Seminar Requirements
PHIL 380.02:
The Self in Love and Friendship
Fall 2025
Michael Taber
St. Mary’s College of Maryland, USA
revised 11 May 2025
Because the readings will be the
springboards for our discussions, and because our discussions will be the
primary focus of the seminar, you will be required to keep up with the
readings.
Your evaluation for the seminar will be
based on the following, out of a semester total of 200 points:
Final letter grades for
the course will correspond to the following percentages:
A- 90–92 A 93–100 A+
**
B- 80–82 B
83–86 B+
87–89
C- 70–72 C 73–76 C+ 77–79
D- ** D 60–66 D+
67–69
F 0–59 ** =
doesn’t exist at SMCM
As this is a seminar, you will be expected to
contribute to making this a seminar. This means more than you being present,
more than you speaking only when called upon, and more than speaking up on your
own only once every few weeks. It also does not mean merely talking often, as
if the more sound waves created, the better.
Work due on a given class day is due at
the start of class, unless otherwise noted. Missing a tutorial costs one full
grade. Late (even barely late) work loses the point equivalent of one
full grade (=10%), and a further grade for each additional twenty-four hours of
lateness. Keep in mind this cost when deliberating about taking more time in
which to complete a paper.
Attendance Policy
Executive summary:
Don’t hit the two-week mark!
You have sensibly
chosen a small college. If you had wanted to be facelessly anonymous, you could
have chosen to enroll at Enormous U. Directly relating to each other about
matters of (I’m sure you’ll come to agree) great importance to us as
individuals and as members of communities is the best of college experiences.
This course is
structured as a seminar. That means we use real-time, in-person discussions to
explore, understand, and even disagree about the text assigned. Even though I
have guideposts for the discussions, the presence or absence of individuals in
a class on a given day will shape how that day’s conversation unfolds and what
new understandings we develop as a class. Missing class isn’t just about
missing the content. In this course, it’s not just about “what we go over,” but
“HOW” we go over it that’s critical for your learning. That’s why showing up
matters.
Asking “Did we cover
anything important yesterday?” about our class is akin to asking it about, say,
your tennis lesson. Of course it was important. But not because there
were a dozen facts for everyone to scribble down. Rather, your presence is
important because that’s the only way you’re going to get better at developing
the skills of interpreting readings, of discussion, and of critical thinking.
For at least this
reason, regular attendance at, and participation in, the class are central to
this course. (Besides, it’s well-nigh impossible to do well in this course
without regular attendance, and difficult without regular participation.)
Because this is a M/W/F
class, everyone is allowed five absences (excused or unexcused) per semester.
Having a fifth absence—excused or unexcused—will result in failing the course,
despite the quality of the rest of the student’s work. (Arriving
to class more than 10 minutes late or departing from class more than 10 minutes
early counts as an absence.)
(Students using an
approved ADA accommodation for “modified attendance policy” will be granted one
extra absence; so the grade wouldn’t be affected even with six absences, but
would automatically become an F upon the seventh.)
The one exception to
the preceding paragraph is for students who are forced by quarantine rules to
stay away from classes. In such cases, the student should contact the
instructor ASAP—and in any case, prior to the first class missed due to
quarantine.
The first recourse
students should use to catch up when absent—for any reason—is to look for a
communication from their Back-Up
Buddy, a system to be explained and signed up for in class. Students can
also contact the instructor for added assistance, of course.
As I hope is obvious—or
soon will be once the semester starts—the fact that you are allowed these absences without any
automatic loss of grade should not be interpreted as a recommendation to
actually use said absences. Not only do you want to avoid imprudently
and prematurely emptying your bank account only to find out that you’re getting
walloped with some virus near the end of the semester, but your ability to make
sense of the material, your ability to become fluent in philosophically
informed ways of thinking, and your ability to succeed in your assignments
would be unhappily compromised in proportion to your number of absences.
Tutorials
The second and third
papers will be run as paired tutorials. I will circulate the topic to you a
week or so in advance; these are not research papers, but thoughtful reactions
to our readings and discussions. You will be scheduled in pairs to come to my
office and read your paper to me and to the other student. At the tutorial, we
will talk about your paper, interrupting you more than once. Then the other
student will read her or his paper in the same way. So that we may follow along
as you read, hand in three copies of your paper (including the original).
Realize that it is your paper that will be graded, not your reading of
it or your answering any questions which I or the other student may bring up.
The purpose of having you read the paper to me is that I can give you comments directly and suggest ways to improve your
future work. This is much easier for me to do, and much more helpful to you,
than having you read my comments in dried ink on a dead piece of paper.
Writing
Since writing is
central to the course, both in reading others' and in creating your own,
respect for writing will manifest itself even at the level of writing
mechanics. You will be expected to take stylistic and mechanical concerns most
seriously in your three papers. As a motivational aid to this end, you will be
allowed two grammatical, spelling, or punctuation mistakes per page (partial
pages counting as full), after which you will lose one point for each mistake.
For example, if you have a 24-point paper of five pages, and you have made
thirteen mechanical errors, then you will receive a 21 for the paper. N.B.:
the same mistake (not just similar) repeated will count as one mistake. You
will be allowed to submit a revised version with the mechanical errors
corrected, and in these cases you will be assigned the average of your original
and revised grade.
For further help
specifically on writing and on giving presentations, see the folks as the
Writing and Speaking Center early in the preparing process. Located on the
first floor of the main Library (pond side), the Writing & Speaking Center
offers free tutorials in writing and speaking. The peer tutors are students
themselves, so they are already familiar with many of the assignments that
students bring to the Center, but they have also completed extensive hands-on
training to learn how to assist their peers at any step of the process
(planning, drafting, or revising) for any assignment. Although the peer tutors
cannot diagnose issues or make revisions for
you, they can work collaboratively with
you to discuss ideas, consider options, and find solutions so that you can
continue solo. This collaborative approach is one of the best ways to help
students develop their abilities because all writers and speakers need
audiences—just as the peer tutors, who often schedule tutorials with each
other.
If you’d like to work
with a tutor on any of your writing or speaking assignments this semester,
please visit www.smcm.edu/writingcenter
and click the “Make an Appointment”
button. The Center’s website also has videos of sample tutorials, helpful
handouts on different writing elements, an FAQ section with more information,
and information on how to become a tutor. If you need assistance scheduling or
have additional questions, please contact the Assistant Director of the Center,
Mandy Taylor, at apheatwole@smcm.edu.
You also might consider spending a bit of
time at my
writing site. Few would fail to
benefit. (Hint, hint….)
Discussion leading
Each of you will lead a
50-minute class session. This is not a lecture, for the 50 minutes should
instigate and incorporate discussion among the other students—even if you have
to spend five minutes giving a mini-lecture about this, or seven minutes about
that.
We all will have read the
piece you have selected, so your job is not to provide us with a review of the
article. You might, however, make explicit for us what the problem is that the
author is trying to solve, what the author’s proposed solution is, what some
objections are (whether addressed by the author, or not) to that proposed
solution, what some tie-ins are to readings we have done or to other
discussions we will have had, etc.
Your leading should not consist
of simply reading notes, reading off PowerPoint slides (shudder!), or something
similar. Nor is this an oral book report. That’s what middle school was for.
You have to remain true to the material, while at the same time respecting your
audience (which requires, at the very least, keeping them awake!).
In planning the arc of your
discussion, you are free to use an
excerpt from the article, a video, a podcast excerpt, a poem, a PowerPoint, a
song, group work, etc. Just bear in mind that your job is not to run
down the clock.
The sessions that are
available for leading and for solo leading are marked with asterisks on the
course schedule.
Evaluation of the discussion
leading is based on:
· evidence of preparation—e.g.,
does your leading seem well organized? Does the timing indicate practice? (4
points)
· command of the material—e.g.,
do you correctly understand the author’s points? (8 points)
· quality of the manner of your leading—e.g., is your leading clear? If there are available tie-ins, did
you avail yourself of them? (8 points)
Final paper
Your final paper will
be a research paper of at least 8 pages on some topic relevant to the material
of this course. The way in which it relates is up to you, in consultation with the
instructor, but should utilize (in a meaningful way—merely quoting from is not
a meaningful way) at least four sources, whether books or articles, as follows:
· At least two should be a peer-reviewed
source from outside our course.
· At least one should be a reading that we have done in
this course.
Tip 1: Google Scholar screens out lots of
internet noise, and will yield only academic sources. (Though not all these
sources are peer-reviewed, so you’d still have to check that. It’s fine to use such
sources; they just don’t count towards the two peer-reviewed sources you need.)
Tip 2: The
Philosopher’s Index is a good database to use specifically for philosophical,
peer-reviewed articles, and our library subscribes to it. Click on the
“Databases” button on our library’s home
page, then go to the letter “P.”
Think of your research
paper as your answer to a question. Which question you select is up to you,
though it should be neither so general that your paper would consist of
platitudes, nor so specific that you would have trouble finding sources. (In
our experience as instructors, the former is a more common mistake than the
latter.)
Personal laptops, tablets, or phones
This seminar requires a
free-flowing exchange of ideas, between you and the authors, as well as among
us. The presence of electronic devices, replete with their glowing
notifications, creates a barrier to this flow. Therefore, the use of
electronics is allowed in class only in order to access the readings online or
by those with documented needs of which I’ve been notified by official
channels.
Cell phones should be
stowed away in any case, and not simply on the table—even if turned upside
down—even if powered completely off. “Why,” you ask? Well, recent studies
indicate the distracting effect of even a cell phone not
one’s own, laying on a nearby table.
In fact, of even a
drawing or a thought of a cell
phone. So I hereby prohibit you during
class even to think of a cell phone!
(I’ll keep mine away, too.)
(If a phone is the only
way you have of accessing the readings in class, fine…just give me a heads-up
so I know not to bark at you.)
As for note-taking, consult this
study, which found superior recall in
students who took notes by hand compared to those who took them by typing, and this
recent article sums up some of
the research findings.
Students with documented disabilities
“Following the Americans with Disabilities Act
(ADA), Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973, as amended, and
applicable state law, St. Mary’s College of Maryland (SMCM) does not
discriminate against any individual on the basis of handicap or disability. As
a result, SMCM will consider requests for reasonable accommodations for
students who self-disclose a disability or disabling health conditions.
Accessibility Services works with students, faculty, and staff to promote
access on our campus.”
The SMCM Office
of Accessibility Services
Academic integrity
Of sickness makes
sickness,
Contagion of
trust can make trust.
--Marianne
Moore, American poet
from “In Distrust of Merits” (1943)
The College’s definitions and policies about academic
misconduct are laid out here. Ignorance of such matters is no excuse.
Academic misconduct can result in automatic failure of the course, regardless
of how well a student has been doing on other assignments. In addition,
extra-course penalties may be pursued, like being prohibited from ever
re-taking the class.
“So, what about using a chatbot?”
Using AI, including platforms like ChatGPT or Bard, can be
helpful as a tool in studying for exams. There’s no guarantee that the info you
get from it will be accurate or to the point of the question. So you have to
refuse to surrender your good judgment. It’s ill-advised to parrot what a
chatbot tells you the answer is, just as it is to assume that the first hit on
a Google search for “best Thai restaurant near me” will delight your palate.
“OK, but what
about for writing papers?
AI can also be useful as a resource for getting clear on
some issues that you would need to understand in order to write the paper, as
would consulting Wikipedia or YouTube videos. In order, that is for YOU to
write the paper.
1.
It’s fine by me for you to use AI as a RESOURCE,
pre-writing.
AI can also be helpful as an editor, to do proofreading and
grammar- and spell-checking, and to improve the organization of a paper. I’m
not saying that the suggestions you get will always be correct, of course.
Don’t outsource your common sense. Also, be wary of missing an opportunity to
*learn* how a proposed revision of, say, a given wording is an
improvement. (Assuming, of course, that it is an improvement.)
2.
It’s fine by me for you to use AI as an EDITOR,
post-writing.
Where AI software should NOT be used is as an author.
For YOU are the author, and to represent the work of another (whether of
another person or of a software application) as if it were YOUR work is clearly
plagiarism. As with using any other source, you should not copy and paste into
your paper any content you did not create.
3.
It’s def NOT fine by me for you to use AI as an AUTHOR,
doing the writing.
Good (and short!) tutorials on topics like samples of
acceptable and unacceptable paraphrases can be found at a page put up by
Indiana University: https://plagiarism.iu.edu/
Send
me mail: mstaber
at smcm dot edu
Go to the home
page for this course.
Go to Michael Taber's home page.
Go to the SMCM home page.