Syllabus

Course Meeting Times

Lectures: 1 session / week, 3 hours / session

Course Overview

This course is a graduate seminar surveying recent work on self-knowledge. Some questions that will be explored and discussed are: What is the distinctive philosophical interest of self-knowledge? Is self-knowledge really an epistemic achievement? Is it plausible that there is a uniform explanation of all distinctively first-personal self-knowledge?

Prerequisites

MIT students were required to obtain permission of the instructors.

Requirements

Students were graded on the following:

  • Attendance
  • Assigned readings
  • An in-class presentation
  • A 20–25 pp. final paper, with a substantial draft submitted by the last session

Calendar

SES # TOPICS KEY DATES
1 Introduction  
2 The Wittgensteinian Legacy  
3 Inner Sense I  
4 Inner Sense II, and Shoemaker's Rationalism  
5 Ryleanism  
6 Transparency I Guest: Prof. Richard Moran, Harvard University
7 Transparency II Guest: Prof. Matt Boyle, Harvard University
8 Sensation Guest: Prof. Brie Gertler, University of Virginia
9 Perception  
10 Review Session  
11 Neo-expressivism Guest: Prof. Dorit Bar-On, University of Connecticut
12 Desire and Emotion  
13 Intention

In-class student presentations

Final paper due 6 days after Session 13