Looking For Input From Subscribers
gauging where interest lies as I plan my next online seminar
After my upcoming 8-week online Aristotle on the Moral Virtues class, which starts tomorrow, I’m planning to lead another 1-day seminar, and I’ve got a few ideas already in mind.
Seminars take place online on one day, with three 90-minute Zoom sessions (with breaks in between them). Students enrolled in the seminar get access to a number of downloadable handouts developed for my academic classes and students.
In the past, we’ve done seminars on Plato’s Symposium, tricky ideas in Stoic literature, Hegel’s Master-Slave Dialectic, and Nietzsche’s Genealogy of Morals.
This time around I’m kicking around these four ideas. I’d love to get your input on whether you think you might be interested in participating in on online seminars on these, and which one you’d get the most out of.
Thanks in advance for participating in this poll!
Your seminar on Stoicism help me to begin to be able to understand more about ahcient stoicism.
Marx, some lesser known aspects
Kant where he went "wrong" his absolutism, depr9v8ngnus of being able to hear what his views might have been if nuance (judgement, discretion) had been entertained
Spinoza, because i don't undersrand why he was so ostracized, even hated.
Stoics and the emotions