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80-150 Nature of Reason

Units:9.0
Department:Philosophy
Related URLs:http://www.hss.cmu.edu/philosophy

This course offers an intellectual history of philosophical views regarding the nature of human reasoning in 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, and continuing through the Middle Ages and late Renaissance thought, to the work of Boole and Frege in the nineteenth century. The second part of the course considers the history of skepticism about empirical knowledge, covering Plato, Sextus Empiricus, 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 mind, culminating in the computational conception of mind that underlies contemporary cognitive science.


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15-415 Database Applications
57-161 Eurhythmics I
15-451 Algorithm Design and Analysis
99-101 Computing @ Carnegie Mellon
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85-221 Principles of Child Development
73-100 Principles of Economics
21-120 Differential and Integral Calculus
70-100 Introduction to Business
15-211 Fundamental Data Structures and Alg...


The Carnegie Pulse: Pulse Scheduler: 80-150 Nature of Reason
The Carnegie Pulseabout the carnegie pulse | advertise | contact | subscriptions | join 
newsart & cultureopinionseventsclassifiedscourse schedule

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View departments
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Find course by title:




 


80-150 Nature of Reason

Units:9.0
Department:Philosophy
Related URLs:http://www.hss.cmu.edu/philosophy

This course offers an intellectual history of philosophical views regarding the nature of human reasoning in 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, and continuing through the Middle Ages and late Renaissance thought, to the work of Boole and Frege in the nineteenth century. The second part of the course considers the history of skepticism about empirical knowledge, covering Plato, Sextus Empiricus, 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 mind, culminating in the computational conception of mind that underlies contemporary cognitive science.


  Popularity index
Rank for this semester:#0
Rank in this department:#0

  Students also scheduled
15-415 Database Applications
57-161 Eurhythmics I
15-451 Algorithm Design and Analysis
99-101 Computing @ Carnegie Mellon
15-128 Freshman Immigration Course
85-221 Principles of Child Development
73-100 Principles of Economics
21-120 Differential and Integral Calculus
70-100 Introduction to Business
15-211 Fundamental Data Structures and Alg...



No sections available for semester Spring 2008.

 




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  (c) Copyright 2004 The Carnegie Pulse, Carnegie Mellon's first exclusively online student-run news source. campus mirror | RSS