Philosophy 132
Fall 2020
Number | Title | Instructor | Days/time | Room |
---|---|---|---|---|
132 | Philosophy of Mind | Martin | MWF 12-1 | Barrows 56 |
From the earliest point in our lives we mark a distinction between the social world of animate beings and the inanimate objects about us. The distinctions we make are fundamental to our ways of finding out about the world and responding to what we discover there. But do the distinctions we mark reflect ultimate differences in the nature of the world around us? These are the questions addressed in this course. We will be looking at some of the oldest and most fundamental questions about the mind: the nature of consciousness, knowledge of our own minds and of others’; physicalism and dualism; functionalism.
Previously taught: SU20D (Winning), SP20 (Lee), SU19D (Noë), FL18 (Martin), SU18A (Khatchirian), FL17 (Khatchirian), SU17D (Noë), SP17 (Khatchirian), SU16A (Winzeler), SP16 (Searle), SU15D (Noë), FL14 (Searle), SU14A (Noë), FL13 (Searle), SU13A (Skokowski), SP13 (Searle), FL12 (Martin), SU12D (Flanagan), SP12 (Searle), SU11A (Flanagan), SP11 (Searle), SU10A (Flanagan), SP10 (Searle), FL08 (Searle), FL07 (Martin), FL06 (Searle), SU06A (Khatchirian), SP06 (Noë), FL05 (Searle), SU05D (Vega), FL04 (Searle), SU04D (Skokowski).