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== Background Reading ==
== Background Reading ==

Revision as of 20:43, 4 March 2021

American Philosophy and Its Contemporary Relevance Topics in the History of Philosophy (PHI 556)

Fall Semester 2020, Monday 1-3:40pm

Venue:

Registration: Class#: 24202

Instructor: Barry Smith

Prerequisites: Open to all persons with an undergraduate degree and some knowledge of philosophy.

Office hours: By appointment via email at phismith@buffalo.edu

The Course

Course Description: Progress in philosophy has been hampered by the fact that philosophers have no shared, controlled vocabulary which they can use as a common starting point when defining their terms. Even mundane terms like ‘world’, ‘fact’, and ‘harm’ have such a variety of meanings that when competing theories use such terms their defenders can often be accused of talking past one another and of engaging in merely verbal disputes. This is in contrast to what is the case in the natural sciences, where consistent terminology – as codified for example in the Periodic Table and the International Standard System of Units – is recognized as indispensable. To put it bluntly, because of the use of standards, the natural sciences are collectively more successful than philosophers at resolving divergent points-of-view in their respective fields. Of course, the idea of developing a shared system of philosophical terms and definitions has been advanced in different forms already, for example by Aristotle in the Categories, by Leibniz in De Arte Combinatoria, by the early Wittgenstein, and by Carnap in his Logical Structure of the World. Similar methods are nowadays being successfully applied, but this is occurring primarily outside philosophy, in areas such as biomedical informatics and industrial engineering.

This course will address three goals:

First, it will explore how to create and use a standard philosophical vocabulary. This will include exploiting modern developments in computational ontology, including the world’s first international standard ontology.
Second, it will explore the ways in which building a restricted philosophical vocabulary can help to arbitrate philosophical disputes in areas such as time, mental content, modality, and obligation.
Third, it will provide an introduction to the methods of contemporary applied ontological that are being used both inside and outside philosophy.
Fourth, it will take students through all the steps involved in writing a paper and submitting it for publication and/or for presentation at a conference. Some of these papers will be authored by teams of up to 3 people (students can write alone, or belong to up to two teams).

Course Structure: This is a three credit hour graduate seminar, with a practical exercise forming part of each class. Students will be trained in the basic tools and methods of ontology, and of how ontology can be used to help consistent formalization of philosophical and other theories. In the initial weeks the practical exercise will take the form of one-to-one interactions with Dr Smith determining the topics and strategy for paper writing. In the middle weeks it will take the form of presentation of critiques of submitted drafts. In the final sessions it will be structured around preparation of powerpoint slides to support class presentations by students of their written work, presentations which will be recorded. .

Target Audience: The course is open to all interested students with an undergraduate degree and some knowledge of philosophy.


Themes

Peirce's Ontology and the Metaphysics of Duns Scotus (Boler)
American Pragmatism and Its Reception in Germany: Scheler and Gehlem
The New Realism
E. B. Holt and J. J. Gibson
The Philosophy of Behaviorism
Wittgenstein and Behaviorism
Gibson's Theory of Perception
Peirce's Theory of Dicisigns
Weber, Mead, Parsons: The Origins of Social Science

Background Reading

Primary Sources

Dewey, John. (1884). The new psychology. Andover Review, 2, 278-289. [Possibly the first use of the phrase "new psychology."]
Dewey, John. (1894). The ego as cause. Philosophical Review, 3, 337-341.
Dewey, John. (1896) The reflex arc concept in psychology. Psychological Review, 3, 357-370. [The article that defined the modern concept of the reflex.
Holt, Edwin Bissell (1931) Animal Drive and the Leaning Process. An Essay Toward Radical Empiricism
James, William. (1890). The principles of psychology. [Perhaps the most important English-language psychology text in history.]
Mead, George H. (1913). The social self. Journal of Philosophy, Psychology, and Scientific Methods, 10, 374- 380. [Major article by the "social behaviorist."
Mead Project Inventory: see especially items by Dewey, E. B. Holt, and Mead himself
Peirce resources
Watson, John B. (1913). Psychology as the behaviorist views it. Psychological Review, 20, 158-177. [The classic manifesto of behaviorism.]
Introduction to Watson (1913) by Christopher D. Green
Commentary on Watson (1913) by Robert H. Wozniak

Secondary Literature

Hierarchy from the perspective of Peirce
Matthieu Queloz, The Practical Origins of Ideas: Genealogy as Conceptual Reverse-Engineering (open access)
Peter Hare, Neglected American Philosophers in the History of Symbolic Interactionism [on Mead's precursors]
E. P. Charles, [researchgate.net/publication/232520180_Seeing_Minds_in_Behavior_Descriptive_Mentalism Seeing Minds in Behavior: Descriptive Mentalism], August 2011, Review of General Psychology 15(3):267-276. Charles' other papers on Holt are listed here.
J. F. Boler, Charles Peirce and Scholastic Realism: A Study of Peirce's Relation to John Duns Scotus

August 30: Introduction: Philosophy on Rails

Philosophy on Rails

Slides
Video (28 minutes)

Driverless Philosophy

Slides
Video (73 minutes)

Example: The Emotion Ontology

Slides
Video (38 minutes)

Readings

Amanda Bryant, "Keep the chickens cooped: the epistemic inadequacy of free range metaphysics", Synthese 197 (5): 1867-1887. 2020.

Precursors

Chisholm
Ingarden
Armstrong, D. M. Sketch for a Systematic Metaphysics, Oxford University Press, 2010.
BFO 2.0

September 6: Labor Day Observed

September 13 Making the Content of Philosophy Accessible Systematically

Pierre Grenon and Barry Smith, “Foundations of an Ontology of Philosophy”, Synthese, 2011, 182 (2), 185-204.

Describes an ontology of philosophy that is designed to help navigation through philosophical literature, including literature in the form of encyclopedia articles and textbooks and in both printed and digital forms. The ontology is designed also to serve integration and structuring of data pertaining to the philosophical literature, and in the long term also to support reasoning about the provenance and contents of such literature, by providing a representation of the philosophical domain that is orientated around what philosophical literature is about.

OWL
gif
Video 40 minutes


Overview

The Philosophome


Ontology of Philosophy

Video 40 minutes
Slides


History of Philosophy

Video 98 minutes
Slides
N. Milkov, A Logical–Contextual History of Philosophy, Southwest Philosophy Review 27 (1):21-29 (2011)


Examples of philosophical categorizations

List of philpapers.org Categories
Dimitris Gakis (2016) "Philosophy as Paradigms: An Account of a Contextual Metaphilosophical Perspective", Philosophical Papers, 45:1-2, 209-239.
Eva Seidlmayer, An ontology of digital objects in philosophy
Advancing beyond the PhilPapers Table of Categories

September 20: An Introduction to Basic Formal Ontology

Background: Robert Arp, Barry Smith and Andrew Spear, Building Ontologies with Basic Formal Ontology, Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, August 2015.

The ISO Standardization Process

ISO/IEC 21838

Video (20 minutes)
Slides

Basic Formal Ontology

Video (70 minutes)
Slides

Basic Formal Ontology Applied to the Ontology of Language

Video (40 minutes)
Slides

-- Modes of Philosophical Derailment / Why Computer Science Needs Philosophy

"... philosophical problems arise when language goes on holiday.” Wittgenstein, Philosophical Investigations, §38
Preliminary reading: "The Weight of the Baby"
Video (51 minutes)
Slides

September 27: Philosophy of Language

Truth and the Ontology of Maps

Video (20 minutes)
https://buffalo.box.com/v/Truth-and-the-Ontology-of-Maps Slides]

Ontology of Language, Ontology of Terrorism, Ontology of Obligations

Video (88 minutes)
Slides

Command and Control

Video (60 minutes)
Slides
Karl Bühler on logical vs. material derailment (Entgleisung). See Mulligan here.
Nosology of Continental Philosophy. See Mulligan here.

October 4: Philosophy of Science

The Replication Crisis in Pharmaceutical Science

Video (70 minutes)
Slides

Quantities as Fiat Universals

Video (78 minutes)
Slides

Functions, Dispositions and Capabilities

Video (47 minutes)
Slides
A. Bandrowski, et al., "The Ontology for Biomedical Investigations", PLoS ONE, 2016

October 11: Ontology of Documents

The Ontology of Document Acts (2005)

Video (50 minutes)
Slides

Documents and Massive Social Agency (2013)

Video (21 minutes)

From Speech Acts to Document Acts (2018)

Video (24 minutes)
Slides

Searle on the Ontology of Money

Video (39 minutes)
Slides

The Documentome

Slides

October 18: Introduction to Protégé

Includes introduction to the ontology authoring and editing software at [1]

October 25: Metaphysics

Mind, Language and Emotions: From Austrian Philosophy to Contemporary Realist Ontology
Video (67 minutes)
Slides
What are capabilities?
Slides (60 minutes)
Video
The Great Debate: John Sowa vs. Barry Smith
Video of BS contribution (30 minutes)
Slides of BS contribution
First 2 hours of whole debate
Final part of whole debate

November 1: Social Ontology, Norms and Values

Deontic Entities

Deontology Ontology: Towards an Ontology of Deontic Entities
Slides
Video (36 minutes)
Document Acts and the Ontology of Social Reality
Slides
Video (103 minutes)
The Ontology of the Organigram
Slides
Video (58 minutes)

Background

Slides
Social Ontology and Social Normativity

November 8: Artificial Intelligence

"Making Artificial Intelligence Meaningful Again", Synthese, online first
"There is no General Artificial Intelligence", https://arxiv.org/pdf/1906.05833.pdf

November 15: Capabilities

Capabilities
Slides
Reading
Eric Merrell, et al., "Mental Capabilities", ICBO, 2019

November 22: Philosophy of Information

The Information Ontology
Video
Werner Ceusters and Barry Smith, "Aboutness: Towards Foundations for the Information Artifact Ontology", Proceedings of the Sixth International Conference on Biomedical Ontology (ICBO). CEUR vol. 1515. pp. 1-5 (2015).

November 29: Philosophy of Action

December 6: Student Projects

December 7: Student Projects (Remote Session)

1:00

Reading


Student Learning Outcomes

Program Outcomes/Competencies Instructional Method(s) Assessment Method(s)
The student will acquire a knowledge of the principles and procedures of ontology, and an insight into the philosophical methods and theories relevant thereto. The student will also acquire a familiarity with research in formal philosophy and analytic metaphysics. Lectures and class discussions Review of reading matter and associated online content and participation in class discussions
The student will acquire experience in using the methods employed in applied ontology, especially as applied to philosophical theories and systems Participation in practical experiments Review of results
The student will acquire experience in communicating the results of work using ontologies and in the potential of modern applied ontology as a tool to aid philosophical understanding Creation of youtube presentation and of associated documentation Review of results

How to Write an Essay

Jordan Peterson's Essay Writing Guide

Important Dates

Sep 1 - about now start to discuss by email the content of your essay or essays with Dr Smith
Sep 14 - submit proposed title and abstract
Sep 28 - submit a table of contents and 300 word summary plus draft of associated ppt slides
Oct 15 - submit first draft of essay (~1000 words) and associated powerpoint (~10 slides)
Nov 15 - submit second draft of essay (~2000 words) and associated powerpoint (~10 slides)
Dec7 - class presentation
Dec 11 - submit final version of essay and powerpoint and upload final version of video to youtube

Grading

Grading will be based on two factors:

I: understanding and criticism of the material presented in classes 1-13

All students are required to take an active part in class (and where relevant on-line) discussions throughout the semester.

II: preparation of an essay, and associated powerpoint slides and recorded presentation.

Content and structure of the essay should be discussed with Dr Smith. Where the essay takes the form of the documentation of a specific ontology developed by the student it should include:

Statement of scope of the ontology
Summary of existing ontologies in the relevant domain
Explanation of how your ontology differs from (or incorporates) these ontologies
Screenshots of parts of the ontology with some examples of important terms and definitions
Summaries of potential applications of the ontology

Grading Policy: Grading follows standard Graduate School policies. Grades will be weighted according to the following breakdown:

Weighting Assignment

20% - class discussions
15% - youtube video presentation
15% - powerpoint slides
50% - essay

Final Grades

Percentages refer to sum of assignment grades as listed above

Grade Quality Percentage

A 4.0 90.0% -100.00%
A- 3.67 87.0% - 89.9%
B+ 3.33 84.0% - 86.9%
B 3.00 80.0% - 83.9%
B- 2.67 77.0% - 79.9%
C+ 2.33 74.0% - 76.9%
C 2.00 71.0% - 73.9%
C- 1.67 68.0% - 70.9%
D+ 1.33 65.0% - 67.9%
D 1.00 62.0% - 64.9%
F 0 61.9% or below

An interim grade of Incomplete (I) may be assigned if the student has not completed all requirements for the course. An interim grade of 'I' shall not be assigned to a student who did not attend the course. The default grade accompanying an interim grade of 'I' shall be 'U' and will be displayed on the UB record as 'IU.' The default Unsatisfactory (U) grade shall become the permanent course grade of record if the 'IU' is not changed through formal notice by the instructor upon the student's completion of the course.

Assignment of an interim 'IU' is at the discretion of the instructor. A grade of 'IU' can be assigned only if successful completion of unfulfilled course requirements can result in a final grade better than the default 'U' grade. The student should have a passing average in the requirements already completed. The instructor shall provide the student specification, in writing, of the requirements to be fulfilled.

The university’s Graduate Incomplete Policy can be found here.

Related Policies and Services

Academic integrity is a fundamental university value. Through the honest completion of academic work, students sustain the integrity of the university while facilitating the university's imperative for the transmission of knowledge and culture based upon the generation of new and innovative ideas. See http://grad.buffalo.edu/Academics/Policies-Procedures/Academic-Integrity.html.

Accessibility resources: If you have any disability which requires reasonable accommodations to enable you to participate in this course, please contact the Office of Accessibility Resources in 60 Capen Hall, 645-2608 and also the instructor of this course during the first week of class. The office will provide you with information and review appropriate arrangements for reasonable accommodations, which can be found on the web here.

University suppert services: Students are often unaware of university support services. For example, the Center for Excellence in Writing provides support for written work, and several tutoring centers on campus provide academic success support and resources.

Available resources on sexual assault: UB is committed to providing an environment free of all forms of discrimination and sexual harassment, including sexual assault, domestic and dating violence and stalking. If you have experienced gender-based violence (intimate partner violence, attempted or completed sexual assault, harassment, coercion, stalking, etc.), UB has resources to help. This includes academic accommodations, health and counseling services, housing accommodations, helping with legal protective orders, and assistance with reporting the incident to police or other UB officials if you so choose. Please contact UB’s Title IX Coordinator at 716-645-2266 for more information. For confidential assistance, you may also contact a Crisis Services Campus Advocate at 716-796-4399.

Counseiling services: As a student you may experience a range of issues that can cause barriers to learning or reduce your ability to participate in daily activities. These might include strained relationships, anxiety, high levels of stress, alcohol/drug problems, feeling down, health concerns, or unwanted sexual experiences. Counseling, Health Services, and Health Promotion are here to help with these or other concerns. You learn can more about these programs and services by contacting:

Counseling Services: 120 Richmond Quad (North Campus), phone 716-645-2720
Health Services: Michael Hall (South Campus), phone: 716-829-3316
Health Promotion: 114 Student Union (North Campus), phone: 716- 645-2837