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Teacher: Institution: Strand: Level
Teacher: Institution: Strand: Level
LESSON PLAN
I. Objectives
At the end of the lesson, the student should be able to
III. Materials
IV. Procedure
A. Preparation
Greet the students and then ask them to seat properly.
B. Motivation
Showing a Picture
Ask students of what is there idea about a picture which is relevant to the topic for an
introduction of the lesson.
C. Lesson Proper
Presentation
“Philosophy is thinking about how we think.”
Doing Philosophy
pursuit of wisdom
loving wisdom
thinking about thinking
Philosophy is different from:
opinion
point of view
preference
ideology
belief
advocacy
The motivation of philosophy derives from uneasiness with the status quo.
Like: “The opinion of a thousand jackasses is just that: the opinion of a thousand
jackasses.”
ARGUMENT
Example: Every scene of this movie was filled with excitement for me. I particularly
liked the action scenes on the river.
NOT ARGUMENT- Expression of support/enthusiasm
Example: I spent thousands to take this course and the professor appeared in blue jeans
and tee shirt, which I consider bad taste. He may have known what he was talking about,
but I couldn’t get past the clothes.
NOT ARGUMENT- A complaint/grip
Example: The sincerest satisfaction in life comes in doing one’s duty and in being a
dependable person.
NOT ARGUMENT- A statement of Point of View
Example: “He that hath wife and children hath given hostages to fortune; for they are
impediments to great enterprises, either of virtue or mischief.”- Francis Bacon
NOT ARGUMENT- Elaborated, but unsupported statement of opinion.
Example: “Women have great strengths, but they are strengths to help the man. A
woman’s primary purpose in life and marriage is to help her husband succeed.”- James
Robinson
NOT ARGUMENT- Elaborated, but unsupported statement of opinion.
“Garbage In…..
……Garbage Out.”
Validity and Soundness of Arguments
An argument is valid if its conclusions follow necessarily from its premises.
A sound argument has true premises and true conclusions.
Example:
All men are mortal
Socrates is a man.
Socrates is a mortal.
Premises are true, inference is valid; this argument is both valid and sound.
Example:
All cats are animals.
All pigs are animals.
All pigs are cats.
Premises are true, but improper inference; not a sound argument
Example:
All movie stars live in Hollywood.
Robert Redford is a movie star.
Therefore Robert Redford Lives in Hollywood.
False premise, but valid reasoning, a valid argument, but not a sound
argument.
Primary ways to examine/take issue with deductive arguments:
1. Is there indeed an argument?
2. Does conclusion necessarily follow from premises? Is this the only logical
conclusion possible from these premises?
3. Are the premises indeed true?
Inductive arguments
1. Reason from the particular to the general.
2. Evaluated in terms of “inductive force” or probability rather than soundness per
se.
“Philosophy is both a body of knowledge (history of ideas) and an on-going, systematic
method of inquiry.”
The data of philosophical research are ideas, concepts, and explanatory constructs.
Philosophers inspect the architecture of such cognitive units, asking “how do we know
what we know?” and “Why?”