PHILOS C127C
Philosophy of Language: Naming and Neccessity
Description: Lecture, four hours; discussion, one hour. Requisite: course 31. Recommended: course C127A or C127B. Selected topics similar to those considered in course C127B, but with focus on contemporary figures. May be repeated for credit with consent of instructor. Concurrently scheduled with course C228C. P/NP or letter grading.
Units: 4.0
Units: 4.0
Most Helpful Review
Spring 2024 - Kaplan is old. He is a genius, is mentioned in the footnotes of the text the class is on, and is super nice, but he is old. Lectures became quite repetitive and at points slow, and we ended up having to rush through some of the later topics. All this being said, you should take Kaplan if you can! He is endlessly knowledgeable, kind, and still quite funny. After each lecture he takes whoever wants to come with him out for coffee at cafe next door, and in these "office hours" you really get to pick his brain about anything and everything. Grading was based on participation, a midterm paper, and a final paper. The papers are essentially just answering 4-5 straightforward prompts, so if you pay any attention in class or discussion (which is mandatory), you'll be fine for an easy A.
Spring 2024 - Kaplan is old. He is a genius, is mentioned in the footnotes of the text the class is on, and is super nice, but he is old. Lectures became quite repetitive and at points slow, and we ended up having to rush through some of the later topics. All this being said, you should take Kaplan if you can! He is endlessly knowledgeable, kind, and still quite funny. After each lecture he takes whoever wants to come with him out for coffee at cafe next door, and in these "office hours" you really get to pick his brain about anything and everything. Grading was based on participation, a midterm paper, and a final paper. The papers are essentially just answering 4-5 straightforward prompts, so if you pay any attention in class or discussion (which is mandatory), you'll be fine for an easy A.