

The Big Questions of Philosophy
Período de teste gratuito do canal The Great Courses Signature Collection ou comprar
Sujeito aos termos
Episódios
T1 EP.1 – How Do We Do Philosophy?
5 de janeiro de 201633 minBegin with the big question: What is philosophy? Start by exploring the kinds of problems that philosophy addresses, the way philosophy works, and the distinction between philosophy and opinion. Discover that philosophy is arguably the most important pursuit there is.Período de teste gratuito do canal The Great Courses Signature Collection ou comprarT1 EP.2 – Why Should We Trust Reason?
5 de janeiro de 201631 minHone your philosophical thinking by identifying the categories of fallacious reasoning that ensnare us all. Investigate examples of gut-thinking, confirmation bias, appealing to ignorance, the correlation fallacy, begging the question, and equivocation. Learn how to check your reasoning for flaws.Período de teste gratuito do canal The Great Courses Signature Collection ou comprarT1 EP.3 – How Do We Reason Carefully?
5 de janeiro de 201631 minAvoiding fallacious reasoning is just the beginning of philosophical thinking. Go deeper by studying the rules of deduction and induction. In the process, learn Aristotle's three axioms of logic, the difference between truth and validity, common mistakes in logical arguments, and why practically all scientific arguments are inductive.Período de teste gratuito do canal The Great Courses Signature Collection ou comprarT1 EP.4 – How Do We Find the Best Explanation?
5 de janeiro de 201633 minExplore the power of abduction, a form of induction also known as inference to the best explanation, that is used not only by philosophers, but also by doctors to make medical diagnoses and scientists to construct theories. Even Sherlock Holmes - the master of deduction - really practiced abductive inference.Período de teste gratuito do canal The Great Courses Signature Collection ou comprarT1 EP.5 – What Is Truth?
5 de janeiro de 201631 minNow begin a section devoted to another big question: What is knowledge? Start with the problem of defining truth. Investigate three philosophical theories that attempt to pin down this elusive concept: pragmatism, coherentism, and the correspondence theory.Período de teste gratuito do canal The Great Courses Signature Collection ou comprarT1 EP.6 – Is Knowledge Possible?
5 de janeiro de 201631 minHaving covered ways of gaining evidence and justifying belief in pursuit of knowledge, now ask: Is knowledge really possible? See what Plato had to say. Then delve into René Descartes' celebrated struggle with this problem, analyzing the strengths and weaknesses of his position.Período de teste gratuito do canal The Great Courses Signature Collection ou comprarT1 EP.7 – What Is the Best Way to Gain Knowledge?
5 de janeiro de 201632 minPut empiricism to the test as the best way to acquire knowledge. Study the ideas of John Locke, George Berkeley, and David Hume, together with the response of Immanuel Kant, before settling on the most effective route to understanding the world as it is.Período de teste gratuito do canal The Great Courses Signature Collection ou comprarT1 EP.8 – Do We Know What Knowledge Is?
5 de janeiro de 201632 minAddress a famous problem concerning the nature of knowledge, posed by contemporary philosopher Edmund Gettier. Use different thought experiments to test the traditional definition of knowledge. Discover firsthand the bafflement and enlightenment that comes from doing philosophy.Período de teste gratuito do canal The Great Courses Signature Collection ou comprarT1 EP.9 – When Can We Trust Testimony?
5 de janeiro de 201632 minIn this section, put what you've learned to work by asking the big question: Can religious belief be justified? Start with Hume's argument that testimony can never justify a belief that a miracle has occurred. Analyze the flaws in Hume's reasoning, and think about whether his conclusion still holds.Período de teste gratuito do canal The Great Courses Signature Collection ou comprarT1 EP.10 – Can Mystical Experience Justify Belief?
5 de janeiro de 201632 minLook at the phenomenon of religious experiences, pondering whether such events justify belief. Find that practically all religions have religious experiences, but the beliefs they lead to can be radically different. Can "feeling the touch of God," like Jules in Pulp Fiction, justify religious belief?Período de teste gratuito do canal The Great Courses Signature Collection ou comprarT1 EP.11 – Is Faith Ever Rational?
5 de janeiro de 201633 minGiven that faith by its nature makes no claim to being logical, can it ever be considered rational? Learn that all of us unconsciously behave as if it is. What are our grounds for doing so, and how does this apply to religious faith? Your inquiry introduces you to famous arguments by Blaise Pascal, William Clifford and William James.Período de teste gratuito do canal The Great Courses Signature Collection ou comprarT1 EP.12 – Why Is There Something Rather Than Nothing?
5 de janeiro de 201631 minBegin a series addressing the next big question: Does God exist? The most popular proofs appeal to God's existence as the best explanation for the universe's existence and nature. Test the cosmological and teleological arguments, using the tools of philosophy and the evidence of physics.Período de teste gratuito do canal The Great Courses Signature Collection ou comprarT1 EP.13 – What Is God Like?
5 de janeiro de 201631 minTraditionally, if God exists, God is perfect - God is omniscient, omnipotent and omnibenevolent. See how these three attributes are likely inconsistent with each another. Focus in particular on the difficulties with St. Anselm's argument for a perfect God, and look at modern proposals for redefining our conception of God.Período de teste gratuito do canal The Great Courses Signature Collection ou comprarT1 EP.14 – How Could God Allow Moral Evil?
5 de janeiro de 201632 minNow consider arguments against God's existence, the most common being the problem of evil. Explore various theological solutions that account for why God allows certain evils, like the holocaust. Does God have reasons we cannot understand? Examine the flaws in this argument.Período de teste gratuito do canal The Great Courses Signature Collection ou comprarT1 EP.15 – Why Would God Cause Natural Evil?
5 de janeiro de 201632 minIt is one thing for God to grant humans the freedom to do evil, but it's harder to understand the existence of natural evils such as earthquakes and plagues. Evaluate different approaches to this problem, including the suggestion that God exists but didn't create our universe.Período de teste gratuito do canal The Great Courses Signature Collection ou comprarT1 EP.16 – Are Freedom and Foreknowledge Compatible?
5 de janeiro de 201632 minDo we have free will? This is your next big question. Begin with a close study of omnitemporalism - the idea that the future already exists and that God necessarily has foreknowledge of it. Taking this view, attempt to make sense of the notion that people have the power to act freely.Período de teste gratuito do canal The Great Courses Signature Collection ou comprarT1 EP.17 – Do Our Souls Make Us Free?
5 de janeiro de 201633 minLook at the problem of free will from the point of view of the soul, the conjectured seat of mentality that exists apart from the body. Discover that neuroscience suggests that the soul does not exist and also casts doubt on the concept of free will.Período de teste gratuito do canal The Great Courses Signature Collection ou comprarT1 EP.18 – What Does It Mean to Be Free?
5 de janeiro de 201632 minSome philosophers, called compatibilists, argue that if we understand free will correctly, the idea that humans are free becomes defensible, leaving room for moral responsibility. Evaluate this stance, and close by considering the consequences of conceding that we don't have free will in the traditional sense.Período de teste gratuito do canal The Great Courses Signature Collection ou comprarT1 EP.19 – What Preserves Personal Identity?
5 de janeiro de 201632 minSpend time with the big question: Could there be an afterlife? First, ask what defines a person and how personal identity is preserved over time. Discover that many proposed answers fail, including the notion that personal identity is preserved by the soul.Período de teste gratuito do canal The Great Courses Signature Collection ou comprarT1 EP.20 – Are Persons Mere Minds?
5 de janeiro de 201632 minExplore the possibility that personal identity is preserved by memory, as Locke contended, or by psychological continuity. Test these ideas in thought experiments involving the transporter from Star Trek and other intriguing scenarios.Período de teste gratuito do canal The Great Courses Signature Collection ou comprarT1 EP.21 – Are Persons Just Bodies?
5 de janeiro de 201633 minCould it be that you are the same person over time because you have the same body over time? Explore the implications of this view, which traces to the Judeo-Christian concept of the resurrection of the body in the afterlife. Consider biological objections.Período de teste gratuito do canal The Great Courses Signature Collection ou comprarT1 EP.22 – Are You Really You?
5 de janeiro de 201632 minClose your inquiry into the afterlife by looking at new ways of defining personhood. According to perdurantism, a person is the sum total of an individual's life experiences and cannot be isolated to a particular time and place. Then question the very concept of a person - a move that may rule out the possibility of an afterlife.Período de teste gratuito do canal The Great Courses Signature Collection ou comprarT1 EP.23 – How Does the Brain Produce the Mind?
5 de janeiro de 201633 minThe next three inquiries ask: What is the nature of the mind? Start with the celebrated "hard problem" of consciousness: How does the brain produce the mind? Investigate two possible answers and explore why many philosophers consider both to be problematic.Período de teste gratuito do canal The Great Courses Signature Collection ou comprarT1 EP.24 – What Do Minds Do, If Anything?
5 de janeiro de 201632 minExamine three more theories of the mind - property dualism, epiphenomenalism, and eliminative materialism - discovering that each has shortcomings. All of us feel that we have minds, so why is it so difficult to pin down what the mind is? Could the mind be an illusion?Período de teste gratuito do canal The Great Courses Signature Collection ou comprarT1 EP.25 – Could Machines Think?
5 de janeiro de 201633 minPush your exploration of the mind even further by looking at functionalism, which suggests that anything that functions like our brain has mentality. The implication is that, in principle, machines can think. Study some responses to this theory, including John Searle's thought experiment called the Chinese Room.Período de teste gratuito do canal The Great Courses Signature Collection ou comprar