To put it bluntly, plagiarism is theft and fraud--it is the theft of someone else's ideas, words, approach, and phrasing; it's fraud because the writer is trying to profit (a grade) by claiming as his/her own someone else's work.
Plagiarism results in a zero for the work submitted, so it's crucial to understand the concept. Just as scientists demand complete and accurate information about experiments so that they duplicate and check those experiments, so scholars and readers demand complete information so they can check your use of sources and accuracy in reporting what others said. In all academic writing, then, you must give complete citations (e.g., author, title, source, page) each time you use someone else's ideas, words, phrasing, or unusual information. An insidious form of plagiarism is the "patchwork paper"--some words and ideas taken from source A are stitched together with words and ideas from source B and source C and....
Your essays should be your own work, although you are encouraged to seek writing advice from the Writing and Communication Center. If there is any question about whether the student's paper is his or her own work, TA's have been directed to bring the paper directly to the professor. Every effort will be made to determine whether the paper is plagiarized. This is an attempt to be fair to the teachers and the other students in the course.
There are 4 guidelines for using sources in your essays:
Write a short essay of 4-5 pages (1200-1500 words) on one of the following topics. Papers are due 2 days after Lecture 10. You may hand in your paper (note that the office closes at 5pm!), or email it to me, preferably as a Word attachment. In writing your papers, please attend to the guidelines handed out in lecture. Students may write on a topic of their own design if it is submitted in writing and approved in advance.
Is your wisdom such as not to realize that your country is to be honored more than your mother, your father, and all your ancestors…? You must either persuade it or obey its orders, and endure in silence whatever it instructs you to endure, whether blows or bonds, and if it leads you into war to be wounded or killed, you must obey. To do so is right… (51a6-6)
Is there a contradiction between the position Socrates defends in the Apology and the one he defends in the Crito? Is it possible to reconcile the two views? If so, explain how. If not, how do you explain Socrates' apparent willingness to contradict himself? Would Socrates have behaved justly if he had continued to philosophize against the order of the court?
If then the soul is a kind of harmony or attunement, clearly, when our body is relaxed or stretched without due measure by diseases and other evils, the soul must immediately be destroyed, even if it be most divine, as are the other harmonies found in music and all the works of artists, and the remains of each body last for a long time until they rot or are burned. Consider what we shall say in answer to one who deems the soul to be a mixture of bodily elements and to be the first to perish in the process we call death. (86c2-d2)
What arguments does Socrates provide in response to this challenge? Is he able to establish in the Phaedo, contrary to Simmias's suggestion, that the soul is not like a harmony "the first to perish", but is immortal? Critically evaluate Socrates' response; is there something Simmias might have said in response? Do you find Socrates' arguments convincing? Why or why not?
Write a 5-7 page (1500-2100 word) paper on one of the following topics. Papers are due 2 days after Lecture 18 (you may email it to me). Be sure that your paper has a clear and comprehensible thesis; that it contains arguments for that thesis; and that it anticipates and responds to likely criticisms. Remember that as an interpreter it is your responsibility to show Plato's ideas in their strongest and most plausible form, while remaining true to the text.
[O]ne is never just willingly but only when compelled to be. No one believes justice to be a good when it is kept private, since, wherever either person thinks he can do injustice with impunity, he does it. Indeed, every man believes that injustice is far more profitable to himself than justice." (360c4-8).
Over the course of the Republic, however, Socrates undertakes to defend the view that injustice is not more profitable than justice, and that justice is good both for its own sake and for its consequences. What is Socrates' argument? Does it convincingly show that a person with Gyges' ring would benefit more from behaving justly than behaving unjustly?
Some people think that the nature and reality of a thing which is due to nature is the primary constituent present in it, something unformed in itself. Thus in a bed it would be the wood, in a statue the bronze. (193a9-11)
Although Aristotle is willing to acknowledge that something's nature may include both matter and form (see 199a31-33), he believes that form "has a better claim than the matter" to count as something's nature (see 193b8). Explain Aristotle's reasons for rejecting the proposal that something's matter has the best claim to being its nature, and explain why he thinks that form is a better candidate. Note that in offering your explanation it will be important to explicate Aristotle's doctrine of four causes, and his views on the roles of matter and form in explanation. Do you think Aristotle is right that form has the better claim to being something's nature?
Being awake, then, is <a second> actuality, corresponding to cutting or seeing. The soul is <a first> actuality, corresponding to <the faculty of> sight and to the potentiality of the instrument <to cut>; and the body is potentially this...It is clear, then, that the soul is not separable from the body.
What does Aristotle mean in claiming that the soul is the "first actuality" of the body? On this account, is the soul separable from the body? Why or why not? (It may be useful to compare this account of the soul with the view Plato presents in the Phaedo.) Suppose a materialist is someone who believes that all that exists is material objects and their material properties. Would Aristotle's account of the soul be compatible with materialism? (Note that you may have to clarify for your purposes what you will mean by "material".)
Students may write on a topic of their own if it is approved by the instructor in advance.
Write a 5-7 page (1500-2100 word) paper on one of the following topics. Papers are due 2 days after Lecture 26 (you may email it to me). Be sure that your paper has a clear and comprehensible thesis; that it contains arguments for that thesis; and that it anticipates and responds to likely criticisms. Remember that as an interpreter it is your responsibility to show the author's ideas in their strongest and most plausible form, while remaining true to the text.
If you did not write on one of these two topics from the second set of paper topics, you may write on one of them for your third paper:
Some people think that the nature and reality of a thing which is due to nature is the primary constituent present in it, something unformed in itself. Thus in a bed it would be the wood, in a statue the bronze. (193a9-11)
Although Aristotle is willing to acknowledge that something's nature may include both matter and form (see 199a31-33), he believes that form "has a better claim than the matter" to count as something's nature (see 193b8). Explain Aristotle's reasons for rejecting the proposal that something's matter has the best claim to being its nature, and explain why he thinks that form is a better candidate. Note that in offering your explanation it will be important to explicate Aristotle's doctrine of four causes, and his views on the roles of matter and form in explanation. Do you think Aristotle is right that form has the better claim to being something's nature?
Being awake, then, is <a second> actuality, corresponding to cutting or seeing. The soul is <a first> actuality, corresponding to <the faculty of> sight and to the potentiality of the instrument <to cut>; and the body is potentially this...It is clear, then, that the soul is not separable from the body.
What does Aristotle mean in claiming that the soul is the "first actuality" of the body? On this account, is the soul separable from the body? Why or why not? (It may be useful to compare this account of the soul with the view Plato presents in the Phaedo.) Suppose a materialist is someone who believes that all that exists is material objects and their material properties. Would Aristotle's account of the soul be compatible with materialism? (Note that you may have to clarify for your purposes what you will mean by "material".)
OR, you may write on one of the following:
Like Socrates and Plato before him, Aristotle believes that the happy life is the life of virtue. Aristotle maintains that happiness, i.e., human good, "turns out to be activity of the soul in conformity with excellence, and if there are more than one excellence, in conformity with the best and most complete". (NE I:7 1098a16-18) What does Aristotle mean by this, and what reasons does he offer for this conclusion? Do you find his reasons convincing? Does it follow from this view that the life of contemplation is the best and most virtuous life for humans?
It is well said, then, that it is by doing just acts that the just man is produced, and by doing temperate acts the temperate man; without doing these no one would have even a prospect of becoming good. But most people do not do these, but take refuge in theory and think they are being philosophers and will become good in this way...[but they] will not be made well in soul by such a course of philosophy. (1105b8-18)
Explicate Aristotle's definition of excellence (see 1106b36-1107a2), explaining why he thinks that one cannot learn to be virtuous simply through philosophical inquiry. On his view, how do we become excellent and virtuous? If philosophical study is not a method for becoming virtuous, why does he write the Nicomachean Ethics, ie., what is its point? Indicate the strengths and weaknesses of Aristotle's position. (Note that it may be helpful to consider Aristotle's position in light of Socrates' view that philosophy is morally therapeutic.)
According to the Epicureans, atoms are: (1) unchangeable and indivisible, (2) eternal, (3) continuously moving, and (4) have shape and weight but no color; moreover, some of them also "swerve" (e.g., On the Nature of the Universe, Bk 2). Present the arguments supporting the attribution of each of these characteristics to the atoms, indicating the strengths and weaknesses of the arguments. Given that the Epicureans believed that experience is the foundation for all knowledge, can they consistently claim that we know that there are atoms (and that they have features (1-4)), even if we don't experience them? Why or why not?
Students may write on a topic of their own if it is approved by the instructor in advance.