Professor of Philosophy and
Chairperson of FIU's Faculty Senate.
Email: hauptli@fiu.edu
Copyright © 2008 Bruce W. Hauptli
Department of Philosophy
DM 341 D
Florida International University
University Park Campus
Miami, FL 33199
Phone/Voice Mail: 305-348-3350
Fax: 305-348-1799
The Philosophy Department's Secretary is Ms. Ivonne Carrasco:
305-348-2185.
FIU's Department of Philosophy Web-page (includes information of faculty, Student Advising Guide, etc.).
FIU Faculty Senate
P.C. 225
University Park Campus
Miami, FL 33199
Phone/Voice Mail: 305-348-3637.
Fax: 305-348-3928
The Faculty Senate's Administrative Assistant is Ms. Hedy
First 305-348-2141.
Office Hours for Summer A 2008 Semester:
Mondays and Thursdays: 2:00-3:00 in DM 341 D, and by appointment. I am generally on campus five days a week, but when I am not teaching or holding the designated office hours, I am usually in the Faculty Senate's office [PC 225]. Contact me through these sites for an appointment:
E-Mail: hauptli@fiu.edu V-Mail: 305-348-3350
Web-Page for Summer A 2008 Course:
PHH 2063 U02A [52602] Classics In Philosophy: Introduction to the History of Philosophy. This course introduces the history of philosophy by examining the works of Plato, Anselm, Hobbes, and Descartes. The course will meet during 2008 Summer A term from 12:30-1:45 on Mondays, Tuesdays, Wednesdays, and Thursdays in PC 426 on the University Park campus. Much of the material online material is from the Fall semester of 2007, and it will be updated throughout the semester.
I will be on sabbatical leave for the Fall and Spring Semesters of the 2008-2009 Academic Year, and will not be teaching courses during the Fall and Spring semesters.
Pages for Recent Courses:
Philosophy:
PHH 3401 16th and 17th Century Philosophy (Fall 2007). A course in the Department's History of Philosophy sequence which deals with orientations of four philosophers: Rene Descartes, Blaise Pascal, Benedict Spinoza, and Gottfired Leibniz.
PHH 3402 British Empiricism (Spring 2008). A course in the Department's History of Philosophy sequence which deals with orientation of three philosophers: John Locke, George Berkeley, and David Hume.
PHI 3300 Epistemology (Spring 2006). A basic upper division course in the theory of knowledge. It addresses skepticism, the nature of knowledge, epistemic justification (what is requisite if we are to support our claims to knowledge), and alternative orientations within contemporary epistemology.
PHI 3601 Ethics (Spring 2007). A basic course in ethical theories, this course will concentrate upon a critical analysis of the theories of Hobbes, Mill, Kant, and Aristotle.
PHH 4930
Wittgenstein (Fall 2006). A course concentrating on the philosophy
of Ludwig Wittgenstein.
PHI 5934 Wittgenstein
the graduate section of the course.
Masters of Liberal Arts Program:
IDS 6937 Great Ideas Seminar: Special Topics--Liberal Education and Democracy ( Summer 2004). The seminar focused on a historical survey of the evolving idea (and ideal) of liberal education and its relationship to democracy. Attention was directed to its cultural origins and contexts, and to its importance for democratic citizenry. This course is one of the Great Ideas Seminars for the Master of Liberal Arts [MALS] Program. For more information on the program select this link: FIU MALS Program.
A General Statement of My Course Objectives and Expectations for Students
Writing Philosophy Papers For Professor Hauptli
A Note for Students Taking Multiple Courses With Me
Regarding Independent Study Requests
Regarding Requests for Letters of Recommendation
Further Information, Position Statements, and Unpublished Work:
My View of The Nature of A Liberal Arts Education
My View of the Relation of Academic Administration and Collegial Governance
Education, Indoctrination, and Academic Freedom
On The Connection Between Research and Undergraduate Teaching
Regarding Professional Responsibility and Ethics
Why I Would Belong To An Academic Union
Why FIU's Faculty Senate Has A Chairperson and Not A President
Information on my book, The Reasonableness of Reason
Student Malapropisms Collected Over My Years of Teaching
My Lecture Supplement Introducing Philosophy: "What Is Philosophy?"
Why Senates Are Important To Universities
Below are a number of unpublished papers which I believe are worth a look, but which are no longer submitted for consideration for publication. While many were written in the 1980's and 1990's, the copyright date indicates when they were first placed on the "web."
William Alston's Epistemic Level Confusion and Disguised Fideism
Perpetual Noon and Strained Analogies (a critique of J.L. Mackie's "Five O'Clock On The Sun").
Good Philosophy Is Unavoidably Technical--A Criticism of Adler (a criticism of Mortimer Adler's Six Great Ideas video program).
Philosophy and The Quest For A Justified World-View--A Review of Kekes (a criticism of John Kekes' The Nature of Philosophy).
Below are a number of lectures which I have given to others' classes at FIU:
The Enlightenment Project (Readings: Chapters 1-3 of E.O. Wilson's Consilience)
Consilience and Consciousness (Reading: Thomas Nagel's "What Is It Like To Be A Bat?")
A Quick and Dirty Argument Against Moral Relativism
Relativism, Objectivism, and Judging (Readings: Ambrose Beirce's "A Horseman In The Sky" and Jonathan Bennett's "The Conscience of Huckleberry Finn)
Some Things Are Just Plain Wrong (Readings: William Gass's "The Case of the Obliging Stranger" and Ted Bundy's "Letter To A Victim")
What Is A Self, and Why Should You Care? (Reading: Daniel Dennett, Why Everyone Is A Novelist)
Other Presentations To FIU Groups:
Presentation to Phi Sigma Tau Panel--Introduction to Skepticism
Presentation to Phi Sigma Tau Panel--Living One's Skepticism Contra Burnyeat
FIU Department of Philosophy (includes information of faculty, Student Advising Guide, etc.)
Arts and Letters Daily--an excellent source of daily information of interest.
Links to Philosophy Web Sites---Episteme Links
The Elements of Style OnLine by Strunk and White--A Classic guide.
Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy
Revised: 05/07/2008.