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Uts Review

The document provides an overview of key concepts and thinkers in philosophy, sociology, and anthropology. In philosophy, it discusses Socrates, Plato, Descartes, Locke, Hume, Kant, and Freud. In sociology, it covers Mead, Cooley, and Goffman and their concepts of the self and impression management. In anthropology, it defines anthropology and outlines subfields like archaeology, biological anthropology, and linguistic anthropology. It emphasizes that language and communication are essential to human survival and interaction.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
55 views8 pages

Uts Review

The document provides an overview of key concepts and thinkers in philosophy, sociology, and anthropology. In philosophy, it discusses Socrates, Plato, Descartes, Locke, Hume, Kant, and Freud. In sociology, it covers Mead, Cooley, and Goffman and their concepts of the self and impression management. In anthropology, it defines anthropology and outlines subfields like archaeology, biological anthropology, and linguistic anthropology. It emphasizes that language and communication are essential to human survival and interaction.

Uploaded by

Joyce Ramos
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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LESSON 1

PHILOSOPHY

SOCRATES

-Philosophy "Love of Wisdom"

-Wisest of all men by Delphi Oracle

-Socratic philosophy of the self

-Every person is dualistic

-The unexamined life is not worth living

-Know thyself ("The only true wisdom is in knowing you know nothing.")

-A person's acceptance of ignorance is the beginning of acquisition of knowledge

*Socratic/Dialect Method

-an artful questioning to bring the person closer to a final understanding of the object/concept.

-if you could create only three laws for people to live by, what would they be and why?

*Happiness motivates us to act towards or avoid things that could have negative effects in our lives.

PLATO

-Father of the Academy (a place where learning and sharing happens)

-Platonic Dualism

=The Realm of the Shadows (imperfect and flawed) - not clear, the vision/idea not clear or specific

=The Realm of Forms (permanent and perfect-the source of all reality and true knowledge)

=Allegory of Cave (what they see in the cave are just shadows which are not real)

FORMS ARE:

-ageless therefore are eternal

-unchanging therefore permanent

-unmoving and indivisible

COMPONENTS OF SOUL

-The Reason - rational and is the motivation for goodness and truth (reasoning) *evaluating the reasons
why
-The Spirited - non-rational and is the will or influenced/pulled into two directions (emotions)

-The Appetites - irrational and lean towards the desire for the pleasure of the body (pleasure x
happiness)

-Theory of Being (the more the person knows, the more he is and the better he is)

*Plato believed that it is not only through education that humans would be able to acquire knowledge of
the forms.

ST. AUGUSTINE

-There is a part of self that lives on when we die and returns to God.

-The soul always yearns to be with the Divine.

-Love for the God is the supreme virtue and only through loving God can man find real happiness.

-Christian philosophers' view human nature: Man as a sinner who does-

-Problem arise because of the objects human choose to love:

=Love of physical objects leads to the sin of greed.

=Love for the other people is not lasting and excessive love is the sin of jealousy.

=Love for the self leads to the sin of pride.

RENE DESCARTES

-Father of Modern Philosophy

-He is a rationalist (with Socrates and Plato) and regards reasons as the chief source and test of
knowledge

POWERS OF HUMAN MIND:

-Intution - ability to apprehend direction of certain truths

-Deduction - discovering what is not known from progressing in an orderly way from what is already
known

Sef's distinct identities:

=Cognito ergo sum (mind) - proof of the human existence: "I think, therefore I am."
=Extenza (body) - extension of the mind (the body is like a machine that is controlled and aided by the
mind.)

-Methodical Doubt (A continuous process of questioning as part of one's existence)

JOHN LOCKE

-He is an empiricist (with Hume and Aristotle); believes knowledge comes to us through our experiences
of the world that comes thru:

=Sensation - experienced through senses (nothing exists in the mind that was not first in the senses)

=Reflection - to discover relationships bet experience and objects

*EMPIRICAL DIRECT APPROACH*

*Ideas are not innate; therefore mind at birth is a tabula rasa (blank state)

LAWS OF MORALITY

-Law of Opinion - actions that are "praise worthy" are virtues and those that are not are called vice

-Civil Law - enforced by people in authority

-Divine Law - set by God on the actions of man

*All things that we have experienced are all base in mind*

DAVID HUME

*His philosophy tells us that self is just a thing to which all perceptions of a man are attributed.

Types of perception (conteent of mind):

-Impression - the immediate sensations of external reality

-Idea - the recollection of impressions

Principle of Association:

-Cause and Effect - when people experience certain relations between objects but can't be a basis for
knowledge

-Resemble - implying 'common' properties

-Contiguity - idea, memories and experiences are linked when one is frequently experienced with other
IMMANUEL KANT

-The founder of German Idealism in which his philosophy was awakened and motivatred by David Hume

-Knowledge is the result of human understanding applied to sense experience

-Reason is the final authority of morality

-Transcendental perception (the experience of the self and its unity with the objects)

SIGMUND FREUD

-The self has an unconscious mind that controls the body

-Topography of the mind (an illustration of an 'iceberg' to show how the mind works based on his theory

ASPECTS OF PERSONALITY

-Id - based on the pleasure principle

-Ego - based on the reality principle. it mediates between the impulses of id and the restraints of
superego

-Superego - based on the morality Principle and primarily dependent on learning the difference between
right and wrong

Levels of Consciousness

-Conscious - where minority of our memories are stored and is easiea to be tapped or accessed

-Preconscious - the memories stored in this area can still be accessed but with a little difficulty

-Unconscious - where a 'majority' of our memories since childhood are deeply stored. it is very difficult
to tap the memories and it would need professionals in order to make some meomries resurface

-Hysteria - the manifestations of hidden and unexpressed thoughts and memories that control the
person's consciousness

Kinds of Instinct

-Eros - the life instinct; includes urges necessary for individual and species survival like thirst, hunger and
sex

-Thanatos - the case where man's behavior is directed towards destruction in the form of aggression and
violence
GILBERT RYLE

*He stigmatized the mind as the "Ghost in the Machine" (man is a complex machine with the different
functioning parts, and the intelligence, and other characteristics or behavior of man is represented by
the ghost in the machine

*Freewill was invented to answer the question of whether an action deserves 'praise or blame'

PAUL AND PATRICIA CHURCHLAND

*Patricia stated that the brain and its biochemical properties are responsible for man thoughts, feelings
and behaviour

*Applied the Neurophilosophy (the study of the philosophy of the mind, science, neuroscience and
psychology all rolled into one) *ur face sounds familiar*

MAURICE MERLEAU-PONTY

*A French phenomenological philosopher, strongly influenced by Edmund Husserl and Martin


Heidegger.

*His primary philosophy: The human body is the source of knowledge in the world

*Self-regarded that the body and mind are not separate entities but rather those two components are
one and the same.

LESSON 2

SOCIOLOGY

GEORGE HERBERT MEAD

-Sociology - one of the disciplines in the social sciences which aim to discover ways by which social
environment influences people's thoughts, feelings and behaviour

-Self - a dimension of personlaity that is made-up of the individual's self-awareness and self-image

*The self cannot be separated from the society.*

STAGES x Existence of Self x Characteristics


-Preparatory Stage x None x Imitation (basis of communication: verbal and non-verbal symbols)

-Play Stage x Developing x Role taking (mentally assuming the perspective of anotehr person)

-Game Stage x Present x Generalized Other (the ability of the child to recognize other people in the
environment)

*Children see themselves as the center of their universe and is having difficulty understanding others
around them

*Parents/Family - the first environment on the child's development (significant otehrs)

*'I' Self - subjective element of the self and initiates or performs a social action

*'Me' Self - objective element of self and takes the role of the other

*Socialization continues for as long as the person is alive

*The self may change based on life circumstances that have strong impact on it

*Events such as death of a loved one, disease or disability may reshape the self

CHARLES HORTON COOLEY

*Looking glass self (the self is a product of social interactions with other people)

Phases of self-development:

-People imagine how they present themselves to others

-People imagine how others evaluate them

-People develop some sort of feeling about themselves as a result of those impressions

*Wrong perceptions, however, can still change based on positive social experiences

ERVING GOOFMAN

*Stated that social interaction is similar to a drama performance

*Impression management - process of altering how the person presents himself to otehrs

*Dramaturgical Approach - the idea taht we are actors on the stage and the similarity of social
interaction to a theatrical presentation ("We are call fakers or engaged in a con job on ourselves to
affect other people.")
ERVING GOOFMAN

*An individual's self can be changed according to audience

-Face work - another aspect of the selfwehre face-saving measures are resorted to in the maintenance
of a proper image of the self in frustrating or embarrasing situation

LESSON 3

ANTHROPOLOGY

"Anthropology rejects arrogant definitions of human"

-Anthropology - a field of social sciences that focuses on the study of man

-Survival - it is the most important aspect of human nature

SUBFIELDS:

-Archeology - deals with the study of the human activity through the recovery and analysis of material
culture

-Biological/Physical Anthropology - focus primarily on how the human body adapts to the different earth
environments

-Linguistic Anthropology - human survival is primarily linked to their ability to communicate

*Language - an essential part of human communication; a means to discover a group's manner of social
interaction and his worldview

*Tower of Babel - a biblical literature which explains the origins of the miltiplicity of languages

*LGBT Slang, LGBT Speak, or Gay Slang - a set of slang lexison used predominantly among LGBT people

*Jejemon - a popular culture phenomenon in the Philippines not only in language but also in subculture
and fashion

-Cultural Anthropology - interested in knowing what makes one group's manner of living particular to
that group and forms and essential part of the member's personal and social identity

*Culture - defined as group of people's ways of life

*Cultural Determinism - a theory stating that culture has a strong influence and impact of how
individuals view themselves

-Manifestations of Culture
*Symbols - words, gestures, pictures or objects that have a recognized/accepted meaning in a particular
culture

*Cultural Diversities - these are manifested in different ways and at different levels of depth

-Heroes - persons from the past or present who have characteristics that are important in a culture

- they may be real or fictitious and are models for behavior

-Rituals - are activities (may be religious or social) participated in by a group of people for the fulfillment
of desired objectives and are considered to be socially essential (religious(baptismsm and weddings),
social(birthdays, prom and graduations)

-Value - are considered to be the core of every culture

- it involves human tendencies and preferences towards good or bad, right or wrong (respect.
hospitality, nationalism)

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