Wednesday, December 29, 2010

Happy New Big Revision Essay!!

I have finally put the final version of the very important revision essay plan on my website: you can find it and download it here:   http://www.mrbrodie.com/Philosophy/Units_%26_Themes.html just click on the 'Reason & Experience fish'.  Why not look at the other marvellous resources while you're there!



I know the essay is quite challenging in places, but it's really vital that you get to grips with it if you're going to have any chance of doing well in the exam. Use the text books and handouts - that's what they're for.


If you have any problems just email me. Please don't use the plan I've put on this blog below as the new one is different and better.

Sunday, December 12, 2010

The Big Revision Essay & Colby's happy Day!

I suppose I was tempting fate! Have unpleasant virus and conjunctivitis (hideous bloodshot weeping eye disease!)  At least Colby will be happy.

Here is the Big Revision Essay plan. Please try to make progress. I'm sure I'll be back very soon - hopefully tomorrow. Sorry the formatting is a bit weird; I'll sort out when I'm recovered.


You should be able to complete the Hume section:
Q.2, refers to the Hume we read on Friday and only requires a summary of what he says.
Q.4, You can do the bit about ʻinductionʼ, but will need to research the bit on ʻcausalityʼ:
there are many excellent explanations of Humeʼs ideas on the internet - including these:
http://science.jrank.org/pages/8538/Causality-Hume.html
http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/hume/

Outline & Discuss the development of epistemology from Plato through Descartes, Locke, Hume & Kant, to Wittgenstein and the ‘linguistic turn’.
You must use all the ‘tools’ at your disposal:
The text book, the blog, (which is now searchable!!) the website.

  • ·     Briefly explain Plato’s ‘cave’ metaphor and how it may be seen as shaping the development of epistemology.  

Think about and discuss/explain::::Philosophy:Web site Artwork Philosophy :arrow4 .jpg
1.   Plato’s notion that philosophers can gain knowledge of the ‘reality’ beyond appearance through thought – through introspection
2.   How this powerful metaphor that suggests a divide between appearance and reality, helps inspire the whole idea of epistemology.
3.   Remember the ‘Plato and the Slave boy’, from the ‘Meno’ where Socrates showed that mathematical understanding was ‘in’ the slave boy waiting to brought out.

  • ·     How does Descartes set about discovering some point of certainty. Why does he come to privilege the mental over the physical? 

Key Terms: ‘Cartesian doubt’ ‘Extreme scepticism’ ‘Cartesian dualism’,  ‘cogito ergo sum’ (I think therefore I am) Rationalist/rationalism
 Think about and discuss/explain:
1.     How Descartes tries to establish the existence of the mind, the physical world and god through a priori reasoning.
2.   His ideas about how we understand  the wax.
3.   The fact that he thinks his idea of God is innate.



·     What aspects of Descartes’ thought does Locke reject?
  Key Terms: Tabula rasa; empiricism; innatism;   
Think about and discuss/explain::::Philosophy:Web site Artwork Philosophy :arrow4 .jpg
1.   Locke’s definition of innate ideas and his  three arguments against them.
2.   Locke’s beliefs about the two ways we get ideas about the world: ‘sensation’ & ‘reflection’
3.   Why Locke’s notion of primary and secondary qualities is significant. (realist)
4.   What Locke said about words and why it is problematic (You  mention  Wittgenstein now, but he comes later so save some!)
 key quote: So words in their primary or immediate signification stand for nothing but the ideas in the mind of him that uses them’ Locke, (Essay Bk 3, Ch. 1 -3)

  •  How does Hume build on Locke’s Empiricist ideas?

Key Terms: empiricism; analytic; synthetic; innatism; a priori; a posteriori; necessary; contingent; scepticism
      Think about and discuss/explain::::Philosophy:Web site Artwork Philosophy :arrow4 .jpg
1.   Hume’s method for gaining clarity and precision in philosophical questions.
2.   Hume’s ideas about the ‘association of ideas’ – how we construct ideas (Section 3 – 4 Enquiry)
3.   Hume’s fork.  Include reference to ‘relations of Ideas’ and ‘matters of Fact’
4.   Hume’s ideas about induction (causality - cause and effect – the billiard balls)   
key quote: ‘we never really advance a step beyond ourselves’.

·     How Kant attempt to synthesis the empiricist and rationalist theories of knowledge? (epistemologies)
Key Terms: empiricism; rationalism;, noumenal; phenomenal; empiricism; rationalism a priori; a posteriori; analytic; synthetic;    
          Think about and discuss/explain:
1.   Kant’s copernican turn.
2.   Conceptual schemes ‘Schema’ : the categories: time, space, cause & effect
3.   Kant’s synthesis.
·     Briefly outline the problems that Locke and Hume’s empiricism seems to run into: (Holland) (again)

·     Explain how Wittgenstein’s ideas about language inform our understanding of the problems of empiricism.

Key Terms: language use, community of language users.
Think about and discuss/explain:
1.   Solipsism and the private language argument (Beetle in the box)
2.   Language as a conceptual scheme.
3.   The difference between Kant’s ‘schema’ and language as a conceptual scheme.


·      The ‘Linguistic turn’: Sapir, Davidson, Rorty etc. (use the last bit of the text book Ch. 1 & the Rorty extract)
Key Terms: representationalism; antirepresentationalism, realism; antirealism.
Think about and discuss/explain:
1.   the move away from attempts to understand the way thought or the mind connects with the world to attempts to understand the way language connects to the ‘world’

And finally …. what do you think?
(The more I think the less I know!)