Saturday, 29 May 2021

Study Material for B.A. Philosophy (Honours & Non-Honous) under CBCS System

SYLLABUS FOR B.A. PHILOSOPHY (HONOURS & NON-HONOURS) UNDER

CHOICE BASED CREDIT SYSTEM

Complete Syllabus   (Available)


B.A. Philosophy Study Material of IGNOU & KKHSOU   (Available)


STUDY MATERIAL (semester wise)

(Dept of Philosophy, Moran College)

B.A. (HONS) PHILOSOPHY

Core Course (14 Papers)

Semester-I

C1: Indian Philosophy

C2: Logic

Semester-II

C3: Ancient Greek Philosophy    (Availble)

C4: Indian Logic

Semester-III

C5: Modern Western Philosophy

C6: Indian Ethics       (Available)

C7: Western Ethics     (Available)

Semester-IV

C8: Contemporary Indian Philosophy-I      (Available)

C9: Social and Political Philosophy

C10: Philosophy of Religion     (Available)

Semester-V

C11: Contemporary Indian Philosophy-II

C12: Existentialism and Phenomenology

Semester-VI

C13: Comparative Religion

C14: Analytic Philosophy


Discipline Specific Elective (DSE)

Generic Elective (GE)

Semester-I

GE-1: Introduction to Philosophy

Semester-II

GE-2: Introduction to Logic

Semester-III

GE-3: Fundamentals of Indian Philosophy

Semester-IV

GE-4: Applied Ethics      (Available)

B.A. (NON-HONS) PHILOSOPHY

Discipline Specific Course (DSC)

Semester-I

DSC-IA: Indian Philosophy

Semester-II

DSC-IB: Fundamentals of Western Philosophy      (Available)

Semester-III

DSC-IC: Fundamentals of Logic

Semester-IV

DSC-ID: Fundamentals of Ethics       (Available)

Discipline Specific Elective (DSE)

Semester-V

DSE-IA (I): Western Philosophy 

                       or 

DSE-IA (II): Analytic Philosophy

Semester-VI

DSE-IB(I): Contemporary Indian Philosophy 

                                  or 

DSE-IB(II) Social and Political Philosophy

Generic Elective (GE)

Semester-V

GE-1: Introduction to Philosophy

Semester-VI

GE-2: Introduction to Logic

General Programme

Semester-VI

NM 601: Social Philosophy and Psychology    (Available)

Major Programme

Semester-VI 

Major Course-XIV: Psychology (Major Programme) (Available)


Extra Information

Contemporary Western Philosophy (Course Code: M-602) (Available)

Saturday, 22 May 2021

Major Course-XIV: PSYCHOLOGY (Major Programme)

Objective: The objective of the first part of this paper is to acquaint the students of

                  Philosophy with the psychological aspect of human life. It also emphasizes

                  on the methods and problems of psychology along with the different schools

                  approaching the mind.

Unit-I

* Nature of Psychology, Its methods - Introspective, Inspective & Experimental

   What is Psychology (NCERT material)

* Schools of Psychology - Behaviourism, Gestaltism & Psychoanalysis

*Applied Psychology introduction

Extra Information

1. Introduction to the Structure and Function of the Nervous System

Unit-II

*Psychological Basis of mental life - Nervous system

                                                            the doctrine of Central Localization (page no.10)

*Sensation - its definition

 Weber - Fechner Law of Sensation

* Perception - definition, stages of perception

  Gestalt Theory of Perception

Unit-III

* Memory - factors, conditions & marks of good memory

* Forgetting, its causes

* Imagination - Nature and kinds

    Freudian theory of Dream

Unit-IV

* The nature of Feeling, Feeling & Emotion

* James-Lange Theory of Emotion (page no. 178)

* Learning -Theories of Learning

Unit-V

* Personality - Traits, Factors, Kinds

                         - Factors

* Intelligence - Nature, Tests IQ

                          - Tests IQ                                    IQ Testing 

*Motivation, nature and types


Extra Information

1. Methods of Enquire in Psychology

2. Sensory, Attentional and Perceptional Processes

3. Introduction to Psychology (e-book)

4. NCERT books on Psychology

DSC-1B: FUNDAMENTALS OF WESTERN PHILOSOPHY

Objective: This paper intends to acquaint the students with basic ideas o philosophy concerning concepts and theories of knowledge, truth, reality and values

Unit-I

    1. Philosophy: Nature, Scope and Value

    2, Theories of the Origin of Knowledge: Rationalism, Empiricism and Kant;s 

        Critical Theory

Unit-II

    1. Realism: Naive Realism and Scientific Realism

    2. Idealism: Subjective and Objective Idealism

Unit-III

    1. Categories of Knowledge: Space, Time, Substance, Causality

    2. Theories of Truth: Correspondence, Coherence and Pragmatic Theory

Unit-IV

    1. Theories of Reality: Monism, Dualism and Pluralism

    2. Value: Nature and Kinds, Intrinsic and Extrinsic, Subjective and Objective, (part-1)

        Absolute and Relative   (part-2)

                  

NM: 601 SOCIAL PHILOSOPHY & PSYCHOLOGY

Objective: The objective of the first part of this paper is to acquaint the students of

                   philosophy with the philosophical basis of social life. The second part deals

                   with the psychological aspects of human life.


Group- (A) Social Philosophy

Unit-I

 Nature and Scope of Social Philosophy, its relation to Sociology, Psychology & Ethics

Unit-II

Relation between individual and society - Different theories

Human Relations (Extra information)

Definition, Nature and Types of Social groups & Institutions

Social Institutions

Unit-III

Conditions of social evolution and progress

Social Evil-Crime

Social evil is any pain or suffering brought about by game-theoretic interactions of many individuals. ... The problem social evil poses for theism is distinct from problems posed by natural and moral evilsSocial evil is not a natural evil because it is brought about by the choices of individuals.

Common social evils include: caste system, poverty, dowry system, gender inequality, illiteracy etc. The social evils and superstitions that dominated the society over the centuries made social reforms imperative for the development of the society and the , masses.

Crime

Types of crimes

Punishment - Different theories of Punishment


Note: Extra Inforamon on Foundations of Social Philosophy

Group-(B) Psychology

Unit-IV

Nature, Scope, methods of Psychology     

Introspection

Methods of Psychology

Nature of Psychology (extra information)

Psychological basis of mental life - Structure of Brain

Extra Information

Introduction to the Structure and Function of the Nervous System

Unit-V

Sensation & Perception - A brief outline

Weber-Fechner law of Sensation

Gestalt theory of Perception

Memory: factors & conditions, marks of good memory

Imagination: nature & types

Freudian theory of Dream

Unit-IV

Personality - Role of Heredity and Environment

Intelligence: Nature

Intelligence Quotient (page no. 7 of pdf file)

Learning - Different theories


DSC-ID: FUNDAMENTALS OF ETHICS

Objective: The objective of this paper is to acquaint the students with fundamental

                   ethical issues from both Western and Indian perspectives.

Unit-I

            1. Nature, Scope of Ethics

                Utility of Ethics

            2. Good, Ought and Right

                Good

                The word ‘Good’ is derived from the German word ‘Gut’. It means anything valuable, useful or serviceable for some end or purpose, therefore desirable. As the term ‘good’ is too wide signifying anything that is desirable, one may use the expression ‘morally good’ to signify moral qualities. Hence, in ethics the word ‘good’ is used to express moral qualities.

It should be stated in this connection that the word ‘good’ is used both as an adjective and also as a noun. Thus when one speaks of ‘material and immaterial goods’, ‘a relative good’ and ‘the absolute or the highest good’ one evidently uses the word ‘good’ as a noun. Good/ used in this way implies ‘an object of desire or pursuit’, ‘anything that is sought’, e.g., wealth, health, courage etc.

In Ethics, a distinction is drawn between good as an end and good as a means. If, for instance, happiness be good, then wealth and health as means of attaining happiness are also good. Again, if health be a good, then regular exercise, regulation of taking diet, taking of good medicine are also good as means of securing good health. It will be easy now to understand the distinction between a relative good and the absolute or the highest good of man. A ‘relative good’ is a kind of good as a means, i.e., it is an object which is desired, not for itself, but for the sake of an ulterior end or good which, again, may be relative to a still higher end, and so on. ‘Absolute good’ means “the good which is desired for its own sake, and is not subordinate to any ulterior good.’’ In short, it is not the concept of good as a means to a higher good; it is however, the highest good- the ultimate end of human activity. Every voluntary action is relative to an end or object of desire. And among ends, there is gradation, culminating in the supreme end or the highest good which is the goal of life.

Thus, the ultimate, absolute or highest good of man is intrinsically good in the sense that the same is desired for its own sake, and not desired for the sake of anything else. In other words, absolute good is not a means to attain any higher end or good. The highest good is the absolute good i.e. the supreme end. The subordinate goods are instrumental goods or relative goods.

        Right and Good

Right’ and ‘good’ are the two basic terms of moral evaluation. In general, something is ‘right’ if it is morally obligatory, whereas it is morally ‘good’ if it is worth having or doing and enhances the life of those who possess it.

Acts are often held to be morally right or wrong in respect of the action performed, but morally good or bad in virtue of their motive: it is right to help a person in distress, but good to do so from a sense of duty or sympathy, since no one can supposedly be obliged to do something (such as acting with a certain motive) which cannot be done at will.

Henry Sidgwick distinguished between two basic conceptions of morality. The ‘attractive’ conception, favoured by the ancient Greeks, views the good as fundamental, and grounds the claims of morality in the self-perfection to which we naturally aspire. The ‘imperative’ conception, preferred in the modern era, views the right as fundamental, and holds that we are subject to certain obligations whatever our wants or desires.

Ought and Right

"Ought" is used in different senses in Xenakis' two examples, a moral sense and a prudential sense, is there anything in com- mon between the two and between them and any other senses it may have? And is there any systematic way of exhibiting the difference among its senses? The answer to both questions is in the affirmative. Let us begin by considering the moral sense of "ought" again. To say to X, speaking morally, "You ought to go there" is to say much the same thing as "It is your duty to go there" (except that the latter way of speaking is more forceful than the former). Very well; now if it is true that X ought to go there or that it is his duty to go there, what can we say about him if he does not go there? We can say that he violated his duty-and to violate one's duty is to do wrong. If he had gone there, he would have performed his duty-and to perform one's duty is to do right. Hence, to say "You ought to go there," speaking morally, is to imply, "If you do go there you will be doing what is right and if you don't go there you will be doing wrong." Indeed, this is the way in which we can find out whether some- one does intend to be using "ought" in a moral sense: if someone tells us, "You ought to do x," we can ask him, "Do you mean that I would be doing wrong if I didn't do x?" and if the answer is in the affirmative, we know he is speaking morally. Thus, in this case, the sense in which "ought" is being used can be specified by reference to the contrary moral terms "right" and "wrong": the action that one ought to do, in this sense, is the one that it would be right to do and wrong not to do.

            3. Moral Consciousness: Its Characteristics and Elements

                Moral Consciousness

               Characteristics of Moral Consciousness

             The characteristics of moral consciousness are usually examined jointly with normative and value factors. O. G. Drobnitskii justly considers the leading criterion of moral consciousness to be the normative quality of moral judgments, the distinctive characteristic of which consists, in turn, of the impersonal nature of such judgments, and also of the fact that moral consciousness "does not associate its judgments directly to whatever facts may be at hand" ("The Nature of Moral Consciousness" [Priroda moral'nogo soznaniia], Voprosy filosofii, 1968, No. 2). Without entering into a polemic against these assertions, we should like to proceed to deal with a different aspect of the same question.

       Elements of Moral Consciousness

       1. Awareness of Self, 2. Awareness of Others, and 3. Awareness of Social Issues

 

              Elements of Human Consciousness

            4. Moral Judgement: Object of Moral Judgement

Unit-II

            1. Theological Ethics: Egoism 

                                                Altruism

            2. Kant's Categorical Imperative

Unit-III

            1. Postulates of Morality

            2. Crime and Punishment: Theories of Punishment

                Crime                       7 Different Types of Crimes     (Extra information)

                  

Unit-IV

            1. Carvaka Ethics

            2. Buddhist Ethics: Four Noble Truth, Pancusila

            3. Jaina Ethics: Mahavrata, Anuvrata

            4. Ethics of Bhagavadgita: Swadharma

                                                       Niskama Karma

            

Note:

1. Ethics Guide

2. Ethics (e-book)

3. Ethics (online Textbook)

C10: PHILOSOPHY OF RELIGION

 Objective: This paper intends to acquaint the students with different philosophical

                     issue and theories regarding religion.

Unit-I

            1. Nature and Scope of Philosophy of Religion (page no. 4 of pdf file)

                Nature and Scope of Philosophy of Religion (Philosophy and Religion)

                Introduction to Religion (Basic Information)

            2. Religion  and Science   

                Science & Religion (IGNOU Material)

            3. Religious Faith, Belief and Reason, Mysticism

                Religious Faith

                Religious Belief

                Belief and Reason

                Mysticism          

                William James on Mysticism    

                The Idea of the Holy- Rudolf Otto

                The Idea of the Holy- Rudolf Otto (pdf file)

                 Numinous

Unit-II

            1. Religious Consciousness: Its Nature and Elements

                Religious Consciousness (pdf file)

                  Religious Consciousness (page no. 201 of pdf file)

                  Elements of Religious Consciousness: Cognitive (Cognition), Feeling (Emotion)

                and Volitional (page no. 167-200 of pdf file)

                  

                Development of Religious Consciousness (e-book)   Five Elements (page.25)

The religious consciousness. The religious experience is fundamentally a consciousness of God or of gods, a realized relation of the worshipper to a spirit or to spirits who are greater than he and greater also than his fellow-men.

Consciousness refers to your individual awareness of your unique thoughts, memories, feelings, sensations, and environments. Essentially, your consciousness is your awareness of yourself and the world around you. This awareness is subjective and unique to you.

            2. Origin of Religion: Anthropological and Psychological Theories

            3. Divine Determinism and Human Freedom

Unit-III

            1. Proofs for the existence of God: (page no. 32 of the pdf file, whole unit material)

                Cosmological Argument

                Ontological Argument

                Teleological Argument

                Moral Argument

Unit-IV

            1. Problem of Evil  (page no. 42 of pdf file)

            2. Immortality of the soul: Metaphysical and Religious Argument (page no. 46)

            3. Anti-theistic Trends: Positivism, Materialism, Marxism

                Anti-theism

                 Anti-theistic Trends: Positivism

                 Anti-theistic Trends: Materialism

                 Anti-theistic Trends: Marxism

Important Information: Comte's Positivism

Note:

1. Philosophy of Religion (e-book)

2. Philosophy of Religion (IGNOU e-book)

3. Philosophy of Religion (online Book)

4. Philosophy of Religion (A-Z Information)

5. Discussion Topics on Philosophy of Religion

 What are the three primary elements of religious consciousness?

It is simply a consciousness of - , presence to - . And it is a consciousness of God; a consciousness of the author and source of all that is, including one's self; a consciousness of the foundation of one's own most being.
Sir Edward Tylor argued that “a minimum definition of Religion [is] the belief in spiritual beings” (Tylor, 1871, cited in Stark, 1999), or as Sir James Frazer elaborated, “religion consists of two elements… a belief in powers higher than man and an attempt to propitiate or appease them” (Frazer, 1922, cited in Stark, ibid.). These definitions are strong in that they identify the key characteristic — belief in the supernatural — that distinguishes religion from other types of potentially similar social practice like politics or art.






Components or Basic elements of Religion:


GE-4 APPLIED ETHICS

Objective: This paper aims acquinting the students with basic ideas of aplied ethics
                   concerning value of lie, environmental ethics and professional ethics.

Applied Ethics: Applied ethics is the problem-solving branch of moral philosophy. It uses the insights derived from metaethics and the general principles and rules of normative ethics in addressing specific ethical issues and cases in a professional, disciplinary or practical field. Applied ethics is the vital link between theory and practice, the real test of ethical decision-making. Applied ethics often requires not only theoretical analysis but also practical and feasible solutions.

Some of the key areas of applied ethics are:

  • Decision Ethics
  • Professional Ethics
  • Clinical Ethics
  • Business Ethics
  • Organizational Ethics
  • Social Ethics

Applied ethics takes into consideration issues such as abortion, euthanasia, capital punishment, drug decriminalization, gay marriage, etc.

Unit-I
            Nature & Scope of Ethics

            Moral and Non-moral Action

Moral action involves taking the necessary steps to transform the intent to do the right thing into reality. This includes moral ownership, moral efficacy, and moral courage.

Non-moral actions or events: those areas of interest where moral categories cannot be applied.

a.      Almost all examples involving human intention, volition, or behaviour are described in terms of moral categories, ceteris paribus, since such examples involve the possibility of helping or harming oneself or others.

b.      For example, wondering whether one should eat grapefruit, wear socks of a specific shade of colour, or part your hair on the left side of the head are all usually considered non-moral issues. Yet there are circumstances where such actions could have moral consequences.

c.      Generally speaking, statements in the sciences (so-called "factual statements") are considered to be about non-moral issues as well.

            Applied Ethics: Nature and Scope

Nature of Applied Ethics

Applied ethics refers to the practical application of moral considerations. It is ethics with respect to real-world actions and their moral considerations in the areas of private and public life, the professions, health, technology, law, and leadership.

Scope of Applied Ethics

Applied ethics is a growing, interdisciplinary field dealing with ethical problems in different areas of society. It includes for instance social and political ethics, computer ethics, medical ethics, bioethics, environmental ethics, business ethics, and it also relates to different forms of professional ethics.


Unit-II
            Value of Human Life

             Suicide   

             Female Foeticide
      
             What is Female foeticide?
    
        






             Capital Punishment

Unit-III
          

 

Unit-IV

            Medical ethics

            Euthanasia

            Abortion

            Doctor-Patient relation

            Media Ethics: Privacy, Problem of Yellow Journalism, Ethical issues in Cyber Space




C8: CONTEMPORARY INDIAN PHILOSOPHY-1

Objective: This paper intends to acquire the students with the philosophical problems

                   from the perspective of contemporary Indian Philosophy

Unit-I

Indian Philosophy

Classical and Contemporary Indian Philosophy

Salient Features of Contemporary Indian Philosophy

Characteristics of Contemporary Indian Philosophy

Unit-II

Vivekananda: Practical Vedanda

                         Universal Religion

                         Philosophy of Education

Iqbql: Intuition

           Human Ego 

           Human Ego (ppt, slide-15 onwards)

Unit-III

Sri Aurobindo: Evolution

                         Super Mind

                         Synthesis of Yoga

                         Integralism

Sri Aurobindo (Evolution, Integral Yoga & Super Mind)

Sri Aurobindo: Introduction to his thought

Aurobindo: Life and Work

Aurobindo: Synthesis of Yoga (e-book)

Gandhi: Truth      Gandhi: Truth (extra information)

              God

              Non-Violence

              Swaraj

Gandhi: Brief Biography

Unit-IV: 

Tagore: Humanism,  Nature of Religion

extra information

Tagore's religion based on the divinization of man and humanization of God. While explaining the meaning of humanization of God, he said 'Humanization of God does not merely mean that God is God of humanity but also it mean that it is the God in every human being. According to Tagore the essence of religion is humanity. It is this human aspect which forms the basis of religion. Tagore believed that humanity and divinity do not belong to two different orders. They are just like two sides of the same coin. The aim of religion is to awaken the element of divinity that lie latent in man. To Tagore, religion should be always a uniting force but not a dividing force. True religion is that which accepts the unity of all people instead of their differences in religious faiths. True religion is inner development of the individual that makes a man to rise above his society, country and sect. True religion is the realization of one's own nature. Tagore never believed in any religious institution and religious practices whether it was Hinduism or Islam or Christianity. Tagore believed that organized religions that act as a barrier to communal harmony. Tagore's vision of God, unity and equality found spontaneous expression in several of his lectures addresses, poems as well as in his novels. In this article an attempt has been made to discuss the Tagore's Philosophy of religion and the relevance of his philosophy to the present society with reference to a few of his poems and novels.

Radhakrishnan: Intellect and Intuition

                          Man and his Destiny (Sarvamukti)

Radhakrishnan: Introduction