This course is an introduction to the philosophical thought of the two most important philosophical figures of ancient Greece. By working through parts of their central texts and thoughts, we will gain an understanding of Plato and Aristotle's relevance in the past and today as well. After each section of this guide, you will find some questions and suggestions for further thought. There is no right or wrong answer to most of these questions; they're designed merely to offer suggestions for how you might think further about the reading and about what was discussed in the lecture. In each case, you will, of course, find the questions more or less accessible depending on whether or not you were able to read the dialogue as well as listen to the lecture. You may find it interesting not to stop with these particular questions, but to use them as models to think further on your own or with others about the issues and questions raised by these lectures.
Up Jumped the Devil : The Real Life of Robert Johnson
Gayle Dean Wardlow, Bruce Conforth
audiobookAn Enquiry Concerning the Principles of Morals and Other Works
David Hume
audiobookDiscourse on the Method
Rene Descartes
audiobookbookPrinciples of Sociology
Herbert Spencer
bookKentucky Traveler
Ricky Skaggs
audiobookA Vindication of the Rights of Woman : With Strictures on Political and Moral Subjects
Mary Wollstonecraft
bookTeaching Theory and Academic Writing : A Guide to Undergraduate Lecturing in Political Science
bookSimply Dirac
Helge Kragh
bookThe Secular Enlightenment
Margaret Jacob
audiobookA Letter Concerning Toleration
John Locke
audiobookbookThink in Models
Nick Trenton
bookÅ leve eller bare eksistere 3
Eduard Wagner
book