The Pursuit of Wonder: Tools for Philosophical Literacy
This philosophy course offers a broad overview of central philosophical issues and their application to everyday life. Learn to construct well-crafted arguments, critically analyze philosophical topics in art and media, and develop tools for philosophical analysis. By the end of the course, you will be able to recognize and evaluate arguments, engage with core philosophical problems, and recognize philosophical issues in media and culture. Perfect for anyone interested in gaining a broad overview of philosophy’s central themes.
What you’ll learn
- Recognize central philosophical issues and their application to everyday life.
- Examine differing responses to basic philosophical issues such as the relationship between causality and free will, mind and body, knowledge and experience.
- Learn to construct your own well-crafted arguments.
- Engage philosophical topics critically as they occur in art, media, and conversation.
- Develop critical tools for philosophical analysis
This course is about broadening the scope of how we think about ourselves, others, and the world. As Plato has Socrates state at Theatetus 155d, “…wonder is the feeling of a philosopher, and philosophy begins in wonder”. If you are unsatisfied with easy answers to difficult questions, feel a real sense of awe in the face of the depth of human experience, and seek better ways to clarify, articulate, and effectively communicate your point of view, then this course is for you. In this course we develop the tools and requisite philosophical framing that will enable you to engage deeply and critically with the questions of philosophy. In this course you will become acquainted with several of the most foundational issues in contemporary philosophy. Do note that this is an introductory course and as such we will be providing a high level view of the various topics and themes of philosophy.
By the end of this course you will be able to:
Recognize and evaluate arguments using the tools of deductive and inductive logic
construct and defend compelling arguments of your own
Recognize core philosophical problems in epistemology, metaphysics, and value-theory, and potential responses to them
Recognize and engage philosophical issues as they show up in media and culture
Who this course is for:
- Anyone interested in gaining a broad overview of some of the central themes of philosophy
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