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
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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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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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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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What's the title of the Cavell piece? I haven't read it, and it might be workable.
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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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that's about as philosophical as i get... at least these days.
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haha.
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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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