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Friday, September 5, 2025

Midterm report presentations - Fall '25

Select a topic related to the day's scheduled assigned reading OR to one of the RECOMMENDED texts #1-8 on reserve in the library, below* (focus on the first couple of chapters, if you wish you can return to the rest of it for your final report presentation later):

Plan to speak for about ten minutes, then give us a discussion question or two and direct the discussion. We'll do two presentations per class. If you can find a suitable way to incorporate a library-produced podcast and/or video into your report presentation (as we learned about on our Library Day tour), you're welcome to do so.

Indicate your date & topic preferences in the comments space below. First come, first served.

SEP

18 Montaigne, Descartes, & Pascal-LHP 11-12. Weiner 14. Rec: FL 13-14. HWT 14-15.

  1. (Name & topic)
  2. (Name & topic)

23 Spinoza, Locke, & Reid-LHP 13-14. Rec: FL 15-16. HWT 16-17.

  1. (Name & topic)
  2. (Name & topic)

25 Berkeley, Leibniz, Hume, & Rousseau-LHP 15-18. Weiner 3. Rec: FL 17-18. HWT 18-19.

  1. (Name & topic)
  2. (Name & topic)

30 Kant, Bentham, Hegel, Schopenhauer-LHP 19-23. Weiner 5. Rec: FL 19-20. HWT 20-22.

  1. (Name & topic)
  2. (Name & topic)

OCT

2 Mill, Darwin, Kierkegaard, Marx-LHP 24-27. Rec: FL 21-22. HWT 23-24.

  1. (Name & topic)
  2. (Name & topic)

7 Peirce & James, Nietzsche, Freud-LHP 28-30. Weiner 11. Rec: FL 23-24. HWT 25-26.

  1. (Name & topic)
  2. (Name & topic)

9 Exam 1.

Fall Break


16 Russell, Ayer, Sartre, de Beauvoir, Camus-LHP 31-33. Weiner 13. Rec: FL 25-26. HWT 27-28.

  1. (Name & topic)
  2. (Name & topic)

21 Wittgenstein, Arendt, Popper & Kuhn, Foot & Thomson-LHP 34-37, Rec: FL 27-28.

  1. (Name & topic)
  2. (Name & topic)

23 Rawls, Turing & Searle, Singer-LHP 38-40. WGU Introduction-p.35. Rec: FL 29-32.

  1. (Name & topic)
  2. (Name & topic)

28 WGU -p.79 Rec: FL 33-34.

  1. (Name & topic)
  2. (Name & topic)

*
  • How the World Thinks (HWT) by Julian Baggini - because Western philosophy is not the whole  story.
  • Fantasyland: How America Went Haywire, a 500-Year History by Kurt Andersen (FL) - because the contemporary crisis of American democracy is rooted in our history.
  • How to Think Like Socrates, by Donald J. Robertson - because he was, as the Monty Python song says, "a lovely little thinker..."
  • How to Think Like Marcus Aurelius, by Donald J. Robertson - because he was a wise stoic and emperor, as close to a Philosopher-King as we've had or are likely to get.
  • The Philosopher Queens: the lives and legacies of philosophy's unsung women, by Rebecca Buxton and Lisa Whiting - because women have always philosophized too.
  • Starry Messenger: cosmic perspectives on civilization, by Neil deGrasse Tyson - because we are cosmopolitans, citizens of the cosmos.
  • Question Everything: A Stone Readereds. Catapano and Critchley - short popular essays by contemporary philosophers published in the New York Times, because philosophy is relevant to contemporary issues.
  • Three Roads Back: How Emerson, Thoreau, and William James Responded to the Greatest Losses of Their Lives by Robert Richardson - because we'll all eventually lose someone close.
  • Be Not Afraid of Life: In the Words of William James-companion anthology to Sick Souls - because William James can save your life, or at least ameliorate it.
  • Life is HardHow Philosophy Can Help by Kieran Setiya - because we'll all eventually be challenged by something hard.
  • Night Vision: seeing ourselves through dark moods, by Mariana Allesandri - because all is not sunshine and light.
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