PHIL 103 Logic and Language (Not offered 1999-2000)
Logic is the study of reasoning and argument. More particularly, it concerns itself with the difference between good and bad reasoning, between strong and weak arguments. We all examine the virtues and vices of arguments in both informal and formal systems. The goals of this course are to improve the critical thinking of the students, to introduce them to sentential and predicate logic, to familiarize them with enough formal logic to enable them to read some of the great works of philosophy, which use formal logic (such as Wittgenstein's Tractatus), and to examine some of the connections between logic and philosophy. We will close with an examination of inductive logic and the scientific method by studying David Hume's Dialogues Concerning Natural Religion. Requirements: a midterm, a final, frequent homework, and problem sets.