Most students enrolled in the course are first-year students who more than likely won’t go on to major in philosophy, but the values of the course extend into other subject areas. Indeed, Shabo said that when he was an undergraduate student he didn’t think he would pursue a major, let alone a career, in philosophy. He said he initially took his first course because he thought the skills learned — critical thinking, communication, public speaking and problem solving, among others — would be applicable in myriad ways.
“Philosophy, if you think of it as a territory, shares borders with almost everything else that's interesting,” Shabo said. “Philosophy shares borders with physics, with artificial intelligence, with political theory, with mathematics, with science, with ethics, with public policy. There's no other discipline that allows you to ask foundational questions that have bearing on so many other things.”
Marie Freebery, a junior biology major who took the class her freshman year, said the class was very different from her science, technology, engineering and math (STEM) classes, in which there are usually very strict right or wrong answers when it comes to exams and assignments.
“A lot of the topics that go along with philosophy have to do with things that you can argue without having a right or wrong answer, and as long as you prove your point in an educated way, then you can make any argument you want,” she said. “With numbers, with math, with biology — if it's not exactly right, then it's wrong. I liked how in philosophy I could use the other part of my brain.”
Emma Crowell, a junior political science and public policy double major, initially took the introductory course to satisfy a breadth-of-curriculum requirement, but she enjoyed the class so much that she decided to minor in philosophy. The classes she’s taken so far, she said, have helped her in other subject areas.
“I think it's a good exercise in learning how to think about problems that you would encounter in any area of study, because it forces you to zoom out and see the big picture,” she said. “It reminds me to think critically about ideas that I encounter in all subject areas. For me, more specifically, with political science and public policy, I feel like it's very relevant in thinking about how to serve communities and serve people. I think it’s relevant to any career that involves interacting with people and working toward a universal goal.”
In all of his classes, Shabo said he tries to foster a sense of community in which students feel comfortable saying what they think and trying out ideas. Indeed, one of his instructions is “don’t worry about what anyone else thinks — just do your best to figure out what your own view is.” He stresses the quality of reasoning over the conclusion students arrive at.
“Reasoned disagreement is a really tremendous catalyst for intellectual growth, and that growth requires being able to question your own assumptions,” Shabo said. “And to really question your own assumptions in the way that you need to to be an independent thinker — maybe it sounds paradoxical — but you need other people who are open minded, who don’t share those assumptions, who you can talk to. And so I try to foster that ethos in my classes.”
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How I Teach — Series
The How I Teach website provides a collection of the stories in this series.