Philosophy

Important Information for Students on Moodle Course Availability

You may not see a full list of all your expected courses in your Moodle My Courses list or in this category. This does not necessarily mean that your course registrations are incorrect. There are two possible reasons:

  • Departments/Tutors make courses visible to Students in Moodle when the course is ready for teaching
  • Not all courses use Moodle.

You can use the Study tab in Campus Connect to check the courses you are registered for or contact your department who can also provide information on their use of Moodle.

Course image 23-24 PY1101: Problems of Knowledge
Philosophy
Knowledge is often thought to be the highest achievement of rational creatures, the thing that distinguishes us from other animals and is the basis of our ability to predict and control our environment. Beginning with the most Platonic of questions—‘what is knowledge?’—this course introduces students to basic topics in contemporary epistemology. Among the questions it goes on to address are: why is knowledge valuable?; how do we acquire knowledge and how do we pass it on to others?; how do we become better knowers?; is there such a thing as collective knowledge?; do animals have knowledge?; is there such a thing as knowledge at all?!
Course image 23-24 PY1102: Tutorial Special Study
Philosophy
QUICK INFO:

TIMETABLE:

Wednesday 11am, 12pm, and 1pm

In Moore 04-5 with Dr Finn, or Bedford 0-07 with Dr Spinney

ASSESSMENT:

Portfolio (60%): Three short written exercises from tutorials, deadline 8th Dec.

Essay (40%): 1,500 words on one of a list of set questions, deadline 12th Jan.

Presentation (formative): Each week, one student per tutorial group.

CONTACT:

Suki Finn: suki.finn@rhul.ac.uk

Oliver Spinney: oliver.spinney@rhul.ac.uk


Course image 23-24 PY1103: Intro to Logic
Philosophy

QUICK INFO:

TIMETABLE:

- Lectures: Monday 2pm Horton LT1

- Seminars: Monday 3pm and 4pm International 031

RESOURCES:

- (MT): Marianne Talbot (2017) Critical Reasoning: A Romp through the Foothills of Logic for the Complete Beginner, CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform

- (M&A): Lepore, E. and Cumming, S. (2013) Meaning and Argument: An Introduction to Logic through Language, Wiley-Blackwell, Revised 2nd edition

- (forallx): Magnus, P. D. and Button, T. (2023) forall x: Calgary. An Introduction to Formal Logic, Creative Commons license

ASSESSMENT:

- Test (30 minutes) 50% Part I

- Exam (2 hours) 50% Part II

CONTACT:

- Suki Finn suki.finn@rhul.ac.uk

- Office hours: Monday 12-2pm McCrea 1-46 or MS Teams by arrangement


Course image 23-24 PY2002: Mind and World
Philosophy
OUTLINE
This course examines some of the major metaphysical and epistemological problems that arise when attempting to understand how mind and language figure in human interactions with and within the world. It centres on attempts to conceptualise, solve, or avoid mind-body related problems in the analytic tradition and aims to contrast these with phenomenological investigations of cognate phenomena.
AIMS
Having successfully completed this course students will be able to:
1. appreciate critically how the rationalist and empiricist traditions in philosophy influence contemporary thought in the philosophy of mind;
2. understand the continuing relevance of the mind-body problem to the question of what it is to be a human being;
3. make critical conceptual connections between the analytic and European traditions in philosophy with respect to their concern with understanding language, subjectivity, and the phenomenology of experience;
4. comprehend the difficulties and importance of conceptualising the relationship between thought and language;
5. understand the importance of consciousness to some contemporary debates in philosophy, psychology and cognitive science.
Course image 23-24 PY2202: Rationalism and Empiricism
Philosophy

Module Summary

This course will explore the central developments in modern philosophy occurring between the foundation of modern empiricism and rationalism by Locke and Descartes in the 17th century, and the emergence of Kant’s philosophical system in the late 18th century. The course will look at figures from the two traditions, exploring the key theories they expound, and the arguments used to support these theories. 

Learning Objectives

1. Explain the main philosophical positions of philosophers in the empiricist and rationalist traditions; 

2. Critically evaluate the validity of the key arguments supporting these positions; 

3. Understand the importance of these traditions to the development of later philosophy; 

4. Express their ideas in writing showing knowledge, understanding and critical evaluation; 

5. Demonstrate their ability to read closely a range of different philosophical texts.


Course image 23-24 PY2900: Race, Gender and Queer Philosophy
Philosophy

QUICK INFO:

TIMETABLE:

- Lectures: Thursday 1pm Horton Lecture Theatre 1

- Seminars: Thursday 2pm and 3pm Internation 244

ASSESSMENT:

- Essay (2000 words) 50% midday, from part I, deadline noon Friday 3rd November 2023

- Online 'take home' exam (3 hours, 1200 words) 50%, from part II, 10am-1pm Friday 12th January 2024

CONTACT:

Suki Finn: suki.finn@rhul.ac.uk

Office hours: Wednesday 2pm, Thursday 12pm, McCrea 1-46