AP/PHIL2020 3.0 A: Descartes, Spinoza, and Leibniz
Offered by: PHIL
Session
Fall 2021
Term
F
Format
ONLN (Fully Online)
Instructor
Calendar Description / Prerequisite / Co-Requisite
The works of Descartes, Spinoza and Leibniz are crucial building blocks of our contemporary understanding of the world. This course examines their work. Course credit exclusions: GL/PHIL 2620 6.00.
Course Start Up
Course Websites hosted on York's "eClass" are accessible to students during the first week of the term. It takes two business days from the time of your enrolment to access your course website. Course materials begin to be released on the course website during the first week. To log in to your eClass course visit the York U eClass Portal and login with your Student Passport York Account. If you are creating and participating in Zoom meetings you may also go directly to the York U Zoom Portal.
For further course Start Up details, review the Getting Started webpage.
For IT support, students may contact University Information Technology Client Services via askit@yorku.ca or (416) 736-5800. Please also visit Students Getting Started UIT or the Getting Help - UIT webpages.
Professor Matthew Leisinger
mleising@yorku.ca
This course is an introduction to topics in seventeenth-century European philosophy and presupposes no prior knowledge of philosophy. We will begin with an in-depth study of René Descartes’s Meditations on First Philosophy, in which Descartes argues for Cartesian Dualism, the view that the mind and the body are two completely distinct things. In the rest of the course, we will examine various consequences of and reactions to Cartesian Dualism in the seventeenth century, including:
- The role of Cartesian dualism in the development of early modern feminist thought;
- The problem of interaction (how can an immaterial mind interact with a material body?);
- Monist alternatives to Cartesian Dualism (idealism, materialism, and non-reductive monism).
Technical requirements for taking the course:
This course will be fully asynchronous. All course materials, including readings, will be available via eClass.
The instructor will be available to students asynchronously via email and eClass discussion. The instructor will also be available synchronously for virtual office hours via Zoom. These office hours are optional and attendance at office hours will not be required in any way. Nonetheless, in order to participate in synchronous office hours, students will require Zoom video-conferencing software, a working microphone (webcam optional), and a stable, higher-speed Internet connection.
Times and locations:
Please note that this is a course that depends on remote teaching and learning. There will be no in-person interactions or activities on campus.
Virtual office hours:
The instructor will be available synchronously for virtual office hours via Zoom, both by appointment and regularly at a time TBD.
Readings from: René Descartes, François Poullain de la Barre, Mary Astell, Elisabeth of Bohemia, Anton Wilhelm Amo, Nicolas Malebranche, Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz, Émilie du Châtelet, Thomas Hobbes, Margaret Cavendish, and Baruch Spinoza.
All texts will be available online.
For students who prefer physical texts, the following recommended (NOT required) editions will be available from the bookstore. These are the texts that we will be reading for at least two full weeks.
- René Descartes. Discourse on Method and Meditations on First Philosophy. Translated by Donald A. Kress. Indianapolis: Hackett. ISBN: 978-0-87220-420-1.
Since we will be focusing on Descartes for approximately the first five weeks, students are particularly encouraged to purchase a physical copy of the Meditations. This edition is also available from the York Library website.
- Benedictus de Spinoza. A Spinoza Reader: The Ethics and Other Works. Edited and translated by Edwin Curley. Princeton: Princeton UP. ISBN: 9780691000671.
We will be focusing on Spinoza’s Ethics for two weeks. The Ethics is available online in a helpful hypertext edition (https://capone.mtsu.edu/rbombard/RB/Spinoza/ethica-front.html). But, since Spinoza can be particularly difficult to follow, students might find it especially valuable to have a physical copy. Note that this specific edition of the Ethics is not available from the York library website.
Weekly assignments (graded for completion): 10%
Three short papers (1000-1500 words): 40% + 30% + 20% = 90%
The paper with the highest grade will be worth 40%
The paper with the second highest grade will be worth 30%
The paper with the lowest grade will be worth 20%
The entire course will take place via eClass. Although we are scheduled to meet at particular times and days of the week, this course has no live virtual meetings outside of office hours. The course will be structured around weekly recorded lectures, readings, and assignments, all available via eClass.
- To introduce students to some of the major ideas and arguments of seventeenth-century European philosophy
- To introduce students to techniques of philosophical analysis
- To develop students’ written philosophical skills
Grading: The grading scheme for the course conforms to the 9-point grading system used in undergraduate programs at York (e.g., A+ = 9, A = 8, B+ - 7, C+ = 5, etc.). Each assignment will bear either a letter grade designation or a corresponding number grade (e.g. A+ = 90 to 100, A = 80 to 90, B+ = 75 to 79, etc.)
(For a full description of York grading system see the York University Undergraduate Calendar - http://calendars.registrar.yorku.ca/2010-2011/academic/index.htm
Assignment Submission: Proper academic performance depends on students doing their work not only well, but on time. Accordingly, assignments for this course must be received on the due date specified for the assignment. All assignments are to be handed in via eClass.
Lateness Penalty: Late submissions will not be accepted for participation in online discussion. Late submissions will be accepted for exams and essays but will be penalized one-half letter grade per day. Exceptions to the lateness penalty for valid reasons such as illness, compassionate grounds, etc., may be entertained by the Instructor but will require supporting documentation (e.g., a doctor’s letter).
Missed Assignments: Students with a documented reason for missing a course assignment, such as illness, compassionate grounds, etc., which is confirmed by supporting documentation (e.g., doctor’s letter) may request accommodation from the Course Instructor.
- Academic Honesty
- Student Rights and Responsibilities
- Religious Observance
- Grading Scheme and Feedback
- 20% Rule
No examinations or tests collectively worth more than 20% of the final grade in a course will be given during the final 14 calendar days of classes in a term. The exceptions to the rule are classes which regularly meet Friday evenings or on Saturday and/or Sunday at any time, and courses offered in the compressed summer terms. - Academic Accommodation for Students with Disabilities