Monday, August 30, 2010

Email Subscription

So why does this course have a blog? Well, why is anything anything?

A blog (short for “web log”) is a website that works like a journal – users write posts that are sorted by date based on when they were written. You can find important course information (like assignments, due dates, reading schedules, etc.) on the blog. I’ll also be updating the blog throughout the semester, posting interesting items related to the stuff we’re currently discussing in class. You don't have to visit the blog if you don't want to. It's just a helpful resource. I've used a blog for this course a lot, and it's seemed helpful. Hopefully it can benefit our course, too.

Since I’ll be updating the blog a lot throughout the semester, you should check it frequently. There are, however, some convenient ways to do this without simply going to the blog each day. The best way to do this is by getting an email subscription, so any new blog post I write automatically gets emailed to you. (You can also subscribe to the rss feed, if you know what that means.) To get an email subscription:

1. Go to http://rulogic2010.blogspot.com.

2. At the main page, enter your email address at the top of the right column (under “EMAIL SUBSCRIPTION: Enter your Email”) and click the "Subscribe me!" button.

3. This will take you to a new page. Follow the directions under #2, where it says “To help stop spam, please type the text here that you see in the image below. Visually impaired or blind users should contact support by email.” Once you type the text, click the "Subscribe me!" button again.

4. You'll then get an email regarding the blog subscription. (Check your spam folder if you haven’t received an email after a day.) You have to confirm your registration. Do so by clicking on the "Click here to activate your account" link in the email you receive.

5. This will bring you to a page that says "Your subscription is confirmed!" Now you're subscribed.

If you are unsure whether you've subscribed, ask me (609-980-8367; landis@rowan.edu). I can check who's subscribed and who hasn't.

Laptop Kitty

Course Details

Logic & Everyday Reasoning
Rowan University
Philosophy 09110, Section 10
Fall 2010
Mondays and Wednesdays, 1:45 – 3:00 p.m. in Rowan Hall, Room 102

Instructor: Sean Landis
Email: landis@rowan.edu
Phone: 609-980-8367
Course Website: http://rulogic2010.blogspot.com
Office Hourse: by appointment

Required Text
THiNK: Critical Thinking and Logic Skills for Everyday Life, by Judith Boss

About the Course

We are presented with arguments for all sorts of conclusions all the time, on topics as serious as abortion or the death penalty and as trivial as who the Phillies best player is or whether Letterman is funnier than Leno. How can we tell good arguments from bad ones?

This course focuses on understanding and evaluating arguments. We’ll first learn how to identify the components and structures of arguments. We’ll then learn how to pick apart the bad reasoning found in some arguments by going over logical fallacies, which are the different ways an argument can go wrong. We’ll also discuss the limitations of our own reasoning abilities and the natural biases that throw us off.

Armed with these evaluative tools, we’ll then explore our arguments for what we believe, and revise or strengthen them based on proper reasoning. The course’s main goal is to develop a respect for arguments and reasoning as an important, if not the most important, tool toward figuring out the truth and gaining a deep understanding of complex issues.

Straw Person is Less Sexist

Grades

A = 934-1000 total points
A- = 900-933 total points
B+ = 867-899 total points
B = 834-866 total points
B- = 800-833 total points
C+ = 767-799 total points
C = 734-766 total points
C- = 700-733 total points
D+ = 667-699 total points
D = 634-666 total points
D- = 600-633 total points
F = below 600 total points

Midterm 150 points
Final 250 points
Quizzes (2) 75 points each (150 points total)
Group Presentation 150 points
Homework 120 points total
Short Paper 50 points
Fun Mondays 80 points total
Attendance/Participation 50 points

Exams: The midterm tests everything covered during the first half of the course, and will last the full period (50 minutes) on the scheduled day. The final exam is cumulative—that is, it tests everything covered throughout the whole course. The final will also last 50 minutes, and be held on the last day of class.

Quizzes: Unlike the exams, quizzes will not be cumulative. Quiz #1 will test you on everything covered during the first 4 weeks of class, and quiz #2 will test you on everything we cover after the midterm. Quizzes will last 20 to 25 minutes, and be held at the beginning of the period on the scheduled day.

Short Paper: There will be a short paper (300-600 words) on understanding and evaluating an argument from a newspaper or magazine article.

Group Presentation: This will be a group project presented in front of the class at the end of the semester. Each group of 3-5 students will research a topic and present a 10- to 15-minute oral presentation on it to the rest of the class.

Fun Mondays: There will be 3 in-class graded assignments scheduled on some Mondays during the semester.

Homework: There will be three total homework assignments.

Attendance/Participation: Most of this will be based on your attendance. If you’re there every class, you’ll get full credit for your attendance grade. In addition, informal group work can impact your grade.

Extra Credit: I like giving extra credit! I’ll be giving some official extra credit assignments throughout the semester. I’ll also be offering some extra credit points more informally during class time. Remind me about this if I slack off on dishing out extra credit points.

Classroom Policies
Academic Integrity: Cheating and plagiarism (using someone else’s words or ideas in a paper or assignment without giving credit to the source) will not be tolerated in the class. Students found guilty of either will definitely fail the exam or assignment on which they plagiarize—and possibly the entire class.

Excused Absences: Make-up exams, quizzes, in-class projects, and oral reports will only be rescheduled for any excused absences. Excused absences include religious observance, official college business, and illness or injury (with a doctor’s note). An unexcused absence on the day of any assignment or test will result in a zero on that assignment or test.

Ask Me About My Bunny

Disability Accommodations: If you have special requirements let me know as soon as possible so we can make all necessary arrangements.

Course Schedule

*This schedule is tentative and will probably change a lot*

September 1
Wednesday: Introduction to class | (no reading)

September 6—8
Monday: LABOR DAY (no class)
Wednesday: Critical Thinking & Understanding Arguments|
read pages 166-176

September 13—15
Monday: Understanding & Evaluating Arguments | read pages 177-187
Wednesday: Evaluating Arguments & Constructing Your Own | read pages 188-194

September 20—22
Monday: Deductive Args: Valid & Sound | read pages 238-247; Homework #1 due
Wednesday: Deductive Args: Evaluating Validity | read pages 249-261

September 27—29
Monday: Inductive Arguments | read pages 202-219
Wednesday: QUIZ #1; Inductive Args: Analogies & Cause/Effect | read pages 221-229

October 4—6
Monday: Inductive Args wrap-up | FUN MONDAY #1: Proof
Wednesday: Scientific Reasoning (Abductive Args) | read pages 371-387

October 11—13
Monday: Scientific Arguments: Evaluation (murder mystery) |
read pages 387-399
Wednesday: Fallacies: Equivocation, Amphiboly, Accent,
Division | read pages 133-138

October 18—20
Monday: Fallacies: Ad Hominem, Force, Pity, Popular Appeal | pgs. 139-144;
Presentations #1 & #2
Wednesday: Fallacies: Ignorance, Hasty, Straw Man, Red Herring | pgs. 144-150;
Presentations #3 & #4; Homework #2 due

October 25—27
Monday: Review for Midterm Exam | (no assignment)
Wednesday: MIDTERM

November 1—3
Monday: Fallacies: Circular, Loaded, Authority, Dilemma | pgs. 151-156;
Presentations #5 & #6
Wednesday: Fallacies: Slippery & Naturalistic | pgs. 156-161; Presentation #7

November 8—10
Monday: Cognitive Biases: Our Mental Limits & Perceptual Errors | read pages 97-107
Wednesday: Cognitive Biases: Statistical Reasoning | read pages 109-119

November 15—17
Monday: Cognitive Biases: I’M-SPECIAL-ism |
FUN MONDAY #2: Biases
Wednesday: Cognitive Biases: Social Biases | read pgs. 120-125

November 22—24
Monday: QUIZ #2; Intellectual Honesty intro | read pages 1-12
Wednesday: Intellectual Honesty: Charity | read pages 13-20

November 25—28: THANKSGIVING BREAK! (no class) (woo?)
carpe diem, lazy bones

November 29—December 1
Monday: Intellectual Honesty: Ignorance | pgs. 20-29; FUN MONDAY #3: Life Plan
Wednesday: PAPER due; Advertising | read pages 311-321

December 6—8
Monday: Marketing & Advertising: Evaluation | read pages 321-333
Friday: Mass Media: News, Critical Consumers | read pages 342-350, 359-362; Homework #3 due

December 13
Monday: Mass Media wrap-up; review for Final Exam

Final Exam: Monday, December 20th, 1:30-2:30 p.m.

It's Starting to Look Like a Triple Rainbow!