1.1 An Introduction to General Philosophy

Video Statistics and Information

Video
Captions Word Cloud
Reddit Comments
Captions
well the general philosophy course consists of eight topics and those topics are all pretty central in epistemology and metaphysics epistemology the theory of knowledge what can we know how can we know it metaphysics what is the nature of things more importantly in a way general philosophy illustrates to you how philosophy is done so the importance isn't just the particular topics it's understanding the discipline of philosophy how it works the sorts of considerations that are brought to bear in discussing these topics and so forth it makes you a better philosopher thinking about these topics and it's got some historical focus you'll find that seven out of the eight topics are introduced through literature of the 17th and 18th century not a lot typically on each of these topics you'll have one reading that goes back to what we call the early modern period you might wonder why that's so you came here to study philosophy not to study history why should you be interested in what happened two or three hundred years ago well the point is that these problems became evident there for a good reason certain things were happening in the world a scientific world view was largely replacing or at least augmenting a predominantly religious view and a lot of these problems naturally emerged then and they remain important today but because the problems emerged then a lot of the labels that we use when discussing these problems are inevitably historical if you don't know what cartesian dualism is for example you will be lost in a lot of modern discussions as well as older ones so you need to know something about what descartes said not necessarily because the way he said it was particularly it remains particularly important today it's not that we now are going to take his arguments as the last word but because the discussions today are still reflect the language of the past in some ways you need to know that so i've given some examples there of the sorts of labels we get welcome to those who've just arrived one of the things i said at the beginning of the lecture was that we start a bit late you haven't missed very much i'm well aware that you have a bit of a job getting here you might notice as you come in that i put handouts at the door i suspect you all came in quickly and quietly without noticing you'll be able to pick some out as you go but all of the slides that you see up here are on the handouts okay another point is by studying these philosophers of the past you are studying people who are undoubtedly great thinkers some of the very greatest thinkers that have ever been you're certainly not wasting time looking at their work there are still plenty of insights to be gleaned from them another point about studying philosophy historically is to do with interconnections between topics if you just study topics in isolation it's all too easy to view them just as separate things that you can pick and mix but philosophical ideas aren't normally like that they have very deep connections taking a view on one one particular position may well commit you to a view on another now one of the great ways of seeing that is to see the interplay between these ideas in historical figures to see one great figure arguing against another and understanding how one view impacts on a different one so we'll see examples of that in what follows many of these themes that arose back in the 17th and 18th centuries as i've said remain today so looking at those battles can actually throw a very useful light on modern debates it is not uncommon to find people debating now in ways that overlook points that were made back then and if you know about that history you were able to find points that were made that remain valid again uh look looking at things with a historical perspective can prevent our getting blinkered by what happened to be the concerns of today so there are all sorts of good reasons for getting some historical perspective in philosophy you don't have to be as it were an antiquarian in order to get value from this sort of discussion okay here briefly after topics i'm not going to say very much about these you know them from the syllabus skepticism knowledge perception primary and secondary qualities induction free will mind and body personal identity and i've given some notes there of particular big thinkers that we're going to be mentioning as we go through so in this lecture and the next i'm basically focusing on an historical perspective which i hope will enable you to see how all these different topics tie together why they arose when they did why they were so important and why many of them remain important in subsequent lectures i'll be looking in detail at each of those topics in turn
Info
Channel: University of Oxford
Views: 378,817
Rating: undefined out of 5
Keywords: yt:stretch=16:9, philosophy, scepticism, epistemology, ontology
Id: hdCBGWcd4qw
Channel Id: undefined
Length: 5min 55sec (355 seconds)
Published: Thu Oct 21 2010
Related Videos
Note
Please note that this website is currently a work in progress! Lots of interesting data and statistics to come.