Chose any one or more philosophers and apply that philosophy to the 21st century.Discuss that philosopher(s) and his/their concept(s) in whatever context you wish.

Writer’s Choice

Political Philosophy Class:

Plato, Locke, Hegel and Marx have different views on the proper role and place regarding property. Plato opposes property ownership by the guardians, and Marx opposes private property. Locke sees the protection of property as one of the main goals of government, while economic activity and property are essential elements of ethical life for Hegel.

1. Construct an argument about which philosopher has the most convincing theories of property by comparing and contrasting Plato, Locke, Hegel, and Marx any two or more of the philosophers. This can include real-world results from their ideas, strength, and consistency of their arguments, or process of elimination by poking holes in the arguments of the other men leaving your choice as the last man standing.

2. Chose any one or more philosophers and apply that philosophy to the 21st century.

3. Chose any topic related to any philosopher, and discuss that philosopher(s) and his/their concept(s) in whatever context you wish.

Remember, have a strong introduction, revised last to reflect what the paper accomplished, and a strong conclusion consisting of lessons learned based on what is presented and documented in the body.

 

How did the book agree with and disagree with the conversations we had in PHI-101?What philosophers did the arguments in the book remind you of?

The Subtle Art

How did the book agree with and disagree with the conversations we had in PHI-101?

What philosophers did the arguments in the book remind you of?

How do your experiences align/contrast to the author’s?

What were the strongest/weakest arguments in the book?

What did you agree and disagree with?

What stories/advice impacted you the most?

What questions do you have for the author?

What is your overall reaction to the book? The assignment?

And anything else you want to bring in to your reaction.

Can robots have minds? (Or another way you might want to consider thinking about this questions—what mental abilities can robots have?

Do robots have minds?

Can robots have minds? (Or another way you might want to consider thinking about this questions—what mental abilities can robots have?)

3.10 and Lycan, “Robots and Minds” (uploaded reading) are the relevant readings. If you choose this, you might want to search for information on Searle’s Chinese Room thought experiment for the view that robots cannot have minds.

There is a section of my textbook that covers this subject.cannot download the textbook so will have to give access to my kindle account.

The title of the book will be the Philosopher’s Way and it is section 3.10 in the textbook.