Philosophy 25B
Spring 2007
Number | Title | Instructor | Days/time | Room |
---|---|---|---|---|
25B | Modern Philosophy | Ginsborg | MWF 11-12 | 145 Dwinelle |
The course will cover some of the main metaphysical and epistemological views of five important early modern philosophers: Descartes, Spinoza, Berkeley, Hume and Kant. We will be concerned with their views on the existence of God, on the nature of the human mind and its relation to the body, on the possibility of knowledge about the external world, on the nature of bodies, on causation and induction, and on other related topics. We will try to understand these views in the context of the scientific developments of the time, in particular that of the “new science” which supplanted the Aristotelian view of nature in the seventeenth century. But we will also be concerned with whether or not these views are plausible in their own right. The course will require close reading of the texts, and careful analysis and evaluation of the philosophical arguments presented in them.
Previously taught: SU06D (Smalligan), SP06 (Ginsborg), SU05D (Beattie), SU05A (Smith), SP05 (McCann), SU04D (Berger), SU04A (Crockett), SP04 (Ginsborg).