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Course Schedule and Assignments



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Course Schedule and Assignments


The following schedule is subject to the professor’s revision. Adequate notice will be given to any significant changes.


DATE

DISCUSSION TOPIC

ASSIGNMENTS DUE

8/26

Introduction to Aesthetics

Chudnoff, Piper, Gordon

9/2

Labor Day

9/9

Greek Thought (Plato, Aristotle); mimesis, craft, episteme, morality, pleasure, forms, catharsis, ethos, splankna, koilia

Sproul 2, 3; Bychkov pp5-74, 79-108

9/16

Early Christian (Justin Martyr, Irenaeus, Origen, Augustine), Medieval, (Boethius, Aquinas) and Reformation Thought; musica mundane, musica humana, musica instrumentalis

Paper topics due

Sproul 4, 5; Thiessen Parts 1 and 2

Augustine: ____________________________________________________


9/23

Cartesian Rationalism (Descartes, Rameau, Baumgarten); doctrine of affections, acoustics, fine art, aesthetics, absolute music, emotion

Sproul 6; Smith; Hodges

Baumgarten: _________________________________________________



9/30

Fall Break

10/7

Empiricism (Hume, Shaftesbury, Hutcheson, Burke) and Subjectivity

Thesis, outline due

Sproul 7, 8; Theissen 13.2.1-13.2.3

Hume:

_________________________________________________



10/14

German Idealism (Kant, Schiller, Schelling, Hegel)

Sproul 9, 10; Thiessen 15.1-15.2

Kant: __________________________________________________________



10/21

Romanticism (Schopenhauer, Nietzsche); Schliermacher; hermeneutics

Sproul 11, 12; Theissen 14.1

Schopenhauer: _________________________________________________________



10/28

Formalism (Hanslick) and Existential Phenomenalism (Heidegger, Sartre)

Sproul 13; Spiegel; Vanhoozer, “Lamp”

Hanslick: ______________________________________________________



11/4

Expressivism (Croce, Collingwood) and Naturalism (Dewey)

Sproul 14; Vanhoozer, “Vienna”; Hendricks

Collingwood: ____________________________________________________



11/11

Semiotics (Hospers, Langer) and Empiricism (Meyer), Contour Theory (Kivy, Davies)

Sproul 14; Thiessen 16.116.11, 17.5, 18.6, 19.3, 19.4, 19.11, 19.12, 19.15

11/18

Paper Presentations

11/25

Thanksgiving

12/2

Paper Presentations

12/9

Paper Presentations


Book Review Guidelines



Format

  • Between 700 and 900 words

  • Double spaced

  • Your name should appear at the end of the review.

  • No need to include a title page.

  • Otherwise, follow SWBTS style manual (margins, page numbers, etc.).


Heading: A full bibliographic reference to the book should be placed two inches from the top of the page, but it is not centered.
Author. Title. Place of publication: Publisher, Year of publication. Number of pages.

List price.


Aniol, Scott. Worship in Song. Winona Lake, IN: BMH Books, 2009. 261 pp.

$17.99.
Content



  • Briefly introduce the author of the book.

  • In 1–5 sentences, state the author’s thesis.

  • In 5–10 sentences, briefly summarize the contents of the book. This should not occupy most of your review.

  • In as many sentences as necessary, thoroughly describe how the author argues and supports his thesis. This should occupy the greatest percentage of your review. The objective in this section is to identify the author’s primary arguments that support his main thesis. Cite concrete examples from the book, including page numbers in parentheses (p. 67).

  • Identify parts of the author’s argument that were particularly strong. Explain and support your opinion. Indicate what topics are covered in more detail in the reviewed book than they are elsewhere, why the analysis is convincing, and/or why this is an important addition to the scholarly debate. Cite concrete examples from the book, including page numbers in parentheses (p. 67).

  • Identify parts of the author’s argument that were particularly weak. Explain and support your opinion. Are the author’s claims and arguments well supported? Point out what the book does not cover (either by intent or by accident), where there are alternative interpretations of the material discussed by the author, and/or material that according to the book’s stated purpose should have fallen within the purview of the book but was left unaddressed. Does the author have certain presuppositions that limit the value of the work? Cite concrete examples from the book (pp. 99–100).

  • In 2–3 sentences, briefly comment on why a book on this topic is important, timely, or otherwise of value. Conclude with a few comments about the “usability” and format of the book. Does it have many illustrations or just text? Could it be suitable as a textbook, or is it full of jargon of interest only to specialists? It is intended as something to be read straight through or in pieces as a reference?

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