Philosophy for Beginners

Philosophy has been studied for thousands of years. It involves the use of reason and argument to search for the truth about reality - about the nature of things, ethics, aesthetics, language, the mind, God and everything else. This series of five introductory lectures, aimed at students new to philosophy, presented by Marianne Talbot, Department for Continuing Education, University of Oxford, will test you on some famous thought experiments and introduce you to some central philosophical issues and to the thoughts of some key philosophers.

Philosophy of language and mind

Language and Mind: What is rationality? What is consciousness? How do we manage to express our thoughts and experiences in language?

01-09
01:28:07

Metaphysics and Epistemology

Metaphysics and Epistemology: what exists, what is its nature and how can we acquire knowledge of it?

01-09
01:30:11

Ethics and politics

Moral and Political Philosophy: how should we live? What constitutes a just state?

01-09
01:30:56

The philosophical method - logic and argument

Logic and Argument: the joys of symbolic and philosophical logic.

01-09
01:34:29

A romp through the history of philosophy from the Pre-Socratics to the present day.

A romp through the history of philosophy from the Pre-Socratics to the present day.

11-13
01:32:01

Franklin Cruz

☺️

07-17 Reply

Alex Moore

i love the idea of this series; id love to be able to learn about philosophy and especially the development of philosophical ideas. Please record these outside of lectures where people can ask questions. While questions can help you to learn and understand there are always people who ask too many questions and dont allow the lecturer to complete her presentation. The audio isnt adequate to pick up the questions which means they have to be guessed from the answer. Questions cause constant interuption and sidetrack away from the point of the lecture; with complex theories in philosophy these tangents make it confusing to follow. Often individuals who disagree with a theory will ask 'questions' which are really a form of argument and will pick away and disagree with the lecturer; this is much better left to essays or self exploration outside the lecture where the individual can research and criticise for themselves and let everyone else learn.

10-20 Reply

⭐👦

Great advice for success. great mam💕

08-21 Reply

⭐👦

happiness is the meaning and the purpose of life, the whole aim is to listen heart for meaning

08-21 Reply

⭐👦

I believe you are confused in trust and belief. Example people trust on god and I believe in myself that's means god created science

08-21 Reply

08-21

12-15

10-16

10-13

09-11

08-19

Recommend Channels