Syllabus - Great Literature 109 - Introduction to Philosophy
π Course Overview
Focus: The "Great Questions" of existence, ethics, reality, and knowledge.
Goal: To engage with the history of Western philosophy through its most accessible yet profound texts, tracing the evolution of thought from Ancient Greece to Existentialism.
Level: Undergraduate / Introductory.
π Reading List
- The Symposium β Plato
- Nicomachean Ethics β Aristotle
- Meditations on First Philosophy β RenΓ© Descartes
- An Enquiry Concerning Human Understanding β David Hume
- The Social Contract β Jean-Jacques Rousseau
- Utilitarianism β John Stuart Mill
- Fear and Trembling β SΓΈren Kierkegaard
- Beyond Good and Evil β Friedrich Nietzsche
- The Problems of Philosophy β Bertrand Russell
- Existentialism Is a Humanism β Jean-Paul Sartre
π§ Key Themes
- Metaphysics: What is real? (Plato, Descartes, Russell)
- Epistemology: How do we know what we know? (Descartes, Hume, Russell)
- Ethics: How should we live? (Aristotle, Mill, Nietzsche)
- Political Philosophy: What is a just society? (Rousseau)
- Existentialism: What is the meaning of life? (Kierkegaard, Nietzsche, Sartre)
π Assignments
- Pre-Reading: Contextualize the philosopher and the problem they are solving.
- Reading: Track arguments, premises, and conclusions.
- Post-Reading: Analyze the enduring relevance of the arguments today.