Phil 106: Kant
Winter, 2020

General Information

Contact Info

Contact Information

Professor:
 Abe Stone (abestone@ucsc.edu)
Office:
 Cowell Annex A-106
Phone (office):
 459-5723
Push notification:
 Notify Abe
Website:
 https://people.ucsc.edu/~abestone/courses
Office hours:
 Tues. 11am–1pm

Course Requirements

Course Requirements

Two take home midterms exams, due Wednesday, January 29 and Wednesday, February 26 (a choice of essay questions) (each worth 20% of the grade); take home final (also a choice of essay questions), due Wednesday, March 18 (60% of the grade). Students who receive an A- or higher on the first two exams may choose to write a final paper (approximately 8–10 pages) in place of the final, on a topic to be discussed in advance with the instructor.

Papers are due as an attachment via the “Assignments” tool on Canvas. The assignments will be available online and there will be links to them from the online version of this syllabus as well as from my main course page.

Note that all three exams are due by 11:55pm on the due date.

You can find answers to some commonly asked questions about my assignments and grading in my FAQ.

Attendance at lecture is strongly encouraged, but it is not a course requirement and I will not be taking attendance.

Texts

Texts

Immanuel Kant, Critique of Pure Reason
, tr. Norman Kemp Smith (Palgrave Macmillan; 2nd edition, 2007) (ISBN: 0230013384).

The above text should be available at the Bay Tree Bookstore, and also on reserve at McHenry.

If you want to use a different translation you are welcome to, but you should be aware that it may be confusing because translations can differ greatly. Of course, if you know German, you should read in the original.

This year we will be reading exclusively the text of the second (“B”) edition. Page numbers in both the first and second (“A”) editions are marked in the margin of Smith’s translation. In most cases where the two editions differ, it should be relatively easy to figure out what the text of the B edition says: Smith mostly either prints the B-edition text with A-edition difference in footnotes, or, where there are big differences, prints the two texts separately.