Summer 2023 Minds, Brains PS0100 section 001

Minds, Brains, and the Nature of Conscio

Intro to Philosophy of Mi

Call Number 10410
Day & Time
Location
MTWRF 9:10am-11:00am
318 Hamilton Hall
Day & Time
Location
MTWRF 1:10pm-3:00pm
318 Hamilton Hall
Points 0
Grading Mode Ungraded
Approvals Required None
Instructor Jared Peterson
Type LECTURE
Method of Instruction In-Person
Course Description

How is the mind related to the brain? Are sensations, beliefs, and desires immaterial or physical states? What are the different types of consciousness and how, if at all, are they related? How do we know that beings besides ourselves possess mentality? Can robots possess minds?

We explore these questions via a philosophical analysis of a number of attempts to explain the nature of the mind and mentality. The course begins with dualist attempts to characterize the mind as a non-physical soul that possesses immaterial mental states such as beliefs and hopes, and proceeds to an investigation of recent efforts to understand the mind and mentality as physical phenomena. Some historically influential answers to the question what is a mind and what is mentality? are critically assessed, including (i) substance dualism, (ii) mind-brain identity theory, and (iii) functionalism. In the latter part of the course, issues such as the nature of consciousness as well as how to make sense of the causal efficacy of mentality are discussed.

Course readings include such influential works as René Descartes’s Meditations on First Philosophy, J.J.C. Smart's "Sensations and Brain Processes,” Hilary Putnam’s “The Nature of Mental States,” and Thomas Nagel’s “What is it Like to be a Bat?” Course activities include class debates, group presentations, the designing of thought experiments, critical writing exercises, and close textual analysis.

The broad goal of the course is to sharpen students’ analytical reading and writing skills, while the more specific objectives are to give them a solid understanding of issues in the philosophy of mind as well as an understanding of the methods of philosophy.

Web Site Vergil
Subterm 06/26-07/14 (K)
Department Pre-College Programs (SHSP)
Enrollment 22 students (24 max) as of 9:06PM Tuesday, April 23, 2024
Subject Minds, Brains
Number PS0100
Section 001
Division School of Professional Studies
Campus Morningside
Section key 20232PHMN0100K001