Philosophy of Love & Pleaure

May 08, 2007 13:29

A non f-locked post, just for fun.

This summer I'm teaching an introductory freshman course on philosophy; it's a required core course, so I have a lot of non-majors. I've taught this course a number of times before, and I've decided to totally revamp the syllabus. Instead of focusing on the nature of the soul & freedom, I'm going to focus on love ( Read more... )

philosophy, teaching

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Comments 19

eve_prime May 8 2007, 18:29:45 UTC
For Augustine, how about some of the self-loathing from the Confessions? I hope he later had more balanced things to say on the topic, but I only read the Confessions.

From the Buddhist writers you're mostly going to get non-attachment stuff. Thich Nhat Hanh, who advocates "engaged Buddhism," does have positive and accepting things to say about the emotions - let me know if you'd like me to look up specific passages. I have three or four of his books.

It would be nice to include some women. How about de Beauvoir?

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eve_prime May 8 2007, 19:07:34 UTC
Re Thich Nhat Hanh:

Actually, this book should do. The link includes an excerpt from the book, a personal story about the author falling in love.

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owl_of_minerva May 8 2007, 19:12:57 UTC
yeah, it is pretty male-y, but that's hard to overcome in a history-of-philosophy-oriented course. I flipped through my anthology of early modern women philosophers, but didn't find much. And I don't just want to default to feminist ethics of care stuff on love (mostly just because I teach it all the time, and I want to do new stuff this summer). De Beauvoir might be good; any specific recommendations? I've been meaning to read Ethics of Ambiguity but haven't yet, so I don't know if anything there would be helpful to me.

Maybe something from Christine Korsgaard's Sources of Normativity, but that might be way above my freshmen's heads.

thanks for the Thich Nhat Hanh rec. below!

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eve_prime May 8 2007, 19:22:11 UTC
I've never read de Beauvoir, but I think I ought to. It looks like she's interested in sexual love as a context for authenticity and overcoming the estrangement between self and other. This overview of her work has lots of interesting leads. I like the phrase "the truth of the erotic event," though I doubt it would go over well if you had your students reading her intro to de Sade's Justine. Maybe something from The Second Sex?

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max_ambiguity May 8 2007, 20:16:43 UTC
Maybe it's not introductory enough, but I would immediately think of Gilles Deleuze's Coldness and Cruelty (and de Sade, but he isn't really a philosopher, is he?). Because I'm cruel.

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owl_of_minerva May 8 2007, 20:36:47 UTC
Hm. Deleuze might be a bit much for them. Maybe, though... hrm. I'll flip through, if it's at our library.

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noetickerf May 9 2007, 00:22:32 UTC
there's an interesting decision to be made w/r/t plato, whether one is going to attempt to confine the discussion to eros, or to introduce care as well ( ... )

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owl_of_minerva May 9 2007, 02:47:00 UTC
Thanks for the long list! Some of them I will file away for my own future reference. I worry that some of those might be a little beyond what I'd normally expect of the folks in this course-- it is not only introductory, but mostly non-majors. The CS Lewis is a good recommendation though; now that I come to think of it, I know others have used that in similar courses to mine & had good success.

What's the title of the Cavell piece? I haven't read it, and it might be workable.

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noetickerf May 9 2007, 03:51:05 UTC
don't mention it. i wasn't so much recommending using the lewis, though, as much as familiarizing yourself with it, so you know what kind of pseudophilosophy you're up against.

the two cavell titles are in my original comment. they're books, so you'd have to hunt around a bit, for what suits you best.

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didymus3000 May 10 2007, 15:45:15 UTC
Augustine, DDC, book I - on uti/frui. and how that fits with love of god and neighbor. helps to explain the homo-erotic parts of the confessions.

that's about as philosophical as i get... at least these days.

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owl_of_minerva May 10 2007, 15:47:41 UTC
hahaha. dig it. I've not read DDC (that's on christian doctrine, right?). I will have to spend some quality time with Augustine this summer; he and I have not hung out since my conversion.

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didymus3000 May 10 2007, 16:02:50 UTC
yeah, that's "on christian teaching." it's probably a good thing you haven't spent much time with the b of hippo since the conversion. he might turn you into a reformed anglican.

haha.

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owl_of_minerva May 10 2007, 16:40:21 UTC
I just want to see if some of the stuff that I thought made no sense whatsoever makes some sense now. Or if it still utterly doesn't.

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phronesis June 22 2007, 01:39:45 UTC
I'm surprised you aren't including Aristotle's Ethics Book 8. Also if you are going to be reading Kierkegaard including Schlegel's Lucinda could be fun.

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owl_of_minerva June 22 2007, 17:27:05 UTC
They will get their Aristotle in the sophomore core.

Indeed, it would be fantastic to include Lucinde. I <3 Schegel. Sadly, this is only a month-long core course, for freshmen, so there is a limit to what can be done.

I worry that the course packet is already too long. I excised Diary of a Seducer, but left in the section from Works of Love on mourning the dead.

Are you studying Kierkegaard? A bunch of my friends are at the Kierkegaard library at St Olaf's this summer.

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