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Preliminary
Considerations Is this course
for you? There are no
formal course prerequisites or co-requisites for Phil 101. However, there
are some very important facts about the course to consider before
committing yourself to it. The Internet
version of Philosophy 101 is entirely conducted by text. For students,
this implies that no one should attempt the internet version of
Philosophy 101 unless he/she already has strong abilities in reading
and writing. This course
requires significantly more and better
reading and writing achievement than an ordinary classroom based
course. Similarly, expect to spend significantly
more time on this course than on an ordinary classroom based course. Do not take
this course: ·
On the
expectation that it will be easier than a classroom based course.
It will not be. ·
On the
expectation that it will require less time than a classroom course. It
will require more time. ·
If your reading and writing competency is not very
high. Any reading or writing problem will likely make the course
impossible to pass. Philosophy is entirely a language based discipline
and in the internet course it is entirely text based. Attention will be
paid to strategies of reading and writing in Philosophy but those are
mapped onto strong initial competencies. ·
Unless you can
consistently devote significant time to the course. The course has a
consistent, even relentless, work plan. There is no possibility of
setting it aside for a week or two and then catching up. Do take this
course: ·
If reading and
writing are your strong suits. ·
If you are
consistently willing to devote 6-10 hours per week to the course. In
the summer semester, you will have to double that time, since the time
available has been halved. ·
If you have an
interest in the abstract and theoretical underpinnings of contemporary
debates. |