Tentative Ay2019-20 Teaching Plan

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Tentative Ay2019-20 Teaching Plan TENTATIVE AY2019-20 TEACHING PLAN Fall Winter Spring Lower Division Phil 1- Intro to Philosophy (online) Pritchard Phil 1 - Intro to Philosophy (online) Boncompagni Phil 1 - Intro to Philosophy Helmreich Phil 2 -Puzzles & Paradoxes Fiocco Phil 2 -Puzzles & Paradoxes Smith Phil 2 -Puzzles & Paradoxes (online) Schafer Lecturer/Bencive Phil 4 -Intro to Ethics (online) Pritchard Phil 3-Technology & Society (online) Bernecker Phil 3 -Technology & Society nga Phil 5- Contemporary Moral Problems Capisani Phil 4-Introduction to Ethics Helmreich Phil 4 -Introduction to Ethics James Phil 10-History of Ancient Philosophy Perin Phil 12 History of Modern Philosophy Greenberg Phil 13-History of Contemporary Philosophy Boncompagni Phil 117 Asian Philosophies: Buddhism and Brianne Brianne Janism Donaldson Phil 21 Intro to Philosophy and Religion Donaldson Phil 22-Intro to Law and Society Helmreich Phil 40 - Topics in Philosophy James Upper Division Phil 101-Introduction to Metaphysics Fiocco Phil 102W Intro to Knowledge Coliva Phil 103-Introduction to Moral Philosophy James Phil 164 Well-Being Perin Phil 113 Evil in Early Modern Philosophy Greenberg Phil 110 -Topics in Ancient Philosophy Perin Brianne Phil 162 -Social Ontology Smith Phil 131C Medical Ethics Donaldson Phil 163-Social Epistemology Boncompagni Phil 165- Philosophy of Action Greenberg Graduate Phil 201 First Year Seminar Pritchard Phil 200 TH!NK Fiocco Phil 210 Plato Perin Phil 220- Metaphysics Fiocco Phil 213-Topics in Modern Philosophy Greenberg Coliva/Boncompag Phil 232- Money James Phil 221 - Topics in Epistemology ni Phil 230 Metaethics Schafer Phil 250- Topics in Existentialism and Phenomenology Smith Phil 230 Topics in Ethics Helmreich Non-Teaching Quarters Annalisa Coliva Casey Perin Annalisa Coliva Sean Greenberg Duncan Pritchard Mark Fiocco Jeff Helmreich Karl Schafer Ermanno Bencivenga (retirement 10/2019) Sabbatical David Woodruff Smith Margaret Gilbert Margaret Gilbert Other LOAs Sven Bernecker Sven Bernecker.
Recommended publications
  • HRP Vol 18 Text Vf
    EPISTEMOLOGY Identity,” International Journal of Philosophical Studies 41 Le temps retrouvéA la recherche du temps perdu, Le temps retrouvé 43 Untimely Meditations, By Duncan Pritchard 44 45 Essays and Lectures as best I can the actual methodology employed by analytical 46 view there has been a tendency in the recent debate about the 47 He does not, of course, give reason the same place in our nature as Kant does (he replaces M The Gay Science is that analytical philosophers do when they do philosophy, and this is especially Le temps retrouvé, Le Côté de Guermantes particular, I claim that once we understand the methodology actually employed 51 To the Lighthouse by analytical epistemologists properly then we will see that it is not as exposed 1 A Sketch of the Past, 53 A Sketch of the Past 54 Proust holds that one is for the most part completely closed down by habit: “habit hides almost the whole universe from us throughout our lives,” Le temps retrouvé, 55 56 Collected Tales, Sketches, Speeches – As we will see below, I think this way of describing the methodology of 57 Late Night Thoughts on Listening to Mahler’s Ninth Sympthony (London: Routledge, the philosophical data provided by intuition, I still think we need to recognise The Myth Makers, Much of the focus when it comes to the role of intuition in epistemology is on our intuitive responses to cases, where we are asked to form an intuitive extensional intuitions Duncan Pritchard joined the University of Edinburgh’s philosophy department in 2007 as the new Chair in Epistemology.
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  • Conversation with Duncan Pritchard
    APhEx 15, 2017 (ed. Vera Tripodi) Redattore: Federica Berdini N° 15 GENNAIO 2017 I NTERVISTE Conversation with Duncan Pritchard by Michel Croce Duncan Pritchard is Chair in Epistemology at the University of Edinburgh and Director of Edinburgh’s Eidyn research centre. He is certainly one of the most influential contemporary epistemologists. His main research inter- ests include topics such as the problem of skepticism, the problem of the na- ture and value of knowledge, extended knowledge, and social epistemology. He is author and co-author of several books, editor of the International Journal for the Study of Skepticism and Oxford Bibliographies: Philosophy, and principal investigator of several international research projects hosted at Eidyn. His latest book, Epistemic Angst: Radical Skepticism and the Groundlessness of Our Believing, published by Princeton University Press in 2015, provides a novel strategy to address the skeptical challenge. In this Periodico On-line / ISSN 2036-9972 Michel Croce – Conversation with Duncan Pritchard broad interview, Pritchard reveals the theoretical origin of his latest work and illustrates the connections between the main topics he explored in his massive research activity. He also offers interesting anecdotes concerning his personal experience as an academic and insightful advices to those who are willing to pursue a philosophy curriculum. 1. Dear Duncan, thank you very much for accepting my invitation to tell the readers of APhEx something about your work. We’ll have time to discuss in detail various aspects of your philosophy, but let me start with a brief bio- graphical question about your interest in philosophy and in becoming an academic.
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  • Curriculum Vitae/List of Projects for Fall/Early Spring 2006-7
    1 Dr. Peter Olen Lake-Sumter State College 9501 U.S. Highway 441 Leesburg, FL 34788 [email protected] https://lssc.academia.edu/PeterOlen 407.920.5132 Area of Specialization, Area of Competence AOS: History of Philosophy, Epistemology AOC: Philosophy of Science, Logic, American Philosophy, Ethics, Philosophy of Mind Employment Assistant Professor of Philosophy, Lake-Sumter State College (Fall 2019 – current) Instructor, Lake-Sumter State College (Fall 2014 – Spring 2019) Visiting Lecturer, University of Central Florida (Fall 2013 – Summer 2014) Education Ph.D. (Philosophy), University of South Florida (2012) M.A. (Philosophy), University of South Florida (Spring 2009) B.A. (Major: Philosophy, Minor: Cognitive Science), University of Central Florida (Spring 2006) Books Wilfrid Sellars and the Foundations of Normativity (Palgrave Macmillan, 2016). Pragmatism in Transition: Contemporary Perspectives on C. I. Lewis (Palgrave Macmillan, 2017 – co-edited with Carl Sachs). Articles “Emotion and Affect in the Space of Reasons” in a special issue of Philosophical Inquiries (in progress) “Perspectivalism and Behaviorism: A Response to Katzav” in the Australasian Philosophical Review (forthcoming) “Author’s Response to Critics” in a special issue of the Journal for the History of Analytical Philosophy (Summer 2019) “Consequences of Behaviorism: Sellars and de Laguna on Explanation” in Philosophy of the Social Sciences (2017). “Was Sellars an Error Theorist?” (co-authored with Stephen Turner) in Synthese, Vol. 163 (2016), pp.2053-2075. “From Formalism to Psychology: Meta-philosophical Shifts in Wilfrid Sellars' Early Works” in HOPOS: The Journal of the International Society for the History of the Philosophy of Science, Vol. 6, No.1 (2016), pp.24-63.
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  • Phil-Eem-Epistemology.Pdf
    Image courtesy of Surgeons' Hall Museums © The Royal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh 2016 Course aims and objectives The course aims to offer online postgraduate students engagement with a selection of core topics in epistemology. No previous philosophical or logical expertise is required. Any technical and/or unfamiliar terms will be defined as we go. Intended learning outcomes On completion of this course, the student will be able to: • Articulate central issues, views and concepts in epistemology. • Critically analyse and engage with the contemporary epistemological literature. • Present arguments clearly and concisely both in the classroom and in writing. • Gain transferable skills in research, analysis and argumentation. • Critically discuss philosophical arguments with peers. Writing the coursework essay and participating in class discussion will develop these skills. People Course organiser: Dr Wolfgang Schwarz; [email protected] ​ ​ Recorded lectures from other Edinburgh faculty: Dr Nick Treanor; [email protected] ​ ​ Dr Matthew Chrisman; [email protected] ​ ​ Dr Martin Smith; [email protected] ​ ​ Course secretary: Ms Becky Verdon; [email protected] ​ ​ Office hours Please email Wolfgang Schwarz ([email protected]) to make an appointment if ​ ​ you need to discuss material covered in the course or essay topics. Syllabus Schedule of lectures, seminars, and forum discussions Week Topic Lecturer Activity W/c date Induction 14 ​ ​ Induction week September Week 1 21 Theory of knowledge and ​ ​ Duncan Pritchard
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  • European Journal for Philosophy of Religion
    EUROPEAN JOURNAL FOR PHILOSOPHY OF RELIGION VOLUME 6 NUMBER 4 WINTER 2014 ARTICLES C.A.J. COADY Communal and Institutional Trust: Authority in Religion and Politics 1 John COTTINGHAM Authority and Trust: Reflections on Linda Zagzebski’s Epistemic Authority 25 Duncan PRITCHARD & Shane RYAN Zagzebski on Rationality 39 Trent DOUGHERTY Zagzebski, Authority, and Faith 47 Arnon KEREN Zagzebski on Authority and Preemption in the Domain of Belief 61 Jacek WOJTYSIAK Zagzebski on Models of Revelation 77 Charity ANDERSON Epistemic Authority and Conscientious Belief 91 Benjamin MCMYLER Epistemic Authority, Preemption, and Normative Power 101 John SCHWENKLER Tradition as Transmission: A Partial Defense 121 Matthew A. BENTON Believing on Authority 133 Damian LESZCZYŃSKI Inconsistency, Uncertainty and Epistemic Authority 145 Joshue OROZCO & Nathan L. KING Conscientious Self-reflection to the Rescue? 155 Linda ZAGZEBSKI Epistemic Authority and Its Critics 169 BOOK REVIEWS AND NOTICES Paolo Diego Bubbio & Philip Andrew Quadrio (eds). The Relationship of Philosophy to Religion Today Reviewed by Mark Manolopoulos 189 Justin Barrett. Born Believers: The Science of Children’s Religious Belief Reviewed by Aku Visala 193 Charles Taliaferro, Dialogues about God Reviewed by Ulrich Schmidt 199 Fraser Watts (ed.). Creation: Law and Probability Reviewed by Graham Wood 205 COMMUNAL AND INSTITUTIONAL TRUST: AUTHORITY IN RELIGION AND POLITICS C.A.J. COADY University of Melbourne Linda Zagzebski’s book on epistemic authority is an impressive and stimulating treatment of an important topic.1 I admire the way she manages to combine imagination, originality and argumentative control. Her work has the further considerable merit of bringing analytic thinking and abstract theory to bear upon areas of concrete human concern, such as the attitudes one should have towards moral and religious authority.
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  • What Is This Thing Called Knowledge?
    what is this thing called knowledge? What is knowledge? Where does it come from? What kinds of knowledge are there? Can we know anything at all? This lucid and engaging introduction grapples with these central questions in the theory of knowledge, offering a clear, non-partisan view of the main themes of epistemology. Both traditional issues and contemporary ideas are discussed in sixteen easily digestible chapters, each of which conclude with a useful summary of the main ideas discussed, study questions, annotated further reading, and a guide to internet resources. Each chapter also features text boxes providing bite-sized summaries of key concepts and major philosophers, and clear and interesting examples are used throughout. The book concludes with an annotated guide to general introductions to epistemology, a glossary of key terms, and a summary of the main examples used in epistemology.This is an ideal first textbook on the theory of knowledge for undergraduates coming to philosophy for the first time. The third edition has been revised and updated throughout and features two new chapters, on religious knowledge and scientific knowledge, as part of a whole new section on what kinds of knowledge there are. In addition, the text as a whole has been refreshed to keep it up to date with current developments. Duncan Pritchard FRSE is Professor of Philosophy at the University of Edinburgh, UK. His main research area is epistemology, and he has published widely in this field, including the books Epistemic Luck (2005), Knowledge (2009), The Nature and Value of Knowledge (with A.Millar and A.Haddock, 2010), and Epistemological Disjunctivism (2012).
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  • Cavell and Hume on Skepticism, Natural Doubt, and the Recovery of the Ordinary
    CONVERSATIONS 3 Cavell and Hume on Skepticism, Natural Doubt, and the Recovery of the Ordinary PETER S. FOSL One curious aspect of Stanley Cavell’s investigations into skepticism is his relative neglect of one of philosophy’s most important skeptics, David Hume. Cavell’s think- ing about skepticism is located in relation to Wittgenstein, Kant, Emerson, Austin, and others. But while Hume is occasionally mentioned, those encounters are brief and generally dismissive. In “Aesthetic Problems of Modern Philosophy,” for exam- ple, Cavell remarks that while “Hume is always a respectable place to begin,”1 Kant is “deeper and obscurer” (MWM, 88). The important Cavell scholar Timothy Gould fol- lows Cavell in this, writing that: “Hume’s tactic of playing billiards as a relief from the melancholy of reflection and skepticism is a relatively unsophisticated strategy, com- pared to some that I know of.”2 Except, perhaps, for the idea that Kant is more obscure, I think this assess- ment of Hume to be a mistake on Cavell et al.’s part, as I think there are important and helpful resources to be culled from le bon David for those of us working through the constellation of topics Cavell has done so much to clarify and to confront. Cavell’s, like Gould’s, discounting Hume so quickly, and in my view thoughtlessly, is, I sus- pect, a casualty of the twentieth century’s dominant readings of Hume either as a kind of proto-positivist, as a psychologizing naturalist, more recently as a realist, or, as we will see later, a “paltry” empiricist.
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  • Review of Duncan Pritchard, Epistemic Luck
    Philosophy Faculty Works Philosophy 2006 Review of Duncan Pritchard, Epistemic Luck Jason Baehr Loyola Marymount University, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.lmu.edu/phil_fac Part of the Epistemology Commons Recommended Citation Baehr, Jason. "Review of Duncan Pritchard, Epistemic Luck." Metaphilosophy 37 (2006), 728-36. Print. This Article - pre-print is brought to you for free and open access by the Philosophy at Digital Commons @ Loyola Marymount University and Loyola Law School. It has been accepted for inclusion in Philosophy Faculty Works by an authorized administrator of Digital Commons@Loyola Marymount University and Loyola Law School. For more information, please contact [email protected]. This is not a final draft. Please cite only the journal version, published in Metaphilosophy 37 (2006). Epistemic Luck. By Duncan Pritchard. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 2005. Pp. xii + 290. Duncan Pritchard’s Epistemic Luck is a wide-ranging, nicely written, and generally masterful treatment of the concept of epistemic luck and its relevance to contemporary epistemology. Its central focus is what Pritchard calls the “epistemic luck platitude,” which is the claim that knowledge excludes luck. This claim is widely (if largely uncritically) accepted among epistemologists; and yet an unqualified endorsement of it is problematic, for there are many putative instances of knowledge in which an agent’s reaching the truth is in some sense a matter of luck (e.g., the archeologist who “happens” upon an important find or the detective who stumbles across a critical clue). Pritchard’s aim is to clarify the sense in which knowledge excludes luck and to consider the resulting implications for the theory of knowledge.
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  • Sceptical Paths Studies and Texts in Scepticism
    Sceptical Paths Studies and Texts in Scepticism Edited on behalf of the Maimonides Centre for Advanced Studies by Giuseppe Veltri Managing Editor: Yoav Meyrav Editorial Board Heidrun Eichner, Talya Fishman, Racheli Haliva, Henrik Lagerlund, Reimund Leicht, Stephan Schmid, Carsten Wilke, Irene Zwiep Volume 6 Sceptical Paths Enquiry and Doubt from Antiquity to the Present Edited by Giuseppe Veltri, Racheli Haliva, Stephan Schmid, and Emidio Spinelli The series Studies and Texts in Scepticism is published on behalf of the Maimonides Centre for Advanced Studies ISBN 978-3-11-058960-3 e-ISBN (PDF) 978-3-11-059104-0 e-ISBN (EPUB) 978-3-11-059111-8 ISSN 2568-9614 This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-Non Commercial-No Derivatives 4.0 Licence. For details go to http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/. Library of Congress Cataloging in Publication Control Number: 2019947115 Bibliographic information published by the Deutsche Nationalbibliothek The Deutsche Nationalbibliothek lists this publication in the Deutsche Nationalbibliografie; detailed bibliographic data are available on the Internet at http://dnb.dnb.de. © 2019 Giuseppe Veltri, Racheli Haliva, Stephan Schmid, Emidio Spinelli, published by Walter de Gruyter GmbH, Berlin/Boston Cover image: Staats- und Universitätsbibliothek Hamburg, Ms Cod. Levy 115, fol. 158r: Maimonides, More Nevukhim, Beginn von Teil III. Printing & binding: CPI books GmbH, Leck www.degruyter.com Contents Introduction 1 Carlos Lévy Philo of Alexandria vs. Descartes: An Ignored Jewish
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  • 1 an Explanatory Challenge for Epistemological Disjunctivism 1
    This is the preprint of an article whose final and definitive form is published in Episteme An Explanatory Challenge for Epistemological Disjunctivism 1. Introduction Duncan Pritchard claims that in paradigm cases of perceptual knowledge, people form empirical beliefs on the basis of reflectively accessible factive rational support.1 For example, John knows that there is a copy of Mind and World on the table because John can see that there is a copy of Mind and World on the table. Seeing that p entails the truth of p. Of course, rational support is not always factive. For example, there are “bad” cases of perception in which one is misled by a deceptive illusion. John’s so-called copy of Mind and World might have been a convincing fake. Indeed, even brains in vats (BIVs) have at least some rational support for their systematically false empirical beliefs. According to Pritchard, this does not mean that one’s rational support cannot be factive in the “good” cases—i.e. cases in which an empirical belief is formed by way of perception in ordinary conditions. His view, known as Epistemological Disjunctivism (ED), is that there is a difference in kind between one’s rational support for believing that p in the so- called good and bad cases. 2 3 1 The claim is not part of an analysis of knowledge. Pritchard thinks of this as a kind of common-sense way of thinking about paradigm cases of perceptual knowledge. He is interested in explaining how perceptual knowledge understood as such is possible. An interesting question concerns what counts as a “paradigm case.” That question comes up at least one more time below, but I set it to one side.
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  • Hume's Fork, and His Theory of Relations
    Philosophy and Phenomenological Research Philosophy and Phenomenological Research Vol. XCV No. 1, July 2017 doi: 10.1111/phpr.12385 © 2017 Philosophy and Phenomenological Research, LLC Hume’s Fork, and his Theory of Relations1 PETER MILLICAN Hertford College, Oxford Hume’s Fork—the distinction between “relations and ideas” and “matters of fact” intro- duced in his first Enquiry—is well known, though considered by most specialist scholars to be a crude simplification of the far more sophisticated theory of relations in his Trea- tise. But close analysis of the Treatise theory shows it to be an unsatisfactory reworking of Locke’s taxonomy, implausibly identifying relations with mental operations and deliv- ering a confused criterion of demonstrability which Hume subsequently abandons in favour of his Conceivability Principle. The latter then becomes the basis for Hume’s Fork, the theory of which, as implicitly defined by the various criteria he specifies, turns out to be consistent and plausible. However it faces a number of potential problems, some of which Hume might have been expected to address, while others—particularly concerning his tendency to identify apriority, demonstrability, and necessity—derive from relatively recent Epistemology, Philosophy of Language, and Philosophy of Mathematics. All of these are considered, some requiring tightening of Hume’s distinction while others imply limitations. Finally, a conclusion is drawn emphasising the continuing value of Hume’s position, despite these difficulties. Hume’s Fork—his distinction between “relations of ideas” and “matters of fact”—is justly famous, and widely acknowledged as an influential ancestor of the familiar modern analytic/synthetic distinction. Given Hume’s tendency to see ideas as the determinants of meaning, the very term “relations of ideas” suggests something like “truth in virtue of meaning”.
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  • Epistemology
    Epistemology Royal Institute of Philosophy Supplement: 64 Edited by Anthony O’Hear Royal Institute of Philosophy Supplements The Royal Institute of Philosophy Supplements are published twice a year. Institutional subscribers to the journal Philosophy receive the supplements as part of their subscription. The following supplements are available to purchase as books. Volume 37 1994 Philosophy, Psychology and Psychiatry (ISBN 0521469023) 38 1995 Philosophy and Technology (ISBN 0521558166) 39 1995 Karl Popper: Philosophy and Problems (ISBN 0521558158) 40 1996 Philosophy and Pluralism (ISBN 0521567505) 41 1996 Verstehen and Human Understanding (ISBN 0521587425) 42 1997 Thought and Language (ISBN 0521587417) 43 1998 Current Issues in Philosophy of Mind (ISBN 0521639271) 44 1999 German Philosophy since Kant (ISBN 0521667828) 45 1999 Philosophy and Public Affairs (ISBN 0521667844) 46 2000 Logic, Cause & Action (ISBN 0521785103) 47 2000 Philosophy, the Good, the True and the Beautiful (ISBN 0521785111) 48 2001 Philosophy at the New Millennium (ISBN 0521005086) 49 2001 Naturalism, Evolution and Mind (ISBN 0521003733) 50 2002 Time, Reality & Experience (ISBN 0521529670) 51 2002 Logic, Thought and Language (ISBN 0521529662) 52 2003 Philosophy and the Emotions (ISBN 0521537347) 53 2003 Minds and Persons (ISBN 0521537339) 54 2004 Modern Moral Philosophy (ISBN 0521603269) 55 2004 Agency and Action (ISBN 0521603560) 56 2005 Philosophy, Biology and Life (ISBN 0521678455) 57 2005 The Philosophy of Need (ISBN 0521678447) 58 2006 Political Philosophy (ISBN 0521695597) 59 2006 Preferences and Well-Being (ISBN 0521695589) 60 2007 Narrative and Understanding Persons (ISBN 9780521714099) 61 2007 Philosophy of Science (ISBN 9780521718967) 62 2008 Being: Developments in Contemporary Metaphysics (ISBN 9780521735445) 63 2008 Kant and Philosophy of Science Today (ISBN 9780521748513) From Volume 13 onwards the Series is published by Cambridge University Press and some earlier titles are also available.
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