PHI 200

Philosophy and the Modern Mind

An introduction to modern philosophy, from the Renaissance to the present, with careful study of works by Descartes, Hume, Kant, and others. Emphasis is placed upon the complex relations of philosophy to the development of modern science, the social and political history of the West, and man's continuing attempt to achieve a satisfactory worldview. Two lectures, one precept.

PHI 201

Introductory Logic

This course provides an introduction to symbolic logic, which studies the principles of valid reasoning from an abstract point of view--paying attention to the form of valid arguments rather than their subject matter. Covers the basic concepts of symbolic logic: validity, logical truth, truth-functional and quantificational inference, formal languages and formal systems, axiomatic and deductive proof procedures. One lecture and one precept, 80 minutes each.

PHI 202/CHV 202

Introduction to Moral Philosophy

Can questions about what is right or wrong have real answers independent of any sort of divine authority? Are there moral principles that any rational person must recognize, or is morality essentially an expression of our feelings or a product of our culture? Are we morally required to do our part in making the world as good as it can be, or does morality give us permission to pursue our own peculiar enthusiasms and interests? What should we do about deception, unwanted pregnancies, and world hunger? This course will provide an overview of these and other issues in moral philosophy. Two lectures, one precept.

PHI 203

Introduction to Metaphysics and Epistemology

An introduction to some of the central questions of pure philosophy through their treatment by traditional and contemporary writers: Questions concerning mind and matter; causation and free will; space and time; meaning, truth, and reality; knowledge, perception, belief, and thought. Two lectures, one preceptorial.

PHI 204

Introduction to the Philosophy of Science

An inquiry into the form and function of concepts, laws, and theories, and into the character of explanation and prediction, in the natural and the social sciences; and an examination of some philosophical problems concerning scientific method and scientific knowledge. Two lectures, one precept.

PHI 205/CLA 205/HLS 208

Introduction to Ancient Greek and Roman Philosophy

Designed to introduce the student to the Greek contribution to the philosophical and scientific ideas of the Western world through study of works of Plato, Aristotle, Epicurus, and Lucretius in English translation. Topics in moral and political philosophy, as well as epistemology and metaphysics, will be included. Attention will be focused on the quality of the arguments presented by the philosophers. Two lectures, one precept.

REL 264/CHV 264/PHI 264

Religion and Reason

An examination of the most influential theoretical, pragmatic, and moral arguments regarding the existence and nature of God (or the gods). Along the way, we consider debates about whether we can talk or think coherently about transcendent beings like God, and about whether religious experience, miracles, and the afterlife are really possible. Finally, we consider whether religious commitment might be rationally acceptable without proof or evidence, and whether the real-world fact of religious diversity has practical or philosophical implications. Course readings will be taken from both historical and contemporary sources.

AAS 201/PHI 291

African American Studies and the Black Intellectual Tradition

This course introduces students to the field of African American Studies through an examination of the complex experiences, both past and present, of Americans of African descent. Through a multidisciplinary perspective, it reveals the complicated ways we come to know and live race in the United States. Students engage classic texts in the field. All of which are framed by a concern with epistemologies of resistance and of ignorance that offer insight into African American thought and practice. AAS Subfield: AACL

PHI 300/HLS 300

Plato and His Predecessors

Readings in translation from pre-Socratic philosophers and from Plato's dialogues, to provide a broad history of Greek philosophy through Plato. Topics covered will include: Socrates's method of dialectic, his conceptions of moral virtue and human knowledge; Plato's theory of knowledge, metaphysics, and moral and political philosophy. Two lectures, one precept.

PHI 301/CLA 303/HLS 302

Aristotle and His Successors

Aristotle's most important contributions in the areas of logic, scientific method, philosophy of nature, metaphysics, psychology, ethics, and politics. Several of his major works will be read in translation. Aristotle's successors in the Greco-Roman period will be studied briefly. Two lectures, one precept.

PHI 302

British Empiricism

A critical study of the metaphysical and epistemological doctrines of Locke, Berkeley, and Hume. Two lectures, one precept.

PHI 303/ECS 306

Descartes, Spinoza, and Leibniz

Readings in continental philosophy of the early modern period, with intensive study of the works of Descartes, Spinoza, and Leibniz. Topics to be specially considered include: Knowledge, understanding, and sense-perception; existence and necessity; the nature of the self and its relation to the physical world. Two 90-minute classes.

PHI 304

Topics in Kant's Philosophy

Topics in Kant's Philosophy: Ethical Thought offers an introduction to Kant's central ethical doctrines. Topics will include Kant's moral psychology and the 'good will'; imperatives and maxims; formulations of the moral law; humanity as an end in itself; the radical evil in human nature; the deduction of morality; the doctrine of right and the doctrine of virtue.

PHI 306/COM 393

Nietzsche

An examination of various issues raised in, and by, Nietzsche's writings. Apart from discussing views like the eternal recurrence, the overman, and the will to power, this course considers Nietzsche's ambiguous relationship with philosophy, the literary status of his work, and his influence on contemporary thought. Prerequisite: one philosophy course or equivalent preparation in the history of modern thought or literature. Two lectures, one precept.

PHI 307/CHV 311

Systematic Ethics

A study of important ethical theories with special reference to the problem of the objectivity of morality and to the relation between moral reasoning and reasoning about other subjects. Two lectures, one precept.

PHI 309/CHV 309/HUM 309

Political Philosophy

A systematic study of problems and concepts connected with political institutions: sovereignty, law, liberty, and political obligation. Topics may include representation, citizenship, power and authority, revolution, civil disobedience, totalitarianism, and legal and political rights. Two lectures, one precept.

PHI 311

Personal Identity

This course will focus on the conditions for personal identity over time, with implications for the beginning and end of life. Students will investigate what it is rational to care about in survival or continued existence, and whether that should change if it is discovered either that there is no human soul, or there is no self or subject behind our various conscious acts.

PHI 312

Computability and Logic

A development of logic from the mathematical viewpoint, including the elements of computability theory through Turing's theorem on the existence of a universal machine, plus the basic results of metalogic (the Gödel completeness and Löwenheim-Skolem and compactness theorems) through the Gödel incompleteness theorems.

PHI 313

Theory of Knowledge

A critical study of important concepts and problems involved in the characterization, analysis, and appraisal of certain types of human knowledge. Such topics as sense perception, knowledge and belief, necessity, memory, and truth will be treated. Writings of contemporary analytic philosophers will be read and discussed. Two lectures, one precept.

PHI 314

Philosophy of Mathematics

A study of the nature of mathematics based on a logical and philosophical examination of its fundamental concepts and methods. Two lectures, one preceptorial. Some previous work in mathematics or logic at the college level is highly desirable, but no one particular branch of mathematics is presupposed in the course.

PHI 315/CGS 315/CHV 315

Philosophy of Mind

Investigation of some of the following (or similar) topics: the mind-body problem, personal identity, the unity of consciousness, the unconscious, the problem of other minds, action, intention, and the will. Readings primarily from recent sources. Two lectures, one precept.

PHI 317

Philosophy of Language

An examination of the nature of language through the study of such topics as truth, reference, meaning, linguistic structure, how language differs from other symbol systems, relations between thought and language and language and the world, the use of language, and the relevance of theories concerning these to selected philosophical issues. Two 90-min. classes.

PHI 318

Metaphysics

An intensive treatment of some of the central problems of metaphysics, such as substance, universals, space and time, causality, and freedom of the will. One 3-hour seminar.

PHI 319/CHV 319

Normative Ethics

A detailed examination of different theories concerning how we should live our lives. Special emphasis will be placed on the conflict between consequentialist theories (for example, utilitarianism) and nonconsequentialist theories (for example, common sense morality). Two lectures, one precept.

PHI 320

Philosophy and Literature

A critical study of works of literature in conjunction with philosophical essays, concentrating on two or three philosophical themes, such as the will, self-identity, self-deception, freedom, and time. Two lectures, one precept.

PHI 321

Philosophy of Science

An intensive examination of selected problems in the methodological and philosophical foundations of the sciences. Topics covered may include scientific explanation, the role of theories in science, and probability and induction. Two 90-minute classes.

PHI 322/CGS 322

Philosophy of the Cognitive Sciences

An examination of philosophical problems arising out of the scientific study of cognition. Possible topics include methodological issues in the cognitive sciences; the nature of theories of reasoning, perception, memory, and language; and the philosophical implications of such theories. Two lectures, one precept.

PHI 323/MAT 306

Set Theory

An introduction to axiomatic set theory, up to the proof of the consistency of the axiom of choice. Prerequisite: some previous study of logic or mathematical maturity. Two 80-minute classes.

PHI 325

Philosophy of Religion

Critical discussion of religious and antireligious interpretations of experience and the world, the grounds and nature of religious beliefs, and of a variety of theistic and atheistic arguments. Readings from contemporary analytical philosophy of religion, and from historical sources in the Western tradition. Two 90-min. seminars.

PHI 326/COM 363/HUM 326

Philosophy of Art

An examination of concepts involved in the interpretation and evaluation of works of art. Emphasis will be placed on sensuous quality, structure, and expression as aesthetic categories. Illustrative material from music, painting, and literature. Two lectures, one precept.

PHI 327

Philosophy of Physics

A discussion of philosophical problems raised by modern physics. Topics will be chosen from the philosophy of relativity theory or more often, quantum mechanics. Two lectures, one precept.

PHI 332/ECS 305

Early Modern Philosophy

Detailed study of important concerns shared by some modern pre-Kantian philosophers of different schools. Topics may include identity and distinctness, the theory of ideas, substance, the mind/body problem, time, and causation. Philosophers may include Descartes, Spinoza, Hobbes, Hume, or others. One three-hour seminar.

PHI 333

Recent Continental Philosophy

Analysis of some representative 20th-century works drawn from the French and German traditions. The specific content of the course will vary from year to year, but in each case there will be some attempt to contrast differing philosophical approaches. Figures to be treated might include Sartre, Gadamer, Habermas, and Foucault. Two lectures, one precept.

PHI 335/CHV 335/HLS 338

Greek Ethical Theory

The development of moral philosophy in Greece. Intensive study of the moral theories of such philosophers as Socrates, Plato, Aristotle, Epicurus, the early Stoics, and Sextus Empiricus. Two 90-minute classes.

PHI 337

Relativism

An exploration of various kinds of relativism: cultural, conceptual, epistemic, and moral, considering what structure if any different relativisms have in common, and whether relativism in any of the domains mentioned is plausible. One 3-hour seminar.

PHI 338

Philosophical Analysis from 1900 to 1950

An introduction to classics of philosophical analysis from the first half of the 20th century. Topics include early paradigms of Moore and Russell, logical atomism in Russell and early Wittgenstein, and logical positivism. Changes are traced both in metaphysical, epistemological, and ethical views and in analysis as a philosophical method. Two lectures, one precept.

PHI 340

Non-Classical Logics

An introduction to modal, intuitionistic, and other extensions of and alternatives to classical logic, with consideration of philosophical motivations and applications. Prerequisite: PHI 201 or instructor's permission. Two 90-minute classes.

PHI 352/CGS 352

Philosophy of Bias: Psychology, Epistemology, and Ethics of Stereotypes

Designed to introduce advanced students to empirical results in the psychology of group-based bias, to analyze these results along several philosophically important dimensions. We will discuss approaches to the semantics of generic statements, such as 'dogs bark', and consider whether these approaches extend to linguistic expressions of stereotypes, such as 'women are nurturing.' We will explore the psychological nature of stereotypes, as informed by both empirical findings and philosophical insights. The students will consider the epistemic import of stereotypes. Finally, we will consider several ethical views of stereotypes.

POL 301/CLA 301/HLS 303/PHI 353

Political Theory, Athens to Augustine

A study of the fundamental questions of political theory as framed in context of the institutions and writings of ancient Greek and Roman thinkers from the classical period into late antiquity and the spread of Christianity in Rome. We will canvass the meaning of justice in Plato's "Republic", the definition of the citizen in Aristotle's "Politics", to Cicero's reflections on the purpose of a commonwealth, and Augustine's challenge to those reflections and to the primacy of political life at all in light of divine purposes. Through classic texts, we explore basic questions of constitutional ethics and politics. Two lectures, one preceptorial.

POL 306/CHV 306/PHI 360

Democratic Theory

A study of the intellectual foundations of the modern democratic state. Topics include the meaning and justification of democracy, the rationality of voting, political representation, property rights, civil disobedience, and education. Two lectures, one preceptorial.

PHI 380/CHV 380

Explaining Values

The course will consider what types of explanations are possible of ordinary moral views. Students will look at philosophical, scientific, and historical explanations and consider how plausible they are, what sort of evidence might be relevant to them, and what their normative implications might be. Two lectures, one precept.

PHI 383/CHV 383

Freedom and Responsibility

An introduction to the free will problem and its implications for ethics and the law.

PHI 384

Philosophy of Law

Conceptual and moral problems in the foundations of law. Topics may include: morality and criminal justice; the justification of punishment; moral and economic problems in private law (torts and contracts); fundamental rights and constitutional interpretation. Two lectures, one precept.

CHV 310/PHI 385

Practical Ethics

The course will challenge students to examine their life from an ethical perspective. Should altruism guide our life? What is effective altruism? Should we share our wealth with people who will otherwise die from poverty-related causes? How should we live and act in an era in which human activity is changing the planet's climate? What ethical considerations are raised by eating meat and other animal products? We will also consider the Supreme Court's decision on abortion. Students will be encouraged to question their ethical beliefs and explore how reason and argument can play a role in everyday ethical decision-making.

CLA 338/HLS 368/PHI 389

Topics in Classical Thought

The ancients were fascinated by dreams and debated a variety of views about the nature, origin, and function of dreams. Are dreams divine messages about the future, our souls' indications of impending diseases, or just distorted versions of earlier thoughts? Do dreams have meaning and if so, how can we understand them? We will explore ancient approaches to dreams and their enigmas in literature and philosophy, medical texts, and religious practices. Although our focus will be on Greek and Roman texts, we will also pay attention to earlier Near Eastern sources as well as modern dream theories from Freud to scientific dream research.

PHI 498

Senior Thesis I (Year-Long)

The philosophy department senior thesis (498-499) is a year-long project in which students undertake a substantial project of philosophical research under the supervision of a Princeton faculty member. Skills to be developed over the course of the senior thesis project include: how to manage time on a year-long project, how to locate tractable specific questions within a larger philosophical subject area, how to summarize effectively the current state of debate on an issue, how to situate a specific philosophical question in a larger context, and how to better write in a way that exhibits virtues including clarity, accuracy, and thoroughness.

PHI 499

Senior Thesis II (Year-Long)

The philosophy department senior thesis (498-499) is a year-long project in which students undertake a substantial project of philosophical research under the supervision of a Princeton faculty member. Skills to be developed over the course of the senior thesis project include: how to manage time on a year-long project, how to locate tractable specific questions within a larger philosophical subject area, how to summarize effectively the current state of debate on an issue, how to situate a specific philosophical question in a larger context, and how to better write in a way that exhibits virtues including clarity, accuracy, and thoroughness.