T 9 Mill, Darwin, Kierkegaard, Marx-LH 24-27, FL 21-22, HWT 23-24. #4 Gracie, Marx's vision; Patrick S, Mill; Archie, Kierkegaard; Karter S, Darwin. #7 Vernon, Kierkegaard’s “Leap”; Sydney, Marim, Darwin's impact; Andrew, Marx's vision; Aaron, Mill. #8 Aalayis, Darwin; Joshua, Kierkegaard's "Leap of Faith"; Patrick, Karl Marx's Utopian Vision; Andrew L., Mill.
Th 11 Peirce & James, Nietzsche, Freud-LH 28-30, FL 23-24, HWT 25-26. #4 Prophetess, Nietzsche's Eternal Recurrence; Brandon, Nietzsche’s Ubermensch; Graham, Peirce; Kendall, Freud. #7 Austin, Nietzsche; Raegan, Freud; Caitlin, Wm James; #8 Matthew, Nietzsche's "Eternal Recurrence"; Sean, Nietzsche’s Ubermensch; Keylee, Nietzsche on morality; Rebecca, Freud
Mar 23 (Russell, Ayer, Sartre, de Beauvoir, Camus). Presentations continue #4 Chloe, Bertrand Russell's "Why I Am Not a Christian"; Jasmine, Russell’s Conquest of Happiness; Dylan, Sartre’s Existentialism; Ashley, Simone de Beauvoir's feminist existentialism #7 Morgan, Russell's Conquest of Happiness; Ash Warner, Sartre’s Existentialism; Kallie, Ayer; Porter, Camus #8 Pai Ning, "Why I am Not a Christian" by Bertrand Russell; Derica, Russell’s Conquest of Happiness; Amanual, A.J.Ayer; Ivan, Camus
Mar 25 (Wittgenstein, Arendt, Popper & Kuhn, Foot & Thomson) #4 Tyanna, Wittgenstein; Matah, Hannah Arendt; Alayna, Popper's & Kuhn's philosophy of science; Lisa, Foot's & Thompson's thought experiments #7 Ahmad, Wittgenstein; Karson, Hannah Arendt; Ryan, “deterritorialization”; Austin D., Foot's & Thompson's thought experiments #8 Kevin Pierce, Wittgenstein (or Socrates?); Liam, Hannah Arendt (or Cosmic Philosophy); Connor, Pascal’s Wager
Mar 30 (Rawls, Turing & Searle, Singer) #4 Jacob, Alan Turing and Artificial Intelligence; Ethan, Rawls's Justice; Kirolos, Peter Singer; Ernest, Emptiness; #7 Renee, John Rawls & racial inequality/justice; Chris H., Turing & AI; Haley, Peter Singer; Kendra, Gnostic Christians on evil #8 William, Rawls; Carter, Turing & AI; Kelvin, Hector Zagal & Aristotle
April 1 (FL 31-32, WGU -p.122) #4; Sheeven, "Wild" religion (see FL ch.31); Morgan K., Religion in America (see FL ch.32); Dylan, Natality and mortality (see WGU ch.2); Alexondra, Peripatetic philosophy (see Gymnasiums of the Mind) #7 & #8 If you missed your presentation date and would still like to present (and have been approved to do so), you may present your report today.
Section 8 - Darwin's Impact on Philosophy
ReplyDeleteCharles Darwin wrote 3 influential books: On the Origin of Species (1859), The Descent of Man and Selection in Relation to Sex (1871), and Expression of the Emotions in Man and Animals (1872) which made the public question if they were actually specially made by God. His conclusions were used by others to make ‘social darwinism’ which justified racist and morally bankrupt choices. Darwin used conclusions from his theory of emotions to contradict racist claims and some of the other early theories of emotions. His bold, scientifically backed claims became the mainstream way of thinking, and made theologies and philosophies that didn’t agree with his claims seem unrealistic.