Up@dawn 2.0

Wednesday, March 16, 2022

Exam 1 review

 Exam 1 will be drawn from the even-numbered questions (2,4,6...) in January and February. Wording will be adjusted to fit the exam format, which will include an answer bank. Best way to prepare: revisit the texts. Recorded review: 

https://mtsu.zoom.us/rec/share/RhvUht89aFHkSpfobgKh7iGtTEkL4jkdvJ9T5Ez87ILXJMDZDVnhvQr5ZA1z7iCS.Osx4mFc-u6uG5Hw9?startTime=1647452668000 (Passcode: ^X4F7?BB)

JB 1-2

  1. What did the word "atheism" conjure up for Baggini in his schooldays? Did it conjure similar associations for you? Or does it still?
  2. The atheist's disbelief in god is usually accompanied by what other rejection, and what affirmation? 
  3. What reductive 'ism do atheists usually not embrace? Which 
  4. Do you have any problem with the claim that love exists, even though it is not identical with some physical substance or "stuff"?
  5. What kind of absence of evidence IS evidence of absence?
  6. What natural human tendency leading to extraordinary but poorly evidenced claims did David Hume point out?
  7. What do you think of the claim that all religions are paths to the same truth?
  8. What do you think of Russell's statement about alternately deploying the labels atheist and agnostic depending on his audience?
  9. Do you agree that atheism is not a faith position?
  10. Is Pascal's Wager rigged?
Atheist ethics; Meaning & purpose (JB 3-4). Post your thoughts (etc.) in the comments space below.

1. What was Ivan Karamazov wrong about? Why do you think this attitude was popular in the 19th century with philosophers like Nietzsche, and is popular still with many theists?

2. What main point about goodness did Plato's Euthyphro make? Do you think most theists are comfortable with the idea that moral principles and rules may ultimately be arbitrary, from the standpoint of reason and human values?

3. The major monotheistic traditions all leave us with what view of morality? Were you raised to believe that God (like Santa Claus) is always watching and knows if you've been bad or good? Do you agree that those whose decision not to engage in criminal acts is motivated primarily by fear of punishment are not behaving morally?

4. What view of choice and responsibility comes easier for the theist?

5. What basic impulse did Adam Smith and David Hume consider prerequisite to moral reasoning?

6. Why should we be moral?

7. What consequentialist conundrum was raised by COVID?

8. What must we accept, if we take a pluralistic approach to moral reasoning?

9. By what measures can the most secular societies be said to be the most moral?

10. What form of purpose is most meaningful?

11. What do most people want, more than the achievement of goals (in the narrow sense)? But are these goals in a broader sense?

12. What do we really need to know, rather than the meaning or purpose of life?

13. Religion's "happiness dividend" seems to come from what?

14. Baggini finds it hard to believe that life could not be improved by what?

15. Who are some famous atheists named by Baggini?

16. What does Baggini find problematic about cheery or happy atheists?

17. What is Hanami?


Atheism in history; Against religion?; Conclusion (JB 5-6... or 7, if you're reading the 1st edition; FYI, 2d edition includes interesting new material on the New Atheists and other more recent debates.)

1. What ancient Indian school was materialist and probably atheist? Do you think a materialist worldview necessarily entails atheism?

2. Naturalism emerges from ____, making the latter most fundamental to the origins of atheism. 

3. "The first unequivocally professed atheist in the Western Tradition" was who? (But in light of #1, can you think of previous philosophers who were probably atheists?)

4. What % of Americans said in a 2019 survey that they would never vote for an atheist? What would it take to shrink that percentage?

5. What does Baggini say is one of the greatest predictors of how well a country is doing? Can you think of exceptions?

6. What is militant atheism?

7. We have to accept that there are no ____. (But do we?)

8. What sort of "climate" does moderate and mild religion support?

9. What is NOMA? Do you accept it?

William James (WJ), Pragmatism Lec I The Present Dilemma in Philosophy; Lec VI Pragmatism's Conception of Truth.  Post your thoughts, questions etc. on James's philosophy and its implications for both those who do and do not believe in a god. Don't forget to declare your midterm report presentation topic.

1. The philosophy which is so important in each of us is not a technical matter, says James, it is our what? In those terms, and to the extent that you can find some pertinent words to characterize it, what's your philosophy?

2. The history of philosophy is that of a clash of what? Do you agree that philosophers' reasons do not initially indicate and identify their respective philosophies? What would you say is the originating source of yours?

3. What quarrel do the the pragmatists have with the definition of truth as agreement? Do you consider the classic correspondence theory of truth helpful or constructive in the practical matter of discovering truths?

4. What is pragmatism's usual question? Are you in the habit of posing this question, with regard to your own as well as others' philosophical assertions?

5. "Woe to him whose beliefs play fast and loose with" what? Does this statement reassure you that pragmatism is NOT an arbitrary philosophical relativism?

6. "To 'agree' in the widest sense with a reality" means what?

7. "We live forwards, _____ has said, but we understand backwards." If that's right, what would you consider the pragmatic lesson we should learn about the nature and function of truth in human affairs?

8. What's the difference between tough- and tender-minded philosophies?

9. What philosopher's religious theodicy does WJ say instantiates "superficiality incarnate"? Agree?

10. What does WJ like about Herbert Spencer's philosophy, and in what important way does pragmatism differ from it?

WJ,  Pragmatism Lec VII Pragmatism and Humanism; Lec VIII Pragmatism and ReligionPost your thoughts, questions etc. on James's philosophy and its implications for both those who do and do not believe in a god. Don't forget to declare your midterm report presentation topic.

1. What attitude towards science, art, morals, and religion does WJ call an idol of rationalism? Do you share it?

2. Whose version of Humanism holds truths to be human products "to an unascertainable extent," and the world to be "plastic" to that extent? How is this a "butt-end-foremost" pronouncement? Do you accept it?

3. Tough-mindedness positively rejects what, and pragmatism cannot on principle reject what? Do you think this implies that pragmatists should resist the "tough-minded" label?

4. What's the "use" of the Absolute? Do you find it a useful and meaningful concept in philosophy?

5. "To You" by _____ is addressed to whom? What are two ways of taking it? Do you take it in one of those ways? What does your way say about your philosophical temper?

6. What does WJ consider "the great religious difference" between rationalists and empiricists, with respect to the world's possibilities and destiny?

7. What "type of theism" does WJ say avoids both "crude naturalism" and "transcendental absolutism"?

8. What are the three parts of reality we must take account of, in order to encounter truths? Do you think that's all there is to it? Is that enough, philosophically speaking?

9. What is the "essential contrast" between rationalism and pragmatism? Is it fundamentally an epistemological difference? What temperamental difference does it indicate, with what nod to Diogenes?

10. WJ's pragmatism is offered as a ____ between tough- and tender-minded philosophies.

The varieties of experience. WJ, Varieties of Religious Experience Preface, Lectures I-II (and whatever else you'd care to read) ; Carl Sagan, Varieties of Scientific Experience, editor's intro & whatever else you'd care to read. (You'll want to get hold of the book when you can, it features stunning astronomical photos missing from the excerpt below.) Also recommended: Pale Blue DotPBD textPBD videoWho Speaks For Earth videoCosmosCosmic Connection...and Carl's & Ann's daughter Sasha's For Small Creatures Such as We: Rituals for Finding Meaning in Our Unlikely World* 

1. What was to have been the second part of these lectures, ultimately postponed (but "suggested" in the postscript)?

2. What precedent does WJ hope his lectures will set?

3. What result does WJ say is "alien to my intention"?

4. What "method of discrediting states of mind for which we have an antipathy" does WJ say we're all familiar with, which he calls medical ___? 

5. Does WJ think religious emotions are more "organically conditioned"  than scientific theories? Why does he think we find some states of mind superior to others?

6. What's WJ's definition of religion? And what do you think of it?

7. "At bottom the whole concern of both morality and religion is ___."

8. "We are in the end absolutely dependent on ___."

9. What did Carl Sagan find tragic about the Genesis creation story, and why did he find Darwinian science more spiritually satisfying? Do you?

10. Carl agreed with Bertrand Russell that what we need is ___. (Russell was targeting WJ with this barb, but do you Carl and WJ ultimately disagreed about this?)

11. Carl wanted us to see ourselves "not as the failed clay of a disappointed Creator but as ___."

12. What did Carl admire about WJ's definition of religion? Do you think science, religion, philosophy are in some important sense an attempt to come home? Or to have the experience of feeling at home, in our experience and our lives?


RR foreword, preface, 1

1. The ultimate goal and aim of pragmatism is what, according to Rorty?

2. How is Rorty at one with Kant?

3. Rorty says for James and Dewey the only goal was what? 

4. What does Rorty want to teach us, according to Robert Brandom? And who do you think he means by "us"? Do you think WJ wanted to teach us the same thing?

5. What are norms, for Rorty, and how do they relate to reality (and Reality)? Do you understand and accept Rorty's upper/lower case distinction?

6. What of the original Enlightenment did Rorty applaud? Do you?

7. What in Plato and Christianity does Rorty call morally ambiguous?

8. What does Rorty say Dewey and Nietzsche simultaneously turned their backs on, and why? But what difference sharply distinguishes them?

9. What does Rorty say his version of pragmatism mediates and replaces?

10. Dewey, like James, hoped each new generation would try to do what? Is that a worthy and reasonable hope? What did Peirce, James, and Dewey "combine"? What was James more interested in than either of the other two?

11. James approvingly cited Papini's description of what, in making what point? 

12. What did Dewey say was the proper task of future philosophy?

13. What do his biographers agree was central to the formation of Dewey's mature thought? To what need related to his father does Rorty think we owe the pragmatist theory of truth? What is that theory's underlying motive?

14. Dewey's stories are always stories of what kind of progress?

15. James rejects what Clifford-like view?


Polytheism, Universality and Truth.  RR 2-4

1. Berthelot found an affinity between James and who? And traced the bifurcated roots of pragmatism to who?

2. Abrams says poetry can be a substitute for what? What definition "covers" Nietzsche and James?

3. Echoing Mill, James said what about demands and desires? Agree?

4. Nietzsche mistakenly thought what, about happiness? Do you agree that he was mistaken? How do James and Dewey differ from Nietzsche with regard to religious belief generally?

5. What text of James or Dewey does Rorty think "coheres best" with their shared view? What do you think of WJ's statement about "the end of religion"? (36)

6. In a democratic society everybody gets to worship what? What was "Dewey's god"?

7. In what way does Rorty see Clifford as religious?

8. RR thinks the universal desire for truth (or unconditionality) is better described as what? Why is the yearning for unconditionality unhealthy?

9. What makes us special, for Dewey? Why might that sound suspicious to Habermas and Apel?

10. What project "is democratic politics?

11. What do "we American college teachers do" when encountering religious fundamentalists?


Pan-Relationalism, Depth. RR 5-6 [I realize now, btw, that I was ahead of myself this afternoon when I said we were officially reading these lectures today.]

1. Rorty says "we bourgeois liberal have Dewey" and no longer need who to fend off anti-Enlightenment irrationalism? Agree? How would you characterize the difference between their respective conceptions of enlightened philosophizing?

2. How should we not answer "what purpose is this description supposed to serve"?

3. Why are numbers a good model of the universe?

4. What do pragmatists think is the aim of inquiry? Do you think their aim is true? (Elvis Costello pun only partly intended.)

5. What's pointless about things-in-themselves?

6. What did Darwin make hard for essentialists and Kantians?

7. Why must pan-relationalists (& pragmatists) not accept the making/finding distinction their critics would like to impose on them?

8. Socrates/Plato said knowledge of something deep would let us escape from what?

9. In what sense, for a pragmatist, are philosophy's traditional problems verbal?


Ethics, obligations, justice. RR 7-8. PRESENTATION: Gary, "My Two Weeks With the Atheists of Prague"

1. What practical question do pragmatists prefer to what traditional question?

2. What may be "the best single mark of our progress toward a full-fledged human rights culture"? 

3. RR asks if we could replace "justice" with what?

4. The problematic dichotomy of reason vs. feeling would begin to fade away, says RR, if we thought of reason as what?


Empiricism. RR 9-10, epilogue. PRESENTATION: Javan, Pragmatism as humanism

1. What statement of Wittgenstein's does RR think applies to terms like "sentience" and "consciousness"?

2. What does RR say Brandom "flirts with"?

3. What cultural achievements do Anglophone and non-Anglophone philosophers first think of?

4. When RR says he sees nothing worth saving in empiricism, he means he doesn't want to save what as a non-human authority due our respect?

5. In the Epilogue RR is quoted as saying what about his faithfulness to the thoughts of James and Dewey?

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