ETHICS
PHL 201 - Spring 2019
Online (CRN 47476 and 48357) Prof.
Borrowdale
OFFICE HOURS: M, Tu,
W 1-2pm and by appointment in
Center 410J; Sun 7-9pm via
Moodle Messaging
TEXT: Borrowdale, Ethics: An
Anthology of Classical Readings, 6th Edition
(available at the LCC
Titan Store).
IMPORTANT: There is a quiz on the syllabus due
Wednesday by 4pm. If you don't take the
Syllabus Quiz by the deadline, you may be dropped from
the course for non-participation. If you decide this
class is not for you, please drop right away on MyLane, as there is
no guarantee you will be dropped for
non-participation the first week and there may be other
students waiting to get in. If you don't drop by Sunday,
April 7, 11:59pm, you will be charged for
the class. If you drop the class after the 4th week,
the class will be recorded on your transcript with a "W"
(withdrawn) next to it. The absolute last day to drop or
change
your grading option to pass/no pass is always Friday
of the 8th week, which this term is May 24 at
11:59pm.
CONTACTING THE INSTRUCTOR:Please
use Moodle
messages to contact me. I will do my
best to reply within 24 hours, excluding Saturdays and
holidays. You may receive a notification and copy
of Moodle messages in your email. Please don't reply
to those directly; log into Moodle and reply there.
Using Moodle messages
consistently also allows us to track any ongoing
issues by scrolling up in the message history. Replying
to email notifications or using email to contact me
will result in a delayed response and
the 24 hour rule will not apply. My students
come first; using Moodle for communication
will ensure your message gets the priority treatment
it deserves. Also, before contacting me, please review
this syllabus to see if your question is already
answered here.
HELP FOR ONLINE STUDENTS AVAILABLE WEEKS 1-2:
Students in online courses can get free, in-person
help during Weeks 1 and 2. April 2, 4, and 5, 2-3
p.m.: Navigating Your Online Course. This 1-hour
workshop helps students get to know Moodle and the
online learning environment. April 8 and 9, 9-10 a.m.:
Time Management for Online Learning. This 1-hour
workshop helps students build a reasonable schedule
for online work and understand the online commitments
ahead. All sessions are in the ATC Computer Lab (CEN
219).
THIS IS AN ADULT
LEARNING SPACE: Expect to come into contact with ideas
with which you disagree and to have your beliefs challenged.
Students will be treated as mature, responsible adults,
capable of engaging in adult conversations which may touch on
topics such as race, sex, gender, sexual orientation, sexual
relations, cultural differences, morality, politics and
religion. It is a prerequisite of this course that you
possess, or be willing to develop, the ability to discuss
controversial issues in a calm, rational and respectful
manner.
TRIGGER WARNING: Examples used in the readings
and in class may reference war, nuclear weapons, biological
weapons, terrorism, genocide, slavery, serial killers,
cannibalism, human sacrifice, murder, torture, FGM
(female genital mutilation), rape, sexual harassment,
sexual infidelity, sexual promiscuity, abortion, addiction,
suicide, drowning children, starving children, children hit by
trains and college students killed for their organs. The
purpose of these hypothetical and real life examples is not to
be lurid but to clearly illustrate moral principles with the
stark realities of human experience. Ethical theory would
otherwise be about meaningless abstractions or petty bourgeois
problems. Also, "extreme" cases give us examples of morally
bad acts and outcomes about which there is nearly universal
agreement that we can use as a starting point for theorizing.
Expect such examples to come up in class regularly, along with
examples of compassion, virtue and heroism. You may also be
exposed to uncensored art nudes and a censored photo of a
congressman "caught with his pants down." If you have
difficulty handling such material, you may want to consider
taking another course. For help with post-traumatic stress
or emotional fragility, please visit the Counseling
& Career Center. If you would like to
improve your tolerance for subject matter and ideas you may
currently find distressing or offensive, I encourage you to
remain in the class but with the understanding that thinking
about, discussing and critically evaluating this material in
a mature and responsible manner is a course requirement.
ACADEMIC FREEDOM OF THE INSTRUCTOR:"The
professional freedom of faculty includes the right to
explore and discuss controversial issues and divergent
points of view..." -- Collective Bargaining Agreement
between the Lane Community College Educational Association and
Board of Education, Section 15.3. This section also notes that
this includes "criticizing, and advocating their point of view
concerning the policies and programs of the college," which
the instructor has been known to do from time to time. Another
relevant section of the faculty contract is Section 16.3,
Civic Life, which states, "Each faculty member is also a
citizen of his or her nation, state and community; and when
he or she speaks, writes or acts as such shall be free from
institutional censorship."
ACADEMIC FREEDOM OF STUDENTS: "Each faculty member is
entitled to and responsible for protecting freedom in the
classroom in discussion and presentation of subject matter."
-- Collective Bargaining Agreement between the Lane Community
College Educational Association and Board of Education,
Section 15.2. Voicing an opinion that differs from that
expressed by the instructor will never be penalized, though
there may be occasions when debate must be curtailed in the
interest of adequately covering course material. The
instructor encourages the voicing of dissenting opinions,
especially on controversial issues and when backed by
convincing reasons and supporting evidence. This
enlivens class, provides an alternative viewpoint, fosters
critical thinking and may end up enlightening the instructor,
who occasionally realizes he has been wrong about something.
Please couch dissenting opinions in a constructive and
respectful manner in order to keep the exchange of ideas
civil.
USE OF HUMOR: The instructor frequently employs humor
to lighten the mood as well as to illustrate points, add color
and make learning fun. This should in no way be interpreted as
disparaging any individual or group. Students will always be
treated with the utmost respect and will never be mocked or
ridiculed.
CONCERNS: I want this class to be a positive learning
experience for you. If, at any time, you have a concern,
grievance or complaint about the course, please speak with
me about it directly in office hours or via Moodle
message. You have my personal guarantee that I will hear you
out, reflect carefully on what you have to say and that it
will have no bearing on your grade. Because the class uses
objective testing in Instructional
Testing Services (with a record of scores on the
server), you have additional protection. My only request is
that, if I have some feedback for you, you consider it in the
same spirit. I'd rather correct any problems than have you be
disgruntled for the rest of the term (which is likely to
negatively affect your performance in the class) only to
complain about it in student evaluations. Why not alert me to
a problem when I can actually do something about it? In the
unlikely event that you remain dissatisfied, you can still
take your concern to the Dean of the Social Science
Division. I am a reasonable, fair and kind human being
and care about my students, so I'm sure we will be able to
work something out. Addressing any concerns early, honestly
and directly will result in a better outcome for both of us.
WHAT PHILOSOPHY IS: Philosophy
is an attempt to come to a systematic understanding of
the objective world through the use of reason. The
philosophical approach assumes a commitment to follow
the truth wherever it leads, however uncomfortable it
may make us and in spite of what we may wish to be
true. It strives for logical consistency and agreement
with the empirical evidence. Philosophy is about
asking questions, especially questions no one else
wants to ask. Philosophy even questions the
unquestionable, including things considered to be
"common sense," such as the existence of an external
world of matter, free will, God, the soul, an
afterlife, or, in the case of this class, the
existence of universal, objective moral values (or
perhaps the unquestionable certainty of our age is the
dogma that morality is culturally relative or
completely subjective). Philosophy uses conceptual
analysis as its primary tool. Properly analyzing
concepts requires the rigorous definition of terms, so
the precise use of language is very important to
philosophers, or at least to the good ones. This goes
all the way back to Socrates. Fuzzy language evinces
fuzzy thinking.
WHAT PHILOSOPHY IS NOT: Philosophy
is not about exploring your "personal beliefs." Nor is
it about your feelings (please avoid the phrase "I
feel" when expressing your point of view in class or
online forums, as hopefully what you have to say is
based on more than your subjective emotional state).
Philosophy is not about your identity, your sex, your
gender, your sexual orientation, your culture or your
"race."
It's not about your faith or "how you were raised."
Please avoid referring to these things in class unless
they have some direct bearing on the issue at hand.
Although there is an historical tradition associated
with philosophy, it is not primarily about history,
and even though understanding their historical or
cultural context may help us understand the ideas of
particular philosophers, it is the ideas
themselves with which philosophy is concerned. CONTRIBUTIONS OF WOMEN AND NON-WESTERN
CULTURES: There were few women philosophers
until the beginning of the feminist movement in the
19th century. This was true of most other academic
fields due to the institutionalization of pre-modern
gender roles. Because this is a survey class concerned
with major historical figures and basic concepts in
ethics, we won't be reading many women philosophers.
This should in no way be seen as casting aspersions on
women as a class of people. We will, however, be
spending a significant amount of time with Ayn Rand,
who happens to be a woman and also one of the most
important and influential philosophers and
intellectuals of the 20th century, especially in
ethics and political philosophy.
Along those same lines, for various complex historical
and cultural reasons, philosophy emerged and
flourished in the West and is the heritage of Western
Civilization. It uniquely sowed the seeds for the
scientific and industrial revolutions in Western
Europe, leading to our modern technological world, as
well as providing the social and political concepts on
which the United States was founded. Like the
scientific method and industrial production
techniques, Western concepts such as individual
rights, separation of Church and State, democratic
self-government, meritocracy and free market
capitalism have been adopted by many non-Western
societies and diffused throughout the world. This is
yet another reason to focus on theories of value that
arose from and influenced the development of the
Western World and, consequently, the rest of human
civilization. The ethical traditions of other
civilizations, including indigenous cultures, are
covered extensively in history, cultural anthropology
and ethnic studies courses.
Finally, it is important to understand that "Western"
is just a conventional term for ideas which first
emerged in Western Europe. An idea's place of origin
or the particulars of the person who first developed
or expounded it has nothing whatever to do with its
truth value or importance in increasing human
understanding. Newton and Leibniz discovered calculus
around the same time and each accused the other of
stealing his discovery. Yet calculus is neither
essentially a British idea nor a German idea, nor is
it a European or "white male" idea. Who was first to
discover it, where he lived and the details of his
ancestry and nationality are irrelevant to the
validity and usefulness of calculus. So it is with all
intellectual discoveries and theoretical innovations,
including those concerning moral value.
CATALOG DESCRIPTION: Ethics is the study of
morality, including an analysis of the concepts of
good and evil, right and wrong, justice,
responsibility, duty, character and successful living.
Topics include whether morality is relative to culture
or to the individual, moral skepticism, the
relationship between morality and religion, theories
about what makes particular actions right or wrong,
the source of moral knowledge and how morality affects
the way we approach controversial social issues.
COURSE OBJECTIVES: The
objectives for this course are for students to (1)
come to a clearer understanding of ethical concepts
through the study of classical and contemporary
theories, (2) acquire some factual knowledge about the
history of ethics and important ethical thinkers, (3)
come to their own conclusions about which ethical
theories are best or most likely to be true, even if
those conclusions are of a tentative nature, (4)
acquire critical and analytical reasoning skills along
the way, and (5) apply conclusions about the nature of
moral value to their present way of life.
COURSE REQUIREMENTS
FORUM
POSTS
Due
before Sunday 11:55pm each week
10%
of grade (this may seem small,
but it amounts to one letter grade)
FIRST
MIDTERM EXAM
Opens: Friday, April 19 at 9am
Closes: Monday, April 29 at 7pm
30% of grade
SECOND
MIDTERM EXAM
Opens:
Friday, May 10 at 9am
Closes: Monday, May 20 25 at 7pm
30%
of grade
EXTRA
CREDIT EXAM (OPTIONAL)
Opens:
Tuesday, May 21 at 9am
Closes: Wednesday, June 5 at 7pm
Replaces
First or Second Midterm,
whichever is lower, otherwise no effect.
FINAL EXAM
Opens:
Thursday, June 6 at 9am
Closes: Wednesday, June 12 at 7pm
30% of grade
AUDIO PODCASTS: In addition to the text, this
class uses audio podcasts from the Fall 2016
face-to-face class. Make sure to listen to these each
week, as they will explain the readings, whiteboard
notes and Powerpoint slides in Moodle. There may be
material on the exams which is contained in these
recordings but not explicitly stated in the text. Feel
free to skip over any announcements at the beginning
of the recordings. Any current announcements will be
posted to the Announcement Forum or Social Forum.
FORUM POSTS: The purpose of the forum
assignment is to allow you the opportunity to
interpret, evaluate and apply what you have learned,
and to discuss the merits and implications of class
concepts and theories with your classmates. Every
Monday a new forum prompt will be posted. To receive
credit, you must make one reply of 100 to 300 words
that substantially and directly addresses the prompt
and displays a familiarity with the reading, i.e. your
post must be distinguishable from someone who hasn't
done any of the reading, looks at the prompt and
"gives their opinion." Avoid all titles, headers
and signatures. Moodle displays your name, the
date, the topic and the forum week; duplicating this
information clutters up the forum. Write in block
format with no indenting, spacing between
paragraphs, and use the standard font. If
you're pasting from Google docs, Microsoft Word or
similar programs, save as plain text first. After
you've posted, make sure that your post's
formatting looks OK, that the font matches
everyone else's and that there are no extra spaces
above or below the text (a common problem with copying
and pasting). See the Student
Help Desk for help using Moodle forums.
Read the prompt carefully before answering.
Make sure you are actually answering the question
since off-topic posts will not receive credit. You
should carefully revise and proofread your
post for typos, awkward language, conceptual vagueness
and inconsistency. Posts making unsupported or
contradictory claims will not receive credit. Your
post should not read like a
stream of consciousness of you trying to figure
things out "on the fly." If it helps you to
write something like that first, go ahead, but then
revise it into something clear, methodical and
coherent. Avoid meaningless, introductory throw-away
comments or restating the question; get straight to
the point.
Plagiarism, which includes but is not limited to
copying and pasting from websites, will result in a
penalty of one letter grade on the first offense (the
equivalent of a zero on all forum posts) and an F
in the class on the second offense. If you do
the readings, you should have no trouble responding to
the prompt in a way that is sufficient for credit
without looking at any other sources. Postings will be
graded on a credit/no-credit basis and are due before Sunday 11:55pm
at the end of each week.
Late posts will not
receive credit. Give yourself 30 minutes to
review and edit your post after you have made it,
making sure the formatting matches if you have copied
and pasted it from a word processing program. If it
doesn't match the font style and size, save as plain
text in your word processor and try again. Set a
weekly reminder in your phone or online calendar so
you don't forget to post (while you’re at it, you
might want to put in the exam dates and grade
option/drop deadline, too). Posts of fewer than
100 words will not receive credit. Use the
word count feature in your word processor or online if
you are in doubt. If your post is over 300 words, edit
it down. An extra credit forum will be available in
Week Ten to make up for one missed post. Students are
also expected to read every post and pay special
attention to posts made by the instructor.
You must arrive one hour
before closing. You will need an official photo
I.D., such as a state-issued driver's license,
state-issued I.D. card, student I.D. card, passport or "green
card." Unfortunately, LCC bus passes no longer qualify as
valid photo I.D. You will need to know your L Number
and MyLane PIN to log into Moodle. If there is more than
one exam open or you've been granted an extension to take an
exam late, make sure to tell the testing personnel which exam
you would like to take so they don't give you the wrong one by
mistake. If English is your second language, dictionaries will
be on hand for you to use. If your native language isn't a
common one, please contact Instructional Testing
Services ahead of time to make sure they have your
language. Unfortunately, you are not allowed to use your own
paper or electronic dictionary.
The exam format will be multiple choice and true/false
questions. During the exam you may use a 3 x 5 note card (both
sides) or a piece of paper measured with a ruler and cut to
the same size. The final will not be
comprehensive.
Once you take your exam, you'll immediately receive your score
as well as be able to see the questions you missed along with
the correct answers. Please give yourself time to review the
exam right after you take it, asyou will not be
able to review your exam from home. Reviewing
your exam will be especially helpful to you if you plan on
taking the Extra Credit Exam, which will cover the same
material. If you wish to review your exam at a later date, you
will have to see one of the philosophy tutors. A small curve
be may included which will add to your raw score. Your
adjusted score can be viewed by clicking on "Grades"
on the side bar in Moodle.
Instructional
Testing Services(and
everything else on campus) will be closed
Friday, May 3 (Spring Conference) and Monday,
May 27 (Memorial Day).
PROCTORED TESTING FOR REMOTE STUDENTS: See http://www.lanecc.edu/laneonline/test-proctoring
for details on proctoring if you are taking the course from
out of the greater Eugene area. If you need help locating a
proctor, try Consortium of College Testing Centers at http://www.ncta-testing.org/cctc.
A per test fee is usually required; fees will vary by
institution.
EXAM DEADLINE POLICY:
Since you will have at least a week to take each exam, you
will be expected to meet the deadline, however, you may contact the Philosophy
Assistant before the deadline via
Moodle messaging to request an extension without
penalty. Please include the date you would like the exam
extended to in your message. The Final Exam closes
WEDNESDAY 7PM of Final Exam Week. Since Instructional Testing
Services on the main campus closes for the term Thursday
at 5pm, extensions are not possible past that time.
PENALTIES FOR CHEATING: Students caught cheating will
be given an F in the course.
EXTRA CREDIT EXAM: There is an optional Extra Credit
Exam, based on the material from the First and Second Midterm
Exams. It will replace the lowest of your First or Second
Midterm Exam scores. If it is lower than either, it will have
no effect. In order for it to count, you have to take both
midterms. It is not a substitute for taking either midterm
or the final exam.
OTHER EXTRA CREDIT: You may also earn extra credit
visiting the philosophy tutors and attending the Philosophy
Club, adding a maximum of 3% to your course grade (details
below).
GRADING:
Exams may be curved upward, based on the distribution of
scores. This is done by adding a certain number of points to
every student score. At the end of the term, the class will
be graded on the following absolute scale, with course
totals rounded to the nearest whole number:
A+ 97% -100%
A 93% - 96%
A- 90% - 92%
B+ 87% - 89%
B 83% - 86%
B- 80% - 82%
C+ 77% - 79%
C 73% - 76%
C- 70% - 72%
D+ 67% - 69%
D 63% - 66%
D- 60% - 62%
F 0% - 59%
GETTING
HELP WITH THE CLASS: If you are having
difficulties with the class, please see one of the philosophy
tutors as soon as possible.The
tutors' walk-in hours and contact information to make an
appointment are linked at the top of the main course page in
Moodle. The tutors can go over your exam with you and help
you to improve your grade on the next one as well as the
Extra Credit Exam. Please see the tutors first about issues
involving understanding basic concepts and improving your
test grade. You will also earn extra credit for each visit,
up to four visits. Each visit will earn you 0.5% toward your
course grade, up to a maximum of 2%.
EARLY OUTREACH AND REFERRAL (EOR) PROGRAM: At Lane
Community College, we want every student to be successful.
The Early
Outreach and Referral (EOR) Program is a campus-wide
effort to support students early in the term when they first
begin experiencing difficulty in a class. If I feel you are
having difficulty in this class (ex. missing classes,
missing assignments, and/or receiving low test or assignment
scores) I may refer you to an Early Outreach Specialist.
Once referred, an Early Outreach Specialist will follow up
with you by phone or email to find out how to best support
you by connecting you with necessary resources and helping
you develop and implement a Success Plan, which may include
individual tutoring or other additional services.
ADVANCED QUESTIONS: If you have a particular issue
from the readings, videos, forums, online reviews or
PowerPoints which you would like to explore, discuss or
perhaps debate in more depth than is practical in online
forums or Moodle messages, please visit me during my office
hours. I am also happy to help clear up any questions you
may still have after seeing one of the tutors.
TECHNOLOGY
USE AND HELP: This is an online course.
It requires you to use (but not necessarily own) a
computer, tablet or smart phone. The syllabus,
schedule, announcements, supplementary material and
resources, practice exam questions and grades are
all distributed via Moodle.
Campus labs are staffed with people who can help you
if you are new to computing devices or have
difficulty using them. Visit the Student
Help Desk (SHeD) website at https://www.lanecc.edu/learningcommons/student-help-desk,
call them at 463-3333 or visit them on the 2nd floor
of the Center Building, Learning Commons, Library,
Room 221B. A list of campus computer labs and hours
may be found at https://www.lanecc.edu/it/computerlabs.
PHILOSOPHY CLUB: The Philosophy Club
meets Tu 2-3pm. Join on OrgSync to
be updated on club activities. Attending a meeting will add
0.5% to your final course grade (maximum of two visits or 1%
possible with this activity).
COOPERATIVE EDUCATION OPPORTUNITY: I am the
faculty advisor for Young Americans
for Liberty, a locally controlled, independent student
club dedicated to limited government, individual rights,
personal responsibility and creating a free society guided
by reason, tolerance and compassion. If you're interested in
earning 2 or 3 credits in Cooperative Education (Political
Science) helping out with the club, send me a Moodle
message. For more information on the club, check out YAL at LCC on
OrgSync and
click the big green Join Now button to be
updated on club activities.
COURSE OUTLINE AND SCHEDULE
WEEK 1: Basic Ethical Theories (Ch. 1), Moral Relativism (Ch.
2)
Post to Weekly Forum before Sunday 11:55pm each week through
Week 10.
WEEK 2: Moral Skepticism (Ch. 3)
WEEK 3: Divine Command Theory (Ch. 4)
First Midterm Exam opens Friday 9am
WEEK 4: Egoism & Social Contract Theory (Ch. 5)
WEEK 5: Utilitarianism (Ch. 6)
First Midterm Exam closes Monday 7pm
Campus closed Friday for Spring Conference