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Page last updated:
2013/02/04 01:02:23 PM
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