Thursday, February 27, 2014

IOCC 201 paper instructions Spring 2014


IOCC 201

Writing Assignment

 

You must write one (1)  paper in this course: it has three parts.

 

Your paper must be 5-7 pages long (1250-1750 words), and my “common sense” rule applies.
You must support your claims with quotes from appropriate text we read in the class.

 

Late papers (w/o proper documentation) will be reduced by 10% for each day that it is late.  Example:  Class starts at 9:00, after 9:00 +/- a few minutes it is late.  Each calendar day is a reduction.

 

Topic:

  Three parts to the paper:

  1. This I believe
  2. This I do not believe
  3. This I want to do

 

Example:   

1.      This I believe:  I believe Aristotle was correct about actions done when drunk are a mixed action and people are blameworthy.

2.      I do not believe what Paul wrote about our obligation to the government is the best way for a person to act.

3.      I want to help women get the right to vote in the world after I read Augustine’s City of Man.

 

You may work with any assigned author (original source material) or text in our course.

 

N.B. You must work on a text we read, and if you work from the Bible it must be from a book of the Bible that was ASSIGNED IN CLASS.

 

Citations are ruled by your Rhetoric 102 course or similar course at your transfer college.  The CLE and the Library can help with this.  The WSRP is an outstanding model for writing this paper.  Use the skills acquired in RHET 101 to write a successful paper in IOCC.

 

Use gender neutral language.

 

Improper citations or lack of citations will be charged a 5 point penalty for each offense at a minimum and at a maximum will be considered plagiarism and I will file a formal complaint with the Academic Standards Committee and the Dean of the College.

 

Many, many, IOCC 201 students do not cite the Bible and suffer dearly from this oversight.  The Bible is a book that deserves equal respect among all the great works of the Western tradition.  Despite rumor, there is no rule that ancient text need not be cited.

 

You must use MLA style.

 

Your paper is due on the last day of class!

Your final draft must be handed in as a hardcopy.

You may have a copy of the General Education writing rubric.  It is in an excel format so please email me and I will send it to you!

Wednesday, February 26, 2014

Isaiah

Chapters to read for 2.28:
2,4,5,7,9,15,24,34,42,52,61

Monday, February 24, 2014

Camus 2.25.14

In classroom Tuesday 2.25.14 Read the Francev paper.
2.27.14 On-line discussion of Francev.

IOCC 201 after Ice Day

I am collapsing some of the Old Testament material so we can stay on track.  The old reading calendar is still valid.
Read the first 14 chapters of Joshua for Wednesday the 26th.
Dr. Berg

Wednesday, February 19, 2014

Phil 250: Camus Exam

I am going to roll out the exam later than I thought, it will go up on Moodle tonight.  I will give you a later due date.
Dr. Berg

Tuesday, February 18, 2014

IOCC 201

I will update the reading calendar to adjust for the ice day on the 17th and post it here.  For now, we will do Wednesday (19) what was scheduled for the 17th.

Phil 250: Camus

In the classroom today (2.18) on-line Thursday (2.20).  Exam will be explained today.

Monday, February 17, 2014

2.17.14 No 9am IOCC 201

Too icy!  No 9am IOCC 201 2.17.14- check back for info about 11am and 1pm.  As it stands now (7:45am), we have class at 11am until I cancel it here.
Dr. Berg

Friday, February 14, 2014

Weather and Classes

Do not put yourself in harms way to get to the College!  Use your best judgment about the weather.
Dr. Berg

Monday, February 10, 2014

IOCC 201 Study Guide Fall '14

Remember, I am not bound by this guide in any way. Think of it as a good basic guide but not a controlling document.


IOCC 210 study guide

Do not take this as a complete representation of what could be on the exam, it is a “rough guide” at best.

Know the “ages” of the Greek world and what gave rise to Homer’s age.


The basic of Homeric authorship, style, works, structure, muse/poet, etc.




Know the main characters from the sections of The Odyssey we read.




When did Greek philosophy develop? Know some basics of Greek Philosophical thought.




Difference between Plato and Socrates.




Fundamentals of Platonic thought.




The story of Ion, magnetic rings, and what it teaches, and Plato’s argument.




Details of the trial of Socrates, outcome, charges, etc




Know the Socratic defense.




The Allegory of the cave from Republic (Book 7)




Rough details of Aristotle’s life.




What counts as poetry




Know how to identify the poetic




Three forms of poetry. Which one is best and why




How to identify the tragic.




The four causes.




 Essential, accidental  properties.




Aristotle on happiness




The 6 conditions for happiness and their order




The 4 lives, which one is best any why.




Voluntary, non-voluntary, and involuntary acts.




The ideal Polis for Plato and Aristotle
 
Aristotle on women.
 
The Virtues



Basic forms of knowledge and the justification for truth from all three.




 Basic form of Platonic and Aristotelian writing as we have it today.




Basic Greek form of Democracy and their legal system.

Auditions for the play

Thursday Feb 13th 4:15-5:30 and Friday Feb 14 12:15-1:30

Held in the Marian Chase Schaeffer Theater.  2nd floor Ed Complex south of the gym.

Questions?
Email Dr. Berg
Eric.berg@mac.edu

Thursday, February 6, 2014

IOCC 201

Greetings everyone!
We will meet in Putnam Hall Monday 2.10.14 as scheduled.  I have made an adjustment to the reading calendar so look at it on the blog and take note of changes; the snow day made it necessary for me to adjust the first exam date and shuffle some of the readings around.
Dr. Berg

Tuesday, February 4, 2014

Phil 250 Camus Feb 4 2014

We will not meet face-to-face today (Feb 4th), we will meet face-to-face Thursday.  We will flip-flop the class this week due to weather.  I will post an assignment on Moodle and we will chat about it and The Plague on Thursday.  My apologies for the late announcement but the weather turned very quickly today and by noon it was not fit to travel.
Dr. Berg

Monday, February 3, 2014

IOCC 201 calendar

IOCC 201 reading and exam calendar:

Jan

31                                                           Plato- Apology

February

3                                                              Aristotle

5                                                              Aristotle-Ethics (Snow Day)

7                                                              Aristotle- Ethics

10                                                           Aristotle-Poetics (Putnam)

12                                                           Aristotle- Politics

14                                                           Exam I

17                                                           Bible 101

19                                                           The Hebrew Tradition

21                                                           No Class

24                                                           Genesis

26                                                           Joshua-Isaiah

28                                                           The Rise of Christianity      

March

3                                                              The Gospel of Mark

5                                                              The Gospel of Mark

7                                                             Paul's Letter to the Romans

10                                           Spring Break

12                                           Spring Break

14                                           Spring Break

17                                                           Koran

19                                                           Koran

21                                           Exam II

24                                           The Roman Empire

26                                           Roman Readings

28                                           Roman Readings

31                                           Early Church Readings

April

2                                              Early Church Readings

4                                              Church Architecture

7                                              Rome and Early Church

9                                              Augustine

11                                           Augustine-Confessions

14                                           Augustine-Confessions

16                                           End of an Empire             

18                                           Transtitions-201 to 301

21                                           Exam III

23                                                           Final Exam Review-Final Papers Due