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articles
1. Teaching Philosophy: Volume > 27 > Issue: 2
Charles Twardy Argument Maps Improve Critical Thinking
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This paper describes the Reason! method of argument mapping (along with the associated Reason!Able software) and measures its effect on the California Critical Thinking Skills Test. The result of the author’s study is that students who use the Reason! method, rather than other methods of teaching critical thinking skills, perform better on the California test. What accounts for the effectiveness of Reason! method is its use of argument maps, a method of representing arguments using a two-dimensional diagram involving boxes and arrows. In addition to describing the method, and presenting empirical data that supports the Reason! approach, the author provides an assessment of the various strengths and weaknesses of the method and details its use at the University of Melbourne.
2. Teaching Philosophy: Volume > 27 > Issue: 2
Katarzyna Paprzycka Teaching Logic as a Foreign Language On-Line
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Similar to learning the grammatical structures of a foreign language, one problem that students face in learning logic is that many of the operations and concepts they need to learn require more practice to fully master. To solve this problem, the author proposes the use of “repetitive exercises”, exercises that aim to develop a familiarity with a concept or operation through repeatedly focusing on that concept or operation. According to the author, the best method for implementing these exercises is the use of on-line teaching environments, specifically WebCT, which allows instructors to develop exercises that they deem appropriate and allows for mechanical grading. Finally, the paper provides an overview of why WebCT is preferable to the use of Blackboard, and notes that the major drawback to the online solution is its poor support for the symbols used in propositional and predicate logic.
3. Teaching Philosophy: Volume > 27 > Issue: 2
Chris McCord Frankenstein Meets Kant (and the Problem of Wide Duties)
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This paper describes how an ethics instructor might use Mary Shelley’s “Frankenstein” to teach Kant’s duty-based ethics. For example, themes like the lack of beneficence of Victor toward his creature and Victor’s uneven development of his talents can be used to introduce students to criticisms of Kant’s view that beneficence is an imperfect (or wide) duty or that we have an imperfect duty to cultivate, not only our scientific abilities, but also non-scientific ones. In addition, “Frankenstein” can be used to consider Kant’s prohibition on making false promises, physically abusing one’s body, suicide, as well as Kant’s stance on the abuse of non-rational animals.
4. Teaching Philosophy: Volume > 27 > Issue: 2
Rick Fairbanks Studying Science in Action: The Case for Using Cases in Teaching the Philosophy of Science
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This paper describes the case-based approach to teaching philosophy of science courses and argues for its merits. The paper first presents a case study that debates whether the “shock features” of the Slate Islands in Lake Superior were formed by meteorite impact or have an endogenous origin, e.g. from explosive volcanic activity. Next, the virtues of the Slate-Island case are considered, e.g. the case is focused insofar as what is at stake is relatively clear and the case illustrates the truisms that creditable scientists disagree and the claims made in natural science are probable rather than indubitable. Finally, the paper argues for the case-based approach to teaching the philosophy of science by responding to two objections: (i) that case studies get in the way of doing philosophy and (ii) that students won’t be able to understand scientific literature well enough to reflect upon how it relates to science in general.
reviews
5. Teaching Philosophy: Volume > 27 > Issue: 2
Bram Van Heuveln Reason!Able: An Argument-Diagramming Software Package
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6. Teaching Philosophy: Volume > 27 > Issue: 2
Scott McElreath Moral Theory: An Introduction
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7. Teaching Philosophy: Volume > 27 > Issue: 2
Garrett Thomson Hume on Morality
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8. Teaching Philosophy: Volume > 27 > Issue: 2
Gabriel Palmer-Fernandez On the Meaning of Life
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9. Teaching Philosophy: Volume > 27 > Issue: 2
Edmund F. Byrne Terrorism and International Justice
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10. Teaching Philosophy: Volume > 27 > Issue: 2
Lisa H. Schwartzman Groups and Group Rights
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11. Teaching Philosophy: Volume > 27 > Issue: 2
John Rudisill Social and Political Philosophy: A Contemporary Introduction
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12. Teaching Philosophy: Volume > 27 > Issue: 2
Pierre Lamarche The Phenomenology Reader
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13. Teaching Philosophy: Volume > 27 > Issue: 2
Emily S. Lee The Gender of Science
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14. Teaching Philosophy: Volume > 27 > Issue: 2
Scott Aikin The Oxford Handbook of Epistemology
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new publications
15. Teaching Philosophy: Volume > 27 > Issue: 2
Books Received
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