PHIL 495: Philosophical Writing (Spring 2006)

The URL for this syllabus is http://aristotle.tamu.edu/~rasmith/Courses/PhilosophicalWriting/06a/

This is a course about writing philosophical prose. Since philosophical writing consists of philosophical arguments, we will spend much of our time studying how to analyze, criticize, and construct philosophical arguments, as well as how to put them into words in a clear way.

Writing-Intensive Course

This course qualifies as a Writing Intensive course for the purpose of the University's Core Curriculum.

Objectives

In this course, you should learn:

Texts

The texts for this class are:

Formal Work

  1. Four short essays (two pages each) on philosophical subjects: 40% (10% each)
  2. Bibliographic assignment: 20%
  3. Participation in classroom discussion: 10%
  4. Paper assignment for co-requisite course: 30%

Each essay will have an assigned topic related to the readings most recently covered in class. Each essay is due by the beginning of class on the date indicated in the schedule below. Since this is a course in philosohical writing, essays will be graded in part for spelling, grammar, punctuation, and writing clarity. Essays may be submitted either in printed form or via email attachment.

Co-Requisite

This course has a co-requisite: you must enroll in another 300- or 400-level philosophy course which has a term paper requirement at the same time. You must inform the instructor of your co-requisite course that you are using it as your co-requisite for PHIL 495. You will also need to submit to me a copy of the term paper you are writing for your co-requisite course. For the purposes of determining your grade in PHIL495, that essay will be graded on its language, organization, structure, and use of research strategies.

Here is a tentative list of the course sections which satisfy this co-requisite for the Spring semester 2006 (THIS IS SUBJECT TO REVISION):

CourseTitleDay and TimeInstructor
PHIL 305Philosophy of Natural ScienceTR 9:35-10:50Sansom
PHIL 330Philosophy of ArtMWF 1:50-2:40George
PHIL 331Philosophy of ReligionTR 11:10-12:25McCann
PHIL 332Social & Political Philosophy TR 2:20-3:35Darby
PHIL 410Classical PhilosophyMWF 8:00-8:50Austin
PHIL 416Rec. British-American Phil. MW 4:10-5:25 PMHand
PHIL 489Sp. Topics: Animal Ethics and Sci.MW 12:30-1:45Varner

If you are not enrolled in one of these courses, you will not be able to continue in this course. If you are enrolled in more than one, you'll need to let me know at the beginning of the semester which one you will be using as your co-requisite course.

Schedule

The schedule below is subject to change to accommodate unforeseen problems. I reserve the right to drop things from the schedule or slow down the pace if it appears to me that the class is having trouble keeping up with the material. All changes will be announced in class as well as appearing here. In the schedule, "Vaughn" and "Graybosch" denote respectively the textbooks by those authors, as listed above.

DateSubjectReadingWork Due
Jan. 23: Reading philosphy
Jan. 30: Reading philosophical arguments Vaughn 1-2, Graybosch 8
Feb. 6: Writing philosophical arguments Vaughn 3, Graybosch 1-2
Feb. 13: Defending a thesis Vaughn 4 Short Essay 1
Feb. 20: Using the library for research Graybosch 3,5 WE WILL MEET IN EVANS LIBRARY, ROOM 204F INSTEAD OF THE REGULAR CLASSROOM.
Feb. 27: More about research Graybosch 5, Vaughn 6 Library Assignment
Mar. 6: What a valid argument is Graybosch 8
Mar. 13-17 SPRING BREAK
Mar. 20: Taking a philosophical position Graybosch 10 Short Essay 2
Mar. 27: What a fallacy is Vaughn 5, Graybosch 9
Apr. 3: History of philosophy papers Graybosch 11
Apr. 10: Acknowledging your sources Graybosch 7, Vaughn 6 Short Essay 3
Apr. 17: Working through a philosophical debate
Apr. 24: Writing coherently and clearly Vaugnn 7-8, Graybosch 2 Short Essay 4 Draft of co-requisite course paper
May 1: Dead day
May 8: Final version of co-requisite paper due by 4:00

Academic Integrity Statement

The Aggie Honor Code:

"An Aggie does not lie, cheat, or steal or tolerate those who do."

Effective September 1, 2004, Texas A&M University has an Honor Code that defines campus policy on academic integrity and academic misconduct. The Aggie Honor System is charged with the enforcement of this Code. Students should be aware that the Aggie Honor System has the power to impose punishments for academic misconduct. For information on the Aggie Honor System, see http://www.tamu.edu/aggiehonor; information of particular concern to students, including definitions of types of academic misconduct, may be found at http://www.tamu.edu/aggiehonor/studentresources.php.

It will be my policy in this course to include the following statement on all examinations and request students to sign it:

 "On my honor, as an Aggie, I have neither given nor received unauthorized aid on this academic work."

________________________________

Signature of student 

Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) Policy Statement

The Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) is a federal antidiscrimination statute that provides comprehensive civil rights protection for persons with disabilities. Among other things, this legislation requires that all students with disabilities be guaranteed a learning environment that provides for reasonable accomodation of their disabilities. If you believe you have a disability requiring an accomodation, please contact the Department of Student Life, Services for Students with Disabilities in Room 118 of Cain Hall, on the Internet at http://studentlife.tamu.edu/ssd/, or by telephone at 979-845-1637.

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