2024w-apphil1100o-03

AP/PHIL1100 3.0 O: The Meaning of Life

Offered by: PHIL


 Session

Winter 2024

 Term

W

Format

LECT

Instructor

Calendar Description / Prerequisite / Co-Requisite

An exploration of a number of fundamental practical philosophical questions, including: What is the meaning of (my) life? What is happiness, and how can I achieve it? What is wisdom? What is death, and what does it mean to me?


Course Start Up

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    Additional Course Instructor/Contact Details

Professor Jim Vernon
jvernon@yorku.ca
Office Location:  S427 Ross Building
Phone Number:  (416) 736-2100 Ext. 33519
Office Hours:  TBA

    Expanded Course Description

What is the meaning of life? What is the meaning of my life? Do pain, suffering and death rob life of its meaning, or render it absurd? Or, to the contrary, do suffering and death make life more meaningful? What is the best, or most authentic way, to live my life? This class treats a variety of philosophical approaches–both historical and contemporary–to the interconnection of life, death, and meaning. It also offers an introduction to Western philosophy through an investigation of questions concerning the nature and meaning of life. The first half of the course will deal with texts from the ancient world, while the latter half will treat philosophers from the 20th century. Thinkers we will cover include Socrates/Plato, Epicurus, Simone de Beauvoir, and Martin Luther King.

Because this is a course that concerns some of the most profound and difficult problems of human existence, the readings we will consider will touch upon topics that can be quite discomforting. This fact should be kept in mind as we all work to ensure respectful dialogue about them throughout the term.

    Required Course Text / Readings

TBA

    Weighting of Course

Two Tests – 20% each (40% total)

Term Paper – 30%

Tutorial attendance/participation – 30%

    Organization of the Course

Lecture/Reading Schedule:

Week 1

Intro. to Course; “The Dispute Between a Man and his Ba”; “The Ancient Egyptian Book of the Dead, Spell 125”; “The Story of Sinuhe”.

Week 2

Plato, Apology

Week 3

Plato, Crito

Week 4

Epictetus, selections from The Handbook (The Enchiridion)

Week 5

Epicurus, “Letter to Menoeceus”; “The Principal Doctrine”.

Week 6

No tutorials/lecture (reading week)

Week 7

Test #1

Week 8

Thomas Nagel, “The Absurd”.

Week 9

Jean-Paul Sartre, Existentialism is a Humanism.

Week 10

Sartre, Existentialism is a Humanism (continued)

Week 11

de Beauvoir, The Ethics of Ambiguity, (Chapter 1: Ambiguity and Freedom)

Week 12

Martin Luther King, “The Three Dimensions of a Complete Life”; “The Drum Major Instinct”

Essays Due

Week 13

Test #2

    Course Learning Objectives

The primary objective of the course is to familiarize students with some of central ideas of in different Western philosophical traditions concerning life, death, and meaning. Student will also learn how to scrutinize texts for arguments that support a central thesis, as well as construct their own strong arguments for their position concerning questions of deep philosophical import.

    Relevant Links / Resources