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PHIL 337 PHILEthics: 337 Ethics: Theory Theory and Practice and Practice Instructor: E-mail: Office: Office Hours: Spring 2016 Karen Brown [email protected] Clearihue B314 Wednesdays 2:20 - 3:00 and by appointment Course Description In this course we will work to understand four ethical traditions in Western philosophy: utilitarianism, Kantian ethics, contractarianism and virtue ethics. We will begin with a classic text in each tradition and move through contemporary attempts to critique, develop and apply these four conceptions of ethics. We will consider the problems that motivate the accounts and the reasoning that supports them. Just as importantly, we will put all of them to the test of practical application. Among the applied topics we will grapple with are aiding people in need, the treatment of non-human animals, sustainability, organ donation, abortion, assisted suicide, hypocrisy and partiality to our friends. Throughout, we will be asking whether any of these approaches to ethics helps us to understand what makes an action right or wrong or helps us to answer the pressing questions of what kind of people we should be and how we ought to live our lives together. Texts The four fundamental texts for the course are all classic works available in many different editions. The Coursespaces page has links to online versions of all of them. All page references made to these works in class will be to the editions listed here and available in the UVic Bookstore. Aristotle Nicomachean Ethics Translated by Joe Sachs. Hackett Publishing. 2002. Thomas Hobbes Leviathan Edited by Edwin Curley. Hackett Publishing. 1994. Immanuel Kant Groundwork for the Metaphysics of Morals Edited by Lara Denis. Broadview Press. 2005. John Stuart Mill Utilitarianism Second Edition. Edited by George Sher. Hackett Publishing. 2002. Additional readings, course materials, detailed information about assignments along with a copy of this course outline and updates to the schedule will be available on the Coursespaces page. To access Coursespaces, go to coursespaces.uvic.ca and log in with your regular network ID. PHIL 337: Ethics: Theory and Practice Spring 2016 Ethics: Theory and Practice Course Work Exam One 25% 4 Quote & Comments 10% Exam Two Part A—in class Part B—take home 15% 20% Essay 30% (approx. 2200 words) For dates see the schedule below. Exam One and Exam Two, Part A will be in-class exams covering material from the readings and class discussion. Exam One will include both short answer questions and essay questions. Exam Two, Part A will be only short answer questions. Exam Two, Part B will be a take-home essay exam covering material from the entire course but focusing on material covered after Exam One. Information about the essay assignment and the quote and comment assignments, including detailed instructions and late policies, can be found on the Coursespaces page. Missed Exams If you miss an exam due to a documented illness or accident, contact me immediately to schedule a make-up. If you miss an exam without a documented illness or accident, you will receive a score of 0. Academic Integrity The University Policy on Academic Integrity (covering plagiarism, multiple submission, falsifying materials, cheating and aiding others to cheat) will be enforced in this course. You are responsible for familiarizing yourself with the policy. You can find it online in the UVIC Calendar at http://web.uvic.ca/calendar2015-05/FACS/UnIn/UARe/PoAcI.html. Grading Grades for the course will be assigned using the standard university scheme: For N and DEF status, please see Department of Philosophy Policies posted in glass cabinets adjacent to CLE B315. Information regarding accommodation of religious observance can be located in the UVIC Calendar at http://web.uvic.ca/calendar2015-09/GI/GUPo.html#pageTop Percentage 90 - 100 85 - 89 80 - 84 77 - 79 73 - 76 70 - 72 65 - 69 60 - 64 50 - 59 Below 50 Grade A+ A AB+ B BC+ C D F Missed Classes If you miss class you should contact another student in the class to find out what you missed. Student email addresses are available in the Participants section of the CourseSpaces page. PHIL 337: Ethics: Theory and Practice Spring 2016 Ethics: Theory and Practice Course Schedule Any changes to the schedule will be announced in class and posted on the Coursespaces page. All readings not in the four texts listed above can be found through the Coursespaces page. Q/C indicates that a quote and comment assignment is due in class that day. January 5 Introduction January 6 Kant Groundwork for the Metaphysics of Morals, First Section January 8, 12 Kant Groundwork for the Metaphysics of Morals, Second Section January 13 Q/C O’Neill “Kant’s Formula of the End in Itself and World Hunger” January 15 Skidmore “Duties to Animals: The Failure of Kant’s Moral Theory” January 19 Gunderson “A Kantian View of Suicide and End of Life Treatment” January 20 Aristotle Nicomachean Ethics, Books I and II January 22 Aristotle Nicomachean Ethics, Book III January 26 Aristotle Nicomachean Ethics, Book VI, Chapter 5— Book VII, Chapter 10 January 27, 29 Hursthouse “Virtue Theory and Abortion” February 2 Q/C Walker “The Good Life for Non-Human Animals: What Virtue Requires of Humans” February 3 Foot “Virtues and Vices” February 5 EXAM ONE Reading Break — February 8 through February 12 February 16 Slote “The Problem We All Have with Deontology” February 17 Mill Utilitarianism, Chapters I and II February 19 Mill Utilitarianism, Chapters III and IV February 23 Mill Utilitarianism, Chapter V February 24 Q/C Griffin “Utilitarian accounts: state of mind or state of the world” February 26 Kagan “Is Death Bad for You?” March 1 Norcross “Comparing Harms: Headaches and Human Lives” March 2 Szabados and Soifer “Consequentialism and Hypocrisy” March 4, 8 Varner “A Harean Perspective on Humane Sustainability” March 9 Q/C Railton “Alienation, Consequentialism, and the Demands of Morality” March 11 continued PHIL 337: Ethics: Theory and Practice Spring 2016 Ethics: Theory and Practice Course Schedule continued March 15 Hobbes Leviathan, Part I, Chapter XIII March 16 Hobbes Leviathan, Part I, Chapters XIV and XV March 18 Gannon “Free Riding and Organ Donation” March 22 Dimock “Why All Feminists Should Be Contractarians” March 23 E S S A Y D U E in class Kavka “When Two 'wrongs' Make a Right: An Essay on Business Ethics” Easter Break — March 25 through March 28 March 29 Rowlands “Contractarianism and Animal Rights” March 30 Wrap-up and Student Experience Survey April 1 E X A M T W O — P A R T A i n April 11 by 5 p.m. E X A M T W O — P A R T B t a k e c l a s s h o m e Images are reproduced and used under ss. 29-29.4 of the Canadian Copyright Act. This document is available for your individual use; further distribution may infringe copyright. PHIL 337: Ethics: Theory and Practice Spring 2016