PHIL 286T (formerly 215) Conceptions of Human Nature (Not offered 2004-2005) (W)

We are all human, and in our daily lives, we seem to know what we mean when we make that claim. However, when we start reflecting on what it is to be human-whether all human beings in spite of individual and social differences, share the same nature, whether that nature is unchangeable, whether it is animal, or divine, or neither, and whether anything follows from the way we naturally are about the ways we should lead our lives, treat others, and organize our societies, we can see that the commonsensical assurance about there being an easily identifiable human nature in all of us gives way to a myriad of questions and problems. Conceptions of human nature-sometimes explicit, sometimes implicit-have shaped many philosophical, scientific and religious views, in addition to providing grounds for many human practices, such as Law, arts, medicine and education. The aim of the course is to examine a variety of accounts of human nature, and a variety of consequences different thinkers derived from their accounts. We will read seminal writings of Western and non-Western thinkers and we will try to articulate, in each reading, what the favored conception of human nature consists in; what kind of evidence is provided in its support; what are the consequences derived from it about human happiness, the ways we should lead our lives, the manner in which we should treat others, and the ways in which human societies should be organized; how are such norms derived from a descriptive account of human nature, and can such derivations be justified. Finally, we will confront and evaluate the two central assumptions which all of the different accounts share: that there is a universal human nature, an "essence of humanity," and that an understanding of it is necessary for thinking about morality, Law, politics, human knowledge and religion. Format: tutorial, each pair of students meeting with the instructor for an hour once a week. Requirements: bi-weekly tutorial papers (totaling 6 per student) with responses to those papers by the tutorial partner. Prerequisites: one course in Philosophy, or permission of instructor.

MLADENOVIC