Teaching Philosophy

ONLINE FIRST

published on March 31, 2015

Christopher Gifford

How to Teach Metaphysics

We present some teaching materials for metaphysics which use the method of introducing issues via puzzles, paradoxes, problems, and conundrums in metaphysics. The method is motivated by the aim to increase student participation and engagement in metaphysical issues so that the student considers and understands philosophical theories based on specific metaphysical concepts. These materials are a result of distill- ing first and second year undergraduate academic materials into simple presentations that retain the core focus on salient concepts. The presented teaching methods share the same approach as Raymond Smullyan’s puzzle-first approach to teaching. Potential goals for the material are numerous; one main goal is the development of the individual student’s independent, original, and creative philosophical thinking and analysis as applied to the area of metaphysics. Other goals include the appreciation of overlap between different subareas within metaphysics - overlaps that we note. The article finishes with a further consideration of the importance and utilization of the emotions elicited from materials of philosophical problems and how these can be best incorporated into the teaching methods.