PHILOSOPHY AND FILM
Philosophy 490
9/20/2009
GENERAL INFORMATION
University of Tennessee at Martin Department of History and Philosophy
Phil 490: Philosophy and Film, all sections, 3 credits, no prerequisite
Instructor: Dr. James Fieser
Office: Humanities 216A
Office Hours: MWF 1:00-2:00, and by appointment
Phone: 881-7537 (Office) 588-2791 (Home)
E-Mail: jfieser@utm.edu
Course web site: www.utm.edu/staff/jfieser/class
Movie viewings: Tuesday and Thursday, 6:00 PM (Library Media Services, Seminar Room 118), or individual viewing by arrangement.
Books:
Christopher Falzon, Philosophy Goes to the Movies, New York: Routledge, 2007
Other readings will be posted on the course website
COURSE REQUIREMENTS
Tests: Three tests will be given throughout the semester consisting of about 40-60 multiple choice questions each. Test questions will be based on both the lecture material and the text. Students should not assume that all material in the text will be covered in the lectures or that all material in the lectures is covered in the text. Please note that I may discard some questions on exams if in retrospect I see that they are unclear. Students will receive a five point penalty for each day an exam is taken late for up to two days. No make up exams will be given after the second day and students will fail the course by default. No make up exams will be given for the final exam at the end of the semester. Do not show up late for class on test days, especially for the final exam. Exam dates are listed in the course reading schedule. The dates are fixed; please do not request that I change them. The third exam will be given during finals week, and will not be comprehensive. Please see the UTM final exam schedule for the day and time of the final exam for your section (the schedule is linked off the following web page: www.utm.edu/departments/registrar/CourseListings.php). The exam will be held in our regular room.
Study Questions: All of the reading material in the course has accompanying study questions, which will be posted on the web. Students are required to handwrite all answers to the questions in a blue exam book (to be purchased from the bookstore). The exam books are due to three times during the semester on test day, and are worth 5 point each time collected. The exam books will not be returned. Do not copy your answers from other students; I’ll be checking for this.
Short Papers: A few short essay papers of about 700 words each may be assigned throughout the semester. Instructions will be given during the semester as appropriate.
Attendance: Attendance is expected and will be taken regularly; poor attendance may adversely affect your grade by 5-15 points. You are allowed six free absences, no questions asked. If you want more absences than six without being penalized, you need to have legitimate written excuses for each absence (including the six free ones, plus everyone thereafter). Most students typically stay within the six absence range. Those who go beyond six are typically prone to miss a lot of classes anyway, and don't have many legitimate excuses. College athletes who miss more than six classes need to be especially careful to make sure that every absence has a legitimate written excuse. I will only evaluate the legitimacy of excuses at the end of the semester, so you need to save all your written excuses until that time; please do not show them to me until then. The aims of this policy are to (1) encourage class attendance, (2) allow students a reasonable amount of flexibility on attendance, and (3) reduce the need for me to make daily judgment calls about what counts as a legitimate absence. Please note that students typically miss more classes than they think they do; thus, I advise that you try to keep track of your absences. Ultimately, however, it is my record of your absences that counts, not your recollections. Students who miss class are responsible for acquiring the missed material from other students.
Tardiness: I understand that students may need to show up to class late. However, routine lateness is disruptive since it requires me to halt class and revise the daily attendance sheet. To discourage chronic tardiness, three tardies will count as one absence. A tardy occurs if a student enters the room after his/her name is called for attendance.
Class Participation: Class participation is encouraged, but not required. The purpose of all class discussion is to help clarify and advance the material under consideration. Please note that I may need to cut short discussions that stray from this aim. Please also note that this course will cover controversial issues and you will likely be exposed to views that differ from your own, particularly in the areas of moral, political and religious philosophy. When discussing these issues, you are expected to respectfully address me and your fellow students, and not let your emotions take over. If you cannot maintain an attitude of respect, or if you are exceptionally sensitive to exposure to controversial issues, then I encourage you to drop this class.
Class Disruption: Penalties for class disruption may include one or more of the following: points deducted from score, lowered grade, relocation to another part of the room, temporary removal from class, permanent expulsion from class, a report to Student Affairs, and a report to your supervisor (e.g., athletic coach, advisor). Class disruptions include unnecessary talking with one's neighbor, reading material which is not relevant to this course, leaving class early, ducking out of class to answer your cell phone, text messaging in class, surfing the web on your laptop, profanity, and any other indication of disrespect. If you have a special need to leave class early or receive a cell phone call, let me know in advance. Please be respectful of the fact that crowd control in a class of 50-plus students is difficult, and stray disruptions can compound quickly. I do not object to students eating food that isn’t noisy. I do not object to students discretely dozing off for a maximum of 15 minutes.
Academic Dishonesty: Dishonesty on tests, essays, or study questions will result in the penalties listed above, particularly permanent expulsion from the class and further penalties from the Office of Student Affairs, including expulsion from UTM. Dishonesty with attendance is a form of academic dishonesty, and will result in the same penalties. A common example of this is sneaking out of class through the back door after attendance is taken. Also, if during attendance a student deceptively says “here” (or an utterance to that effect) for an absent friend, both students will be penalized and reported to Student Affairs. Please note that these warnings regarding disruption and dishonesty are not bluffs. In recent semesters I have reported seven students to Student Affairs (who were subsequently put on probation) and have reported five others to their athletic coaches. I have relocated about 10 students to other parts of the room, docked points for about 10 other students, and had one student expelled from school.
Mid-Term Grade: if you receive an F for mid-term, I encourage you to drop the course and try again another semester. While it is possible for you to improve your standing later in the semester, my experience is that bad study habits set in early, and students typically sustain their failing grades throughout the semester.
Course Grade: Final grades will be determined according to the total points from the three exams (120-180 total points), quizzes and Attendance (10-15 points), study questions (15 points), minus penalty points for class disruption and late exams. The total number of points will be between 145 and 215. Students should assume that final grading will follow the standard grading scale, that is, A: 90%, B: 80 %, C: 70%, D: 60 %, F: 59% and under. However, the final grading scale may be curved slightly lower as will be determined at the end of the semester. Final grades will be calculated at the very end of finals week, and entered into Banner at that time (the print out sheet with the third exam scores will be posted in the hallway at that time, but it will not include final grades). When you receive your final grade at the close of the semester, please do not contact me to request a higher grade.
Extra Credit and Lottery Scholarships: No extra credit will be available for this course; the reason is that it is nearly impossible to devise an extra credit system that is fair to everyone and doesn't inadvertently penalize otherwise good students who decline an extra credit opportunity. Students on Lottery Scholarships/Grants should take particular note of this since recipients must maintain a designated grade point average (see http://www.tennessee.gov/tsac/tels_facts.pdf). To avoid jeopardizing your average, please begin working hard at the outset of the semester.
Email Contact: During the semester I may email short messages to the entire class. I will do so through Banner, which has a database of your official UTM addresses. If you do not check your email regularly, please set up your UTM email account so that it forwards all email to your preferred account (e.g., a gmail account that you regularly use). To do so, go to this website www.utm.edu/otutor.php#owa and click on the link half way down the page that says “forward all messages to preferred account”.
Hints for Exams: All exams will emphasize definitions, famous theories, and pro/contra arguments in the assigned readings. I do not stress dates or superfluous names mentioned in the readings; you will get a sense of which names are important based on what I emphasize in class. Your best strategy for preparing for the exam is to outline all the readings (or expand on the outline that I provide for you) and study from that. As a sample of how I typically construct exams, I have posted on the course web page a sample test from a class that I no longer teach (www.utm.edu/staff/jfieser/class/sample-exam.htm).
Computer Assisted Reading: If you have trouble reading long assignments, consider having your computer read the chapters to you with a text-to-speech computer program. The use of such a program will work particularly well with this class since all of the reading assignments are in the form of e-texts that I’ve posted on the web. You can download a free text-to-speech program here: www.naturalreaders.com (the voice sounds a bit robotic with the free version, but they do sell a more natural sounding upgrade). I use a program like this almost daily, particularly for proofreading texts that I compose. If you install the program, open it and check the box that says “read clipboard automatically”. Then (a) highlight any paragraph of text (e.g., in your web browser, word processor, or email program), and (b) hit control-c. It will then read the paragraph to you.
Implied consent: By remaining in this class you implicitly consent to the class policies and penalties associated with infractions. If you have difficulties with any of the above, I encourage you to drop this course.
Disclaimer: The above items are subject to change during the semester.
Disability Services Information: Any student eligible for and requesting academic accommodations due to a disability is requested to provide a letter of accommodation from PACE or Student Academic Support Center within the first two weeks of the semester.
SWINE FLU:
If you get swine flu, please stay home; the student health office will write you a note and all of your absences will be excused. If an epidemic breaks out, there is a chance that the university will shut down the main campus for perhaps a week or two. During this time, you should proceed through your assignments, and I’ll stay in touch with you through email. The class email database I’ll use is the one in Banner (please see “Email Contact” above).
EXAM SCHEDULE:
First exam: Wednesday, September 30
Second exam: Wednesday, November 4
Third exam: finals week
STUDY QUESTION ASSIGNMENTS
For each chapter, please answer *all* of the “Questions for Review” and *one* of the “Questions for Analysis” that appear at the close of each chapter. Handwrite your answers in a blue examination book, which will be collected on exam days. (Please note that the assigned questions for the logic chapter are the ones titled “take home exercises”)