Majors Seminar Class Notes
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First Day Notes:
- Welcome: introductions
- Goals -- becoming better philosophers, developing philosophical voice, improving expression
- About the course
- Previous versions and influences -- problems of method and style in philosophy.
- Philosophy and creative writing - parallels bt writers' workshop classes and seminars
- Applied philosophy -
- Philosophy as personal vocation -
- Structure of this course
- Websites in the course: alfino.org --> courses.alfino.org & wiki.gonzaga.edu/faculty/alfino
- fill out Roster Information
- Note on wiki editing
- Course Resources
- Break
- Philosophical ice breaker
- The Writing & Performing Philosopher
- Link to some of my current interests: [1]
SEP 6
1. Writing and Philosophy
- Let's thinking about Stafford's view of writing as discovery in relation to both the NYT piece and the Dillard piece. How do these two pieces engage philosophy?
2. Discussion of Lakoff and Johnson chapter, "How Philosophical Theories Work"
- This reading gives us an introduction to some of the "embodied consciouness" literature from it's early days. We'll track both the view and it's rhetoric. Note the rhetoric of the sample chapter as well and the reviewers.
Break
3. Philosophical Method, Progress in Philosophy, and Defining Philosophy
- We'll do some philosophy together here by outlining and evaluating some positions on these three topics and their interrelationships.
- Look at some list of philosophical methods:
- Do philosophers' have unique methods, unique goals, or neither?
- What does progress mean for a discipline or form of inquiry? (ask parallel questions: Has there been progress in physics? In the novel? In film?
4. Browsing in Philosophy
- A variety of search tools can help you find interests, pursue them, and join active philosophical communities.
SEP 13
Misc notes
- schedule student meetings
- NIC conference: [2]
Writing, Seeing, Highlighting Experience, Speculating
- Overbye, Stafford, Dillard
Method: Embodied Mind, Early Statement
- Lakoff and Johnson, chapters 1 and 24, reviews.
- Baggini and Fosl - TOC
Dennett & Crawford
Dennett
- Fox and Grapes: Taking a few steps back, the fox jumped and just missed the hanging grapes. Again the fox took a few paces back and tried to reach them but still failed. Finally, giving up, the fox turned up his nose and said, "They're probably sour anyway," and proceeded to walk away. It's easy to despise what you cannot have.
- Chinese Room argument. [3]
Crawford
SEP 20
Crawford, Chapter 1, The Jig, the Nudge, and the Local Ecology
- jigs -- constrain environments, reduce degrees of freedom, embody thought.
- The Intelligent Use of Space [4]
- Andy Clark and embodied / extended cognition -- 34-35 Could this apply to culture and morality?
- Nudge -- Sunstein & Thaler
- What's the diff between being nudged and using your own jig? not saying autonomy is nec. DIY.
- works with some critical theses at 40-41
Crawford, Chapter 2, Embodied Perception
- Hockey player and stick -- Blind person's stick -- Polanyi and Merleau Ponty.
- Perceiving as a form of action. Kitten experiment, 49
- Motorcycles -- the intelligence you need to safely ride a motorcycle has to be cultivated by doing it. social knowledge also, 58. at 61, discussion of learning from close calls reminds me of Dennett; need for criticism 63. states of mind in motorcycling -- "alert watchfulness without meddling"
- theses at end 67: self into relation of fit with world, embodied perception challenges idea that representation comes first. reread 67-68 to see where he's going. Typical forms of abstraction in ethics seem suspect to Crawford in light of embodied cognition. "ethics of attention" "alive to the concrete particularity of others" (?!) wants to get to the technological concept of virtual reality and show it's implicit moral ideal.
Dennett, Intuition Pumps, Chapter 2 A Dozen General Thinking Tools
- 1. Making Mistakes -- History of philosophy important for the mistakes. Also, important to intentionally make mistakes! evolution as trial and error. how natural selection handles mistakes. 22. Importance of examining the wreckage. Evolutionary "mistakes" disappear.... no ancestors. Credit Assignment Problem 25 [5]
- 2. Reductio ad absurdum
- 3. Rapoport's Rules
- 4. Sturgeon's Law 90% of Everything is Crap
- 5. Occam's Razor
- 6. Occam's Broom
SEP 27
News:
- Philosophy (argument) in everyday life: NPR story with Ga. voters. [6]
OCT 4
Crawford, Chapter 5, "Autism as a Design"
- Leap Frog Learning Table
- Natasha Dow Schull, "Addiction by Design: Machine Gambling in Las Vegas"
- exposition of book and comparision with previous examples of interaction with machines
- 92: connection with autism
- delvering goods and services vs. creating experiences; affective capitalism
- 95ff: details from Schull
- [interesting parallell between processed food products and gambling addiction by design.]
- Argument summary at the end: Doesn't just want to complain about how slot machines (and related phen.) compromise autonomy, but also to raise the question of what sort of autonomy should we want. What are healthy "ecologies of attention"?
Writing Prompts for 1st Writing
- Write 3-5 pages on a philosophical topic of your choice. You are welcome to write an academic piece, but you could also experiement with creative fiction or creative non-fiction. Here are a couple of specific choices:
- Reconstruct and critically evaluate the argument (through Chapter 5) in Crawford, "The World Beyond Your Head". Are the problems Crawford is identifying as serious as he thinks they are? Do they point toward a problem with our historic model of autonomy?
- Use the discussions in Crawford of attention and/or skill as a starting point to write a personal philosophical essay in which you reflect on the challenge of maintaining attention and focus in a world characterized by the commercialization of the "attentional commons". The essay may discover a personal insight about our relationship to technology (perhaps a response you have made or want to make to this relationship) or direct the focus to a critical assessment of the ways in which contemporary culture (and capitalism) attempt to manage our attention and expectations.
OCT 11
OCT 18
OCT 25
NOV 1
NOV 8
NOV 15
NOV 17
NOV 22
- Thanksgiving Week: Optional Meeting Time