TA for 80-150 ‘‘Nature of Reason’’
Undergraduate course, Carnegie Mellon University, Department of Philosophy, 2021
TA for the course 80-150 ‘‘Nature of Reason’’, with Instructor of Record Dr. Francesca Zaffora Blando. Description from here.
“This course provides an accessible introduction to the historical development of philosophical ideas about the nature of reasoning and rationality (with a focus on mathematics and the sciences), from ancient to modern times. The first part of the course traces the search for deductive methods for obtaining certain knowledge, starting with Aristotle and Euclid all the way to the work of Boole and Frege in the 19th century. The second part of the course considers the history of skepticism about empirical knowledge, covering Plato, Descartes, Pascal, and Hume, along with replies to skepticism in the works of Bayes and Kant. The third part of the course discusses theories of the nature of the mind and mental processes, culminating in the computational conception of the mind that underlies contemporary cognitive science.”
