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⇱ Introduction to Philosophy | Coursera


Introduction to Philosophy

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Gain insight into a topic and learn the fundamentals.
4.7

9,717 reviews

2 weeks to complete
at 10 hours a week
Flexible schedule
Learn at your own pace

Gain insight into a topic and learn the fundamentals.
4.7

9,717 reviews

2 weeks to complete
at 10 hours a week
Flexible schedule
Learn at your own pace

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Assessments

18 assignments¹

AI Graded see disclaimer
Taught in English
97%
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There are 14 modules in this course

This course will introduce you to some of the main areas of research in contemporary philosophy. Each module a different philosopher will talk you through some of the most important questions and issues in their area of expertise. We’ll begin by trying to understand what philosophy is – what are its characteristic aims and methods, and how does it differ from other subjects? Then we’ll spend the rest of the course gaining an introductory overview of several different areas of philosophy.

Topics you’ll learn about will include: Epistemology, where we’ll consider what our knowledge of the world and ourselves consists in, and how we come to have it; Philosophy of science, where we’ll investigate foundational conceptual issues in scientific research and practice; Philosophy of Mind, where we’ll ask questions about what it means for something to have a mind, and how minds should be understood and explained; Political Philosophy, where we'll investigate whether we have an obligation to obey the law; Moral Philosophy, where we’ll attempt to understand the nature of our moral judgements and reactions – whether they aim at some objective moral truth, or are mere personal or cultural preferences, and; Metaphysics, where we’ll think through some fundamental conceptual questions about free will and the nature of reality. The development of this MOOC has been led by the University of Edinburgh's Eidyn research centre. To accompany 'Introduction to Philosophy', we are pleased to announce a tie-in book from Routledge entitled 'Philosophy for Everyone'. This course companion to the 'Introduction to Philosophy' course was written by the Edinburgh Philosophy team expressly with the needs of MOOC students in mind. 'Philosophy for Everyone' contains clear and user-friendly chapters, chapter summaries, glossary, study questions, suggestions for further reading and guides to online resources. Please click "Start Here" and navigate to the "Optional Reading" page for more information. This course is also available with captions in Chinese: https://www.coursera.org/learn/zhexue-daolun Learners can apply for Financial Aid directly with Coursera to assist with the cost of accessing the full course and gaining a certificate for successfully completing the course.

(Dr. Dave Ward) We’ll start the course by thinking about what Philosophy actually is: what makes it different from other subjects? What are its distinctive aims and methods? We'll also think about why the questions that philosophers attempt to answer are often thought to be both fundamental and important, and have a look at how philosophy is actually practiced. Finally, we'll briefly touch upon two very influential philosophers' answers to the question of how we can know whether, in any given case, there really is a right way of thinking about things.

What's included

4 videos3 readings2 assignments

4 videosTotal 47 minutes
  • Introduction: What is Philosophy?13 minutes
  • Philosophy: Difficult, Important and Everywhere11 minutes
  • Philosophy: How Do We Do It?17 minutes
  • Is There A 'Right Way' To Think About Things?6 minutes
3 readingsTotal 30 minutes
  • About this Course10 minutes
  • Module: What is Philosophy?10 minutes
  • Optional Reading10 minutes
2 assignmentsTotal 60 minutes
  • Practice: What is Philosophy?30 minutes
  • What is Philosophy?30 minutes

(Dr. Matthew Chrisman) We all live with some sense of what is good or bad, some feelings about which ways of conducting ourselves are better or worse. But what is the status of these moral beliefs, senses, or feelings? Should we think of them as reflecting hard, objective facts about our world, of the sort that scientists could uncover and study? Or should we think of moral judgements as mere expressions of personal or cultural preferences? In this module we’ll survey some of the different options that are available when we’re thinking about these issues, and the problems and prospects for each.

What's included

4 videos2 readings1 assignment

4 videosTotal 44 minutes
  • The Status of Morality11 minutes
  • Objectivism, Relativism and Emotivism13 minutes
  • Objections to Objectivism, Relativism and Emotivism11 minutes
  • Further Discussion8 minutes
2 readingsTotal 20 minutes
  • Module: Morality: Objective, Emotive or Relative?10 minutes
  • Related work by Philosophy staff at the University of Edinburgh10 minutes
1 assignmentTotal 12 minutes
  • Practice: Morality: Objective, Relative or Emotive?12 minutes

(Professor Duncan Pritchard) We know a lot of things – or, at least, we think we do. Epistemology is the branch of philosophy that studies knowledge; what it is, and the ways we can come to have it. In this module, we’ll take a tour through some of the issues that arise in this branch of philosophy. In particular, we’ll think about what radical scepticism means for our claims to knowledge. How can we know something is the case if we’re unable to rule out possibilities that are clearly incompatible with it?

What's included

5 videos2 readings1 assignment

5 videosTotal 56 minutes
  • The Basic Constituents of Knowledge13 minutes
  • The Classical Account of Knowledge and the Gettier Problem19 minutes
  • Do We Have Any Knowledge?11 minutes
  • Further Discussion 110 minutes
  • Further Discussion 24 minutes
2 readingsTotal 20 minutes
  • Module: What is Knowledge? And Do We Have Any?10 minutes
  • Related work by Philosophy staff at the University of Edinburgh10 minutes
1 assignmentTotal 12 minutes
  • Practice: What is Knowledge? And Do We Have Any?12 minutes

What's included

2 assignments

2 assignmentsTotal 50 minutes
  • Morality: Objective, Relative or Emotive?20 minutes
  • What is Knowledge? And Do We Have Any?30 minutes

(Dr. Guy Fletcher) The laws of a state govern what we can and cannot do within that state. But do we have an obligation to obey those laws? In this module, we'll discuss this question, together with some of the main positions that philosophers have developed in response to it. We'll start off by examining what obeying the law means exactly. Then we'll look at three factors that might form the basis of an obligation to follow the law. Finally, we'll discuss what the consequences might be if the problem can't be solved.

What's included

7 videos2 readings1 assignment

7 videosTotal 27 minutes
  • Do You Have an Obligation to Obey the Law?5 minutes
  • The Grounds of Political Obligation3 minutes
  • Gratitude and Benefit4 minutes
  • Consent9 minutes
  • Fairness3 minutes
  • What if the Problem Can't Be Solved?2 minutes
  • Summary2 minutes
2 readingsTotal 20 minutes
  • Module: Do We Have an Obligation to Obey the Law?10 minutes
  • Related work by Philosophy staff at the University of Edinburgh10 minutes
1 assignmentTotal 20 minutes
  • Practice: Do We Have an Obligation to Obey the Law?20 minutes

(Dr. Allan Hazlett) Much of what we think about the world we believe on the basis of what other people say. But is this trust in other people's testimony justified? In this module, we’ll investigate how this question was addressed by two great philosophers of the Scottish Enlightenment, David Hume (1711 - 1776) and Thomas Reid (1710 - 1796). Hume and Reid's dispute about testimony represents a clash between two worldviews that would continue to clash for centuries: a skeptical and often secular worldview, eager to question everything (represented by Hume), and a conservative and often religious worldview, keen to defend common sense (represented by Reid).

What's included

5 videos2 readings1 assignment

5 videosTotal 25 minutes
  • Introduction: Hume on Testimony and Miracles9 minutes
  • Reid's Challenge to Hume2 minutes
  • Reid's Argument6 minutes
  • Kant, the Enlightenment and Intellectual Autonomy4 minutes
  • The Value of Intellectual Autonomy4 minutes
2 readingsTotal 20 minutes
  • Module: Should You Believe What You Hear?10 minutes
  • Related work by Philosophy staff at the University of Edinburgh10 minutes
1 assignmentTotal 30 minutes
  • Practice: Should You Believe What You Hear?30 minutes

What's included

2 assignments

2 assignmentsTotal 50 minutes
  • Do We Have an Obligation to Obey the Law?30 minutes
  • Should You Believe What You Hear?20 minutes

(Dr. Suilin Lavelle) If you’re reading this, then you’ve got a mind. But what is a mind, and what does it take to have one? Should we understand minds as sets of dispositions to behave in certain ways, as patterns of neural activation, or as akin to programmes that are run on the computational hardware of our brains? In this module, we’ll look at how and why recent philosophy of mind and psychology has embraced each of these options in turn, and think about the problems and prospects for each.

What's included

7 videos2 readings1 assignment

7 videosTotal 57 minutes
  • Descartes' Substance Dualism Theory of the Mind11 minutes
  • Physicalism: Identity Theory and Functionalism13 minutes
  • Functionalism and What Mental States Do8 minutes
  • Functionalism and Functional Complexity4 minutes
  • Minds vs. Machines: The Turing Test and the Chinese Room11 minutes
  • Minds vs. Machines: Problems for the Computational View of the Mind4 minutes
  • Further Discussion5 minutes
2 readingsTotal 20 minutes
  • Module: Mind, Brains and Computers10 minutes
  • Related work by Philosophy staff at the University of Edinburgh10 minutes
1 assignmentTotal 24 minutes
  • Practice: Minds, Brains and Computers24 minutes

(Professor Michela Massimi) In this module we will explore a central and ongoing debate in contemporary philosophy of science: whether or not scientific theories are true. Or better, whether a scientific theory needs to be 'true' to be good at all. The answer to this question comes in two main varieties. Scientific realists believe that theories ought to be true in order to be good. We will analyse their main argument for this claim (which goes under the name of 'no miracles argument'), and some prominent objections to it. Scientific antirealists, on the other hand, defend the view that there is nothing special about 'truth' and that scientific theories and scientific progress can be understood without appeal to it. The aim of this session is to present both views, their main arguments, and prospects.

What's included

7 videos2 readings1 assignment

7 videosTotal 29 minutes
  • The Aim of Science: Saving the Phenomena vs. Truth2 minutes
  • Saving the Phenomena? Ptolemeic Astronomy5 minutes
  • Truth? Galileo and Copernican Astronomy2 minutes
  • Scientific Realism and the No Miracles Argument4 minutes
  • Scientific Anti-Realism: Constructive Empiricism7 minutes
  • Realist Rejoinders: Inference to the Best Explanation6 minutes
  • Concluding Summary2 minutes
2 readingsTotal 20 minutes
  • Module: Are Scientific Theories True?10 minutes
  • Related work by Philosophy staff at the University of Edinburgh10 minutes
1 assignmentTotal 30 minutes
  • Practice: Are Scientific Theories True?30 minutes

What's included

2 assignments

2 assignmentsTotal 60 minutes
  • Minds, Brains and Computers30 minutes
  • Are Scientific Theories True?30 minutes

(Dr. Elinor Mason) We typically feel that the actions that we make are the result of our own free choices. But what if those actions are simply the end result of a long chain of cause and effect? What does this mean for free will? In this module, we'll look at the concept of determinism. In particular, we'll consider the implications that determinism might have for the notion of free will.

What's included

5 videos2 readings1 assignment

5 videosTotal 35 minutes
  • What is Determinism?11 minutes
  • Libertarianism10 minutes
  • Compatibilism8 minutes
  • Hard Determinism4 minutes
  • Summary3 minutes
2 readingsTotal 20 minutes
  • Module: Do We Have Free Will? Does it Matter?10 minutes
  • Related work by Philosophy staff at the University of Edinburgh10 minutes
1 assignmentTotal 20 minutes
  • Practice: Do We Have Free Will and Does It Matter?20 minutes

(Dr. Alasdair Richmond) In this module we'll think about some issues in metaphysics, a branch of philosophy that investigates the ways that reality could intelligibly be. Our case study will be the possibility, or otherwise, of time-travel. Some have thought that the apparent possibility of creating a machine that we could use to transport a person backwards in time can be ruled out just by thinking about it. But is time-travel really logically impossible? What would the universe have to be like for it to be possible? And can we know whether our universe fits the bill?

What's included

6 videos2 readings1 assignment

6 videosTotal 49 minutes
  • What Might Time Travel Be Anyway?7 minutes
  • Grandfather Paradoxes9 minutes
  • Two Senses of Change7 minutes
  • Causal Loops8 minutes
  • Where Next?9 minutes
  • Further Discussions9 minutes
2 readingsTotal 20 minutes
  • Module: Time Travel and Philosophy10 minutes
  • Related work by Philosophy staff at the University of Edinburgh10 minutes
1 assignmentTotal 30 minutes
  • Practice: Time Travel and Philosophy30 minutes

What's included

2 assignments

2 assignmentsTotal 60 minutes
  • Do We Have Free Will and Does It Matter?30 minutes
  • Time Travel and Philosophy30 minutes

What's included

1 reading1 peer review

1 readingTotal 10 minutes
  • Post-Course Survey10 minutes
1 peer reviewTotal 120 minutes
  • Peer Review120 minutes

Instructors

Instructor ratings
4.7 (2,016 ratings)
The University of Edinburgh
2 Courses758,538 learners
The University of Edinburgh
11 Courses928,411 learners
The University of Edinburgh
4 Courses838,833 learners

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Learner reviews

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Showing 3 of 9717

IH
·

Reviewed on Feb 21, 2023

I already had a Bachelor's in Philosophy degree. But, this course has the potential to comprehensively elaborate on the aspects that were lacking and that I was unable to comprehend in a unique way.

MN
·

Reviewed on Feb 3, 2017

Actually I have enjoyed the course . I have learned about the problems were asked by previous philosophers and about how to think correctly by analyzing the prefaces to get logical results .

NS
·

Reviewed on May 15, 2020

I enjoyed the course a bit. But in middle i got stuck for some lectures which were designed in a bit difficult way to understand. Otherwise the rest of the materials were great. Learnt a Lot!

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