Philosophy 381: Metaphysics in Science Fiction
I expect a critical research paper. By critical I mean one that explores a particular issue related to the course and either defends a particular view of the issue against criticisms or criticizes various views of the issue. By research I mean a paper that is not solely comprised of course readings. There must be significant appeal to or criticism of at least one work not assigned as a course reading.
Papers should be a minimum of 8 complete pages typewritten, double-spaced, and with no more than one inch margins. (Font and line-spacing manipulators beware!) There is no maximum length, but since I value precision and conciseness (see evaluation criteria below), unnecessary filler and verbose ramblings should be avoided. If you find yourself going over 20 pages, you might want to see if you can narrow your topic or come consult with me on whether what you have could be effectively pared down.
If you want to discuss potential paper topics with me, please do not hesitate to come talk to me. If you want to discuss your ongoing work on your topic with me, I will be happy to oblige. If you wish to get some feedback prior to my grading the final paper, I will accept drafts, on or before, Tuesday, November 28 for review and comments (the earlier in the semester you give me a draft, the better! You can even give me multiple drafts or pieces of drafts as long as they are all submitted before the deadline). Drafts submitted on Nov 28 will be available for pickup outside my office, Humanities 401 by noon, Friday, December 1.
Papers are due Thursday, December 7 at the beginning of class. Late papers will not be accepted.
Evaluation criteria (in no particular order) include:
--How well does the author understand and appreciate the complexity
of the problem(s) and issue(s) he or she is addressing? To what
extent has the author made judicious use of the clearly relevant
concepts, categories, distinctions, positions, arguments, etc.
that have been included in course readings and that have been
brought out in class lecture or discussion?
--Is the paper clearly, cogently, and concisely written? Are the
author's claims precise? Does the paper have an explicit overall
direction? Does the paper have a clear, accurate, and informative
introduction and conclusion? Would the paper be intelligible to
another student at this level who is interested in the topic,
but not enrolled in the course?
--To what extent has the author identified the assumptions or
presuppositions underlying his or her position? And to what extent
is he or she aware of the possible difficulties with them?
--Are the author's claims and positions accompanied by cogent
arguments? Are the author's claims adequately justified? Are claims
and arguments provided in different parts of the paper consistent
with each other?
--Has the author been fairly thorough? Can the reader think of
some fairly obvious objection to the author's position already
raised in class or in the readings that the author has not anticipated
nor addressed?
--Does the paper legitimately satisfy the length requirement?
Does the meaningful and relevant content of the paper satisfy
the length requirement?
Topic Suggestions:
--A critical examination of some article(s) related to the course topics
--What exactly is the cause/effect relationship?
--Can an effect precede its cause?
--Is freedom properly defined as the ability to do otherwise?
--Do objects and/or people persist through time?
--Does time travel entail a denial of free-will (in at least some cases?)
--Is it possible for one object to be in two discrete places at once?
--Does a person/object survive matter/energy transport?
--What are the conditions for personal identity through time?
Final Advice:
Keep the focus of your paper as narrow and precise as possible.
You do not need to explain an author's entire paper or theory.
You can focus on a particular part, one or two arguments, a particular
claim, and analyze in detail. I am much more interested in detail
than in grand synthesis.