The capstone of our philosophy classes will be the project “The Meeting of the Minds.” Each...

9
The capstone of our philosophy classes will be the project “The Meeting of the Minds.” Each student will select a philosopher and work independently to grasp that thinker in depth. Students are expected to do readings in primary sources, submit regular reading logs, and give periodic progress reports. The final several class periods are conversations with the great philosophers (“The Meeting of the Minds”). These conversations cover topics given to students in advance as the talking points for this assemblage. Each student must speak for their philosopher in the first person and engage in debate with the other great minds in the room. This method has helped avoid the mile- wide-inch-deep curse inherent in introductory courses. START HERE: http://plato.stanford.edu/ The Meeting of the Minds

Transcript of The capstone of our philosophy classes will be the project “The Meeting of the Minds.” Each...

Page 1: The capstone of our philosophy classes will be the project “The Meeting of the Minds.” Each student will select a philosopher and work independently to.

The capstone of our philosophy classes will be the project “The Meeting of the Minds.” Each student will select a philosopher and work independently to grasp that thinker in depth. Students are expected to do readings in primary sources, submit regular reading logs, and give periodic progress reports. The final several class periods are conversations with the great philosophers (“The Meeting of the Minds”). These conversations cover topics given to students in advance as the talking points for this assemblage. Each student must speak for their philosopher in the first person and engage in debate with the other great minds in the room. This method has helped avoid the mile-wide-inch-deep curse inherent in introductory courses.  START HERE: http://plato.stanford.edu/

The Meeting of the Minds

Page 2: The capstone of our philosophy classes will be the project “The Meeting of the Minds.” Each student will select a philosopher and work independently to.

(Thee Slide PowerPoint Introduction) What was your “project”?

o What are you most noted for? Why are you a big deal?o How have people misunderstood you?o If you had a bumper sticker for your philosophy what would it say?

 

(Conversations with Great Minds . . . Bring your notes!) What is the goal of life?

o What constitutes a good life?o How does one know?

 

(MOM! Bring Notes!) What is the role or purpose for society?

o What are the rights and responsibilities of the individual to the society?o What is the goal of education?o Would you celebrate “Thanksgiving”?

  

(MOM! Bring Your Notes) How would your philosopher view Global Warming?

o Is it real? What should be done? Who should do it?

The Meeting of the Minds

Page 3: The capstone of our philosophy classes will be the project “The Meeting of the Minds.” Each student will select a philosopher and work independently to.

Three Slide Introduction

Page 4: The capstone of our philosophy classes will be the project “The Meeting of the Minds.” Each student will select a philosopher and work independently to.

Major Works

Environmental Social Reform

Walden“Walking”“The Succession of Forest Trees”  

“Civil Disobedience”“Slavery in Massachusetts”“A Plea for Captain John Brown”“Life Without Principle”

Major Concepts

WildernessÞ Hard to get toÞ Takes planning

WildnessÞ EverywhereÞ Attention – Awake, Aware

and Alive

Hearing That Different Drummer

Desperate Lives Deliberate Lives

Living in Society Living in Nature

Henry David ThoreauJuly 12, 1817 – May 6, 1862

was an American author and philosopher

Henry David Thoreau’s Influence on American Culture:

·Individualism·“Back to Nature”·Articulation of Abolitionists’ Positions·Civil Disobedience – Non-Violent Resistance·Conservationist·Cultural Criticism and Free Speech

Page 5: The capstone of our philosophy classes will be the project “The Meeting of the Minds.” Each student will select a philosopher and work independently to.

Because of his Walden ExperimentThoreau is often misunderstood as promoting isolation and anti-social views

Page 6: The capstone of our philosophy classes will be the project “The Meeting of the Minds.” Each student will select a philosopher and work independently to.

Only that day dawns to which we are awake.

Thoreau

Page 7: The capstone of our philosophy classes will be the project “The Meeting of the Minds.” Each student will select a philosopher and work independently to.
Page 8: The capstone of our philosophy classes will be the project “The Meeting of the Minds.” Each student will select a philosopher and work independently to.

http://users.ox.ac.uk/~worc0337/philosophers.html

Page 9: The capstone of our philosophy classes will be the project “The Meeting of the Minds.” Each student will select a philosopher and work independently to.

 1. Confucius: Philosophy as Interdependence, Christopher Rzonca.2. The Presocratics and Socrates: Philosophy as Rational Inquiry, Phil Washburn. 3. Plato: Philosophy as an Ideal, Phil Washburn. 4. Aristotle: Philosophy as Science, Phil Washburn. 5. Marcus Aurelius: Philosophy as Consolation, David J. Rosner. 6. St. Thomas Aquinas: Philosophy as the Handmaid of Theology, Ronald Rainey. 7. Descartes: Philosophy as the Search for Reasonableness, Michael Shenefelt. 8. Locke: Philosophy as Moderation, John Barna. 9. Hume: Philosophy as an Intellectual Game?, Angelo Juffras.10. Kant: Philosophy as Mapping the Mind, Ellen Freeberg.11. Marx: Philosophy as Changing the World, Ernie Alleva.12. Mill: Philosophy as Experiment, Maria Antonini.13. Nietzsche: Philosophy as Creating Values, Betty Weitz.14. James: Philosophy as Practice, Gail E. Linsenbard.15. Wittgenstein: Philosophy as Investigating Language, John J. Ross.16. Beauvoir: Philosophy as Freedom, Gail E. Linsenbard.