Expectations for Students/Learning Outcomes
| Students learn about | Students should be able to |
|---|---|
| Introducing philosophy |
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Building a community of enquiry
Participate in discussion by being able to: |
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| Developing tools for thinking |
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| Key concepts |
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| Students learn about | Students should be able to |
|---|---|
| Philosophy of knowledge |
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| Guiding Questions |
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Key concepts
Mind/body relationship, knowledge/perception, reality, truth, illusion, idea, senses, imagination, experience, beliefs, memories, language, emotion, self, artificial intelligence, brain-enhancing technologies, gender, culture, beauty, scepticism, relativism. |
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| Students learn about | Students should be able to |
|---|---|
| Philosophy of language |
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| Questions |
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| Students learn about | Students should be able to |
|---|---|
| Philosophy of art (including visual arts, music, poetry, film, fashion, etc.) |
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| Questions |
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| Students learn about | Students should be able to |
|---|---|
| Philosophy of sport |
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| Questions |
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| Students learn about | Students should be able to |
|---|---|
| Philosophy of science and technology |
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| Questions |
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| Students learn about | Students should be able to |
|---|---|
| Moral philosophy |
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| Questions |
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| Students learn about | Students should be able to |
|---|---|
| Social and political philosophy |
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| Questions |
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| Students learn about | Students should be able to |
|---|---|
| Philosophy of education |
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| Questions |
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| Students learn about | Students should be able to |
|---|---|
| Philosophy of religion |
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| Questions |
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