HON 201-7

Fall, 2009

Dr. Greenway

 

Defining “Progress”

 

Syllabus

 

Texts

Brecht, Bertolt.  Galileo.  Grove Press, 1994. 0802130593

Florman, Samuel. The Existential Pleasures of Engineering 2nd ed.  St. Martin's: Griffin, 1996. 0312141041

Wells, H.G .The Time Machine.  Signet 0451528557; Online at http://www.gutenberg.org/etext/35

Appleman, Philip. Darwin 3rd ed.  WW Norton 2000. 0393958493

 Bury, J.B. The Idea of Progress.  Cosimo Classics, 2008. 1605201383 Opt: Online at http://www.gutenberg.org/etext/4557
 
Kierkegaard, Søren.  Fear and Trembling. Penguin, 1986.  0140444491. Online at http://www.ccel.org/k/kierkegaard/selections/trembling.htm
 
Kandinsky, Wassily. Concerning the Spiritual in Art.  Dover, 1977. 0486234118. Online at http://www.gutenberg.org/etext/5321

 

Huxley, T. H. Evolution and Ethics. On line at http://www.gutenberg.org/etext/2940

 

Course Outline: Topics for Contemplation

 

Progress, Part 1: Faith in Science and Technology (Sept 1 – 17)

 

A. Text: Brecht, Galileo

The nature and limits of scientific knowledge

Faith in mathematics

The dynamics of a scientific theory

 

B. Text: Florman, The Existential Pleasures of Engineering

The engineer as hero

The “engineering mentality”

Technology and tragedy

 

Progress, Part 2: Faith and Spirituality (Sept 22- Oct 13)

Text:  Kierkegaard, Fear and Trembling

Spiritual progress?

Do spiritual truths have access to reason?

What do you mean, “Literally true”?

Hegel and dialectic

Kierkegaard: not what you think, but how you live. Three choices: Either/Or

Abraham: Teleological Suspension of the Ethical

Faith in ethics vs. faith in God

 

Progress, Part 3: Biology and Social Evolution (Oct 15 – Dec 3)

 

A. Text: Darwin, Origin of Species and Descent of Man

Elements of theory: adaptation and natural selection

Implications: William Paley and design

 

B. Social Evolution and Progress

Text: Huxley, Evolution and Ethics

Thomas Malthus, Adam Smith

Herbert Spencer and Social Darwinism

Laissez-faire Capitalism

 

C. The Future

Text: Wells, The Time Machine

Progress vs. Entropy

 

Goals:

Thinking: Consider an important idea actively, synthesize reading and discussion.

Writing: Write concisely, professionally, according to defined criteria

Speaking: Present short topics intelligibly and with confidence.

Enjoyment, edification, fascination: Optional, but desirable.

 

            Policies:

-- Grading

1. Attendance/  Participation (40%): I do not take attendance, nor do I give pop quizzes. I see them as an insult to you and a waste of my time. Do not mistake this, however: I expect you in class and prepared to engage ideas actively. In this context, I hope to show you how to present specific topics concisely and confidently. If you elect not to attend class or read the material, you may have good reasons for doing so, but do not hold me responsible at the end of the semester for the choices you have made: grow up. I evaluate not you as a person, but your contribution to the class.

 

2. Writing (60%): I have divided the semester into three parts, with the “Darwin” section subdivided into Biology and Theories of Social Progress. You’ll have a take-home review at the end of each section, written according to established editorial standards, which assume familiarity with our topic’s vocabulary. Submit these in electronic form, and I will line-edit them for stylistic and mechanical errors, giving you a chance to revise. NB: Work handed in late will incur a penalty (what do I tell the person who does hand the work in on time?).

 

-- Civility

1. Please squelch your cell-phones, iPods, phasers, twitterers and other communications gizmos during class. None of us is that important.

2. I have no problems with your bringing non-noisy food or drink to class, but be prepared to share.

3. You will, I trust, find some of the topics and opinions we touch on preposterous or even offensive. Criticize the idea, after you understand it, but refrain from attacking the person.

I hope you will enjoy exploring this idea as much as I will.

 

          For class members, look here

          For due dates, print out the Calendar.

 

 

 

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