Programme/Approved Electives for 2022/23
None
Available as a Free Standing Elective
Yes
Questions concerning knowledge and reality strike at the heart of the philosophical enterprise, as they are some of the most fundamental questions that have occurred to us as human beings. As such, epistemology (the study of knowledge) and metaphysics (the study of reality) are the two central areas of philosophy. This module gives an opportunity to study key contemporary debates that touch on the most fundamental questions about our world and what we can know about it. Informed by the latest scholarship, we will reflect on such questions as:1) What is time?2) What is causation?3) What is knowledge, and how do we get it?4) Can we define knowledge?5) What is it to be an object?Students will be able to critically assess these and other important philosophical topics, and encouraged to develop their own personal views.
Aims
The course aims:1) To give students a deeper grounding the two central areas of philosophy: metaphysics and epistemology2) To develop core study skills, including writing and research, as well as developing some key employability skills
Talis Aspire Reading ListAny reading lists will be provided by the start of the course.http://lists.lib.keele.ac.uk/modules/phi-20021/lists
Intended Learning Outcomes
Analyse and critically assess key approaches in metaphysics and epistemology: 1,2Explain some of the central debates in metaphysics and epistemology: 1,2Develop and defend views regarding debates in metaphysics and epistemology: 1,2Write about philosophical issues in metaphysics and epistemology with clarity and precision: 1,2Summarise and analyse key readings from metaphysics and epistemology: 1,2
10 hours attendance at lectures10 hours attendance at seminars40 hours study and preparation for seminars45 hours study and preparation for reader report45 hours study and preparation for essay
Description of Module Assessment
1: Essay weighted 50%1,000 word essayStudents will choose one question to answer from a list provided at the start of the semester. The essay will be on epistemology and submitted at the end of the semester.
2: Commentary weighted 50%1,000 word reader reportA written exercise - students will be expected to provide a report on one article on metaphysics from the reading list. Students must reconstruct the argument of the article in their own words, and then critically assess the argument, drawing on their own original arguments and wider discussion in the literature. This will be submitted partway through the semester, with feedback used to aid work on essay assessment.