Philosophy 100 - Introduction To Philosophy
Fall
2020
02
4.00
Timothy Charles Juvshik
TU TH 11:30AM 12:45PM
UMass Amherst
64669
Fully Remote Class
tjuvshik@umass.edu
The goals of this course are two-fold: to develop and hone students' analytical skills and to look at a number of the central issues in philosophy. Crucial to doing and understanding philosophy is an ability to present, explain, and evaluate arguments; throughout the course we will refine these abilities. By way of an introduction to a number of core philosophical issues we will take an in-depth look at one of the greatest works of philosophy of all time, Descartes's Meditations on First Philosophy. In it we will encounter skeptical arguments, arguments for the existence of God, and an argument for mind-body dualism. We will grapple with these issues in addition to questions about free will and ethics. (Gen. Ed. AL)
Open to first-year students in the Scientific Thinking RAP in Knowlton Hall. Students in Scientific Thinking RAP in Knowlton Hall will enroll together in "Introduction to Philosophy" (Philosophy 100). Scientific practice is aimed at expanding our understanding of the world, both of what is actual and what is possible. It is also aimed at expanding our control over the natural world, over ourselves, and over each other. In this class we will try to get a better grip on what scientific thinking is and what it should be.
See https://www.umass.edu/rap/scientific-thinking-rap
See https://www.umass.edu/rap/scientific-thinking-rap