Course Syllabus
PHIL 1301 INTRO TO PHILOSOPHY
Galveston College
FALL 2016 INTERNET
Instructor: Deborah Lariviere
Email: dlarivie@gc.edu
Phone: 409-944-1551
Alternate phone and email: 512.484.6159 debriver@gmail.com
Approved Textbook: The Great Conversation, Norman Melchert. Oxford University Press. ISBN: 9780199999651. (7th edition)
(3-0) Credit: 3
This is an introductory philosophy course emphasizing various approaches to the study and organization of the world and its phenomena. We will survey many philosophical systems, and how thinkers have historically attempted to solve some of the most important problems regarding society, life, liberty, and humanity.
Procedure: This course is offered as an internet course. We will combine an examination of major historical figures and their methods with an equal portion of analyzing and writing on the topics. The assignment questions are written to make connections between the requisite textbook readings, Canvas lecture notes (in “Pages”), and ideas that might arise concerning a particular topic. However, you may draw upon personal experience when composing responses to any assignment prompts. The course material will be accessible at Canvas, Galveston College’s Learning Management System. Logon at www.gc.edu and click on the e-learning link at the top of the Galveston College home page. As soon as you are registered for the course and the course actually begins, you should be able to access course materials. After logging in, click on the course link and go to its home page. You will find links to assignments, “Pages” lectures to accompany the readings for the course, and quizzes. It is required that you have a textbook.
Assignments: Written assignments are short written compositions that involve responses to the readings. These are private responses between you and your instructor. You may be prompted to respond to the readings in various ways and to make connections between the text and the films used for the course. Please strictly limit yourself to the length requirements for any written assignment. This will challenge you to sharpen your writing efficiency, and will allow the instructor to better manage her time in grading your submissions.
Essay: Two essay assignments are required for the course, and will be identified as "Assignment". If you quote from sources, document your source, whether it is the primary source (the textbook) or a secondary source. Do not borrow material from study guides, Wikipedia, Sparknotes or other such online sources. Do your own thinking. Proofread your essay for errors in grammar, spelling and punctuation.
Quizzes: Some chapters will contain an assessment which is designed to ensure that one has completed the assigned reading. The assessment will cover the most important ideas presented in the chapter.
Final Exam: The final exam will be cumulative and will include questions concerning material covered in the course. There will be a list of Review Questions to help you prepare for the final exam.
Evaluation Criteria:
25 percent: Discussion/Assignments
20 percent: Quizzes
20 percent: Essays
35 percent: Final exam
Late Work Policy: It is expected that work will be completed in a timely manner, and submitted by the due dates. Late work will be accepted, but penalized, save for documentable extenuating circumstances. Each assignment will be due on Sunday by 9pm. Some assignments might be graded solely on the basis of having been submitted on time, meaning that IF the assignment was turned in on time, THEN the submission receives a “100” score. These assignments will not be given feedback by the instructor, and late submissions will be graded “as-is”, will receive a penalty deduction in points, and there will be no rewrite offered. The student will not know ahead of time which assignments will be graded on timely submission alone, so it’s strongly suggested that one turn in all assignments on time.
Another benefit of turning work in on-time is that re-writes are offered in order to achieve a higher score. If the work is late, then it will be graded as-is.
Plagiarism policy: Any evidence of plagiarism is ground for an “F” on the assignment and/or in the course. See the Galveston College Student Handbook for additional information.
Course Schedule: The course begins August 29th and ends Dec 14th. The final exam must be completed by 11:59pm on Wednesday, Dec 14th.
Assignment Due Dates Please make sure that your assignments are turned in according to the following schedule. You may work ahead, but you must have work turned in by the following deadlines:
Unit #1 Intro / False Dichotomy & Fallacy ... due Aug 31st
Unit #2 QUIZ Before Philosophy due Sep 4th
Unit #3 Assignment Pre-Socratics …...…... due Sep 11th
Unit #4 QUIZ Socrates due Sep 18th
Unit #5 QUIZ Plato ………….……..….…...… due Sep 25th
Unit #6 Assignment Aristotle due Oct 2nd
Unit #7 Quiz Epicureans, Stoics, Skeptics... due Oct 9th
Unit #8 ESSAY Anselm due Oct 16th
Unit #9 QUIZ Descartes ………………...….…due Oct 23rd
Unit #10 Assignment Empiricists due Oct 30th
Unit #11 QUIZ Hume…........................…….…due Nov 6th
Unit #12 ESSAY Trial & Death of Socrates…..due Nov 13th
Unit #13 QUIZ Kant…..............................……..due Nov 20th
Unit #14 QUIZ Aristotelian "Telos"…..................due Nov 30th
Unit #15…. REVIEW for Final Exam & any final rewrites (Nov 30th through Dec 10th)
FINAL EXAM …. Available online between Dec11th (midnight) – Dec14th (11:59pm)
Course Summary:
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